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Appendix: Some Remarks on the Literature and Sources

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 December 2009

Frank Uekoetter
Affiliation:
Forschunginstitut des Deutschen Museums, Munich
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Summary

The history of conservation during the Nazi era is one of the better-researched topics in German environmental history, and some 25 years of scholarly activity have produced a considerable number of important books and a multitude of essays on a wide range of topics. It is not the intention of the following remarks to give a complete account of the range of publications or to provide in-depth descriptions of the major works: a comprehensive overview that the author wrote in 2002 filled thirty-five pages. The goal of this appendix is more modest in that it seeks to provide a rough overview on the most important books and articles as a guide to everyone who would like to read more. At the same time, it will give a more precise idea of the general direction in which this book seeks to push conservation history.

It is not surprising that the majority of publications have appeared in German, but a number of important contributions are in English. The most recent monograph is Thomas Lekan's Imagining the Nation in Nature, a book that draws strongly on Lekan's research on conservation work in the Rhineland from the late 1800s to 1945. The books of Alon Confino and Celia Applegate provide important insights into different aspects of German regionalism, whereas Raymond Dominick discussed the Nazi era extensively in his account of the German environmental movement.

Type
Chapter
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The Green and the Brown
A History of Conservation in Nazi Germany
, pp. 211 - 216
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2006

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