Builders of the Third Reich: The Organisation Todt and Nazi Forced Labour
By (Author) Dr Charles Dick
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
12th November 2020
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Social and cultural history
940.5405
Hardback
280
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
567g
This is the first comprehensive critical study of the Organisation Todt (OT), a key institution which oversaw the Third Reichs vast slave labour programme together with the SS, Wehrmacht and industry. The book breaks new ground by revealing the full extent of the organisations brutal and murderous operations across occupied Europe and in the Reich. For the first time, Charles Dick provides a strong voice for camp survivors overseen by the OT, drawing on an extensive collection of personal accounts and analysing the violence they endured. Builders of the Third Reich shows Hitler used the OT, which had a labour force of around 1.5 million people in 1944, as an instrument of subjugation and occupation to project German imperial power. Drawing on a broad range of primary sources, it demonstrates how the organisation participated in the plunder of Europes raw materials and manpower, greatly boosting the German war economy. The book reveals how OT staff shot, beat or worked tens of thousands of prisoners to death, both within the SS-run concentration camp system and outside it, with analysis of OT operations showing that where it had sole, or very high levels of control over camps, prisoner death rates were extremely high. Examining how engineers and builders, individuals who fitted the category of ordinary men as precisely as any other group so far examined by historians, perpetrated war crimes, this volume reflects on how few OT personnel were interrogated or came to trial and how the organisation passed largely under the radar of post-war prosecutors, researchers and the general public.
This book is a welcome addition to the slim historiography of an insufficiently researched organization. It is the first scholarly book-length account of Organisation Todt in English ... While Builders of the Third Reich is not written expressly for historians of technology and scholars of infrastructure, its conclusions offer many opportunities for comparative and general analyses. The book examines infrastructure serving the Nazi dictatorship, but its findings are useful for research on infrastructures, violence, and modern management in general. * Technology & Culture *
Drawing on work about Nazi building and infrastructure and the role of these projects in the expansion of the Reich together with work on perpetrators, Dick makes a valuable contribution to the evolving discourse on Hannah Arendts thesis of the banality of evil and of ordinary men who were just following orders. * Canadian Slavonic Papers *
Incisive and original, this remarkable account explores what British intelligence regarded as the most impressive building programme since Roman times. The master builders of the Third Reich constructed the motorways, fortifications, and mines of the racial state with the axioms of the racial state. Charles Dick explains how engineers and architects drove hundreds of thousands of slaves as they executed their blueprints. With great authority, he tells us the story of both groups, the drivers and the slaves, who inhabited this vast, terrifying construction site in twentieth-century Germany. * Peter Fritzsche, Professor of History, University of Illinois, USA *
Builders of the Third Reich offers the first sustained scholarly analysis of the Organisation Todt. Assiduously researched and carefully argued, the book studies Nazi forced labour projects from the Balkans to the Arctic Circle. Dicks sensitive analysis of life and death at Organisation Todt worksites makes an important and original contribution to scholarship on forced labour in occupied Europe. * Christopher Dillon, Senior Lecturer in Modern German History, King's College London, UK *
Charles Dick is an independent scholar who obtained his PhD from Birkbeck, University of London, UK. He was a journalist for Reuters News Agency (later Thomson Reuters) in North Africa, Bonn, Paris, Vienna and London over a 35-year career.