Industry and ideology : IG Farben in the Nazi era

Author(s)

Bibliographic Information

Industry and ideology : IG Farben in the Nazi era

Peter Hayes

Cambridge University Press, 2001

New ed. [2nd ed.]

  • : pbk

Available at  / 19 libraries

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Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The power of big business in the economy of the Third Reich remains one of the most important issues of that era. Drawing upon research, much of it in German corporate and government archives, Peter Hayes argues that IG Farben Chemicals, the largest corporation in Nazi Germany, proved consistently unable to influence national policy outside the narrow sphere of the firm's expertise. Indeed, as Hayes shows, the most infamous aspects of Nazi policy - the Third Reich's armaments and autarky drives during the 1930s, Germany's advance toward war, the pillaging of Europe, the exploitation of slave and conscript labor, and the persecution of the Jews - occurred despite IG Farben's advocacy of alternative courses of action. Nonetheless, Farben grew rich under the Nazi regime and was directly involved in some of its greatest crimes.

Table of Contents

  • Part I. The Nascent Concern, 1860-1933: 1. Origins and organization
  • 2. The search for stability
  • Part II. The National Revival, 1933-6: 3. Revolution and reflation
  • 4. From Schacht to Goering
  • Part III. The Nervous Years, 1936-9: 5. Autarky and atomization
  • Part IV. The Nazi Empire, 1938-44: 6. Greater Germany
  • 7. The New Order
  • Part V. The Nature of War, 1939-45: 8. Commerce and complicity
  • Epilogue.

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