Hitler and Stalin
Opis
Alan Bullock's Hitler and Stalin is his crowning achievement, the magnum
opus of one of today's most admired historians--the distinguished Oxford
scholar and author of the now classic Hitler: A Study in Tyranny. This new
work is a full-scale dual biography, remarkable for the richness and
clarity of its narrative, for its historical astuteness, and above all for
its freshly revealing perspective. Bullock examines his protagonists not in
the traditional context of their conflicts with the Western Alliance but,
for the first time, primarily against the more fruitful background of
Berlin-Moscow relations; for he sees the cataclysmic history of Europe in
the mid-twentieth century as an ongoing and accelerating clash between the
aspirations of Germany and those of the Soviet Union. Until now the
pendulum has swung between exaggeration and underestimation of the roles
played by Hitler and Stalin. Bullock argues convincingly that, in order to
show how two such outsiders came to power, it is necessary to take into
account both the historical circumstances that gave them an opportunity and
the highly individual traits and gifts each man used to exploit it. He goes
on to explore the nature and scope of their power. His approach, developed
with a remarkable command of historical and psychological detail and a sure
grasp of historical currents--both the sweeping and the small--is to take
the reader through one after another of the major crises: from Stalin's
savage attack on the Russian peasantry and the Nazi takeover of Germany, to
Stalin's destructive purges of the Communist Party and the Red Army, and
Hitler's planned attempt to exterminate the Jewish population of Europe.
Bullock finds in both Hitler and Stalin, despite the radical differences
between them, the same unshaken belief in their historic missions,
overriding any regard for law, limits, or humanity and armoring them
against any feeling of compassion, remorse, or guilt.