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Race in 20th-century German history is an inescapable topic, one
that has been defined overwhelmingly by the narratives of
degeneracy that prefigured the Nuremberg Laws and death camps of
the Third Reich. As the contributions to this innovative volume
show, however, German society produced a much more complex variety
of racial representations over the first part of the century. Here,
historians explore the hateful depictions of the Nazi period
alongside idealized images of African, Pacific and Australian
indigenous peoples, demonstrating both the remarkable fixity race
had as an object of fascination for German society as well as the
conceptual plasticity it exhibited through several historical eras.
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