Hildesheim is a mid-sized provincial town in northwest Germany.
Ordinary Germans in Extraordinary Times is a carefully drawn
account of how townspeople went about their lives and reacted to
events during the Nazi era. Andrew Stuart Bergerson argues that
ordinary Germans did in fact make Germany and Europe more fascist,
more racist, and more modern during the 1930s, but they disguised
their involvement behind a pre-existing veil of normalcy.
Bergerson details a way of being, believing, and behaving by
which "ordinary Germans" imagined their powerlessness and absence
of responsibility even as they collaborated in the Nazi revolution.
He builds his story on research that includes anecdotes of everyday
life collected systematically from newspapers, literature,
photography, personal documents, public records, and especially
extensive interviews with a representative sample of residents born
between 1900 and 1930.
The book considers the actual customs and experiences of
friendship and neighborliness in a German town before, during, and
after the Third Reich. By analyzing the customs of conviviality in
interwar Hildesheim, and the culture of normalcy these customs
invoked, Bergerson aims to help us better understand how ordinary
Germans transformed "neighbors" into "Jews" or "Aryans."
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