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Review: Final Solution

Holocaust as improvisation

March 10, 2016 13:23
David Cesarani: deeply impressive.

By

Ben Barkow,

Ben Barkow

2 min read

By David Cesarani
Macmillan, £25

Can the content of a book be entirely untouched by the circumstances of its writing? Surely not, and Final Solution is poignant for being shot through with the sense of an ending - tragically, David Cesarani did not live to see its publication. Yet the book is forward-looking and challenges readers to think afresh about this most agonising of histories.

It is also uncompromising in recognising the poor state of popular understanding of the subject and the "earnest but ill-informed" way the Holocaust is taught in schools.

The core of his argument is that historians have misunderstood the place of anti-Jewish policies in Hitler's priorities. Nazi Germany was not, Cesarani argues, the "racial state" depicted by Michael Burleigh and other scholars; it was, above all, the war-making state. Hitler's extreme hatred of Jews came into focus only with the German defeat in 1918.