Publisher's Synopsis
Unlike "AN AFRO-GERMAN FAMILY IN NAZI GERMANY", which is an amazing case study of "otherness" in Nazi Germany, this second book in Ms. Kuzniar's "Black Wolf" tetralogy tackles a multitude of related topics and themes, thus providing readers with several accounts of "otherness". Contrary to what mainstream history dictates, Nazi Germany was far more practical, reasonable, and tolerant vis-à-vis race, race-mixing, ethnicity, and international relations than one might think.With this one-of-a-kind survey, analysis, and synthesis of both mainstream and revisionist portrayals of "otherness" in Nazi Germany, Ms. Kuzniar lays the groundwork for much, if not all, future research in this very neglected area of Third Reich studies. She has tapped so many rare and valuable sources, and offers such intriguing insight into her selected sources, that one cannot possibly know the Third Reich without reading this book. She skillfully explains and evidences her "BLACK NAZIS" thesis, meanwhile offering so many fresh new perspectives on this passe era of history that one will be shocked to learn so much new information.On the Web: https: //blackwolftetralogy.wordpress.com/