City Libraries, City of Gold Coast

The pink triangle, the Nazi war against homosexuals, Richard Plant

Label
The pink triangle, the Nazi war against homosexuals, Richard Plant
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 236-248) and index
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
The pink triangle
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
13123647
Responsibility statement
Richard Plant
Sub title
the Nazi war against homosexuals
Summary
This text discusses the persecution of homosexuals under the Third ReichThe Pink Triangle sheds light on a corner of contemporary history that has long remained in the shadows: the persecution of homosexuals under the Third Reich. The author, himself a refugee from Nazi Germany, begins at the turn of the 20th century when widespread anti-gay prejudice was increasingly challenged in Germany by the rise of a vigorous homosexual emancipation movement. The various popular and scientific beliefs that often defamed and sometimes romanticized the gays are analyzed in depth. The Nazi movement, as it emerged in the 1920s, drew upon a rich tradition of sexual prejudice while adding its own brand of gutter fanaticism. The author records the origins and growth of the virulent homophobia that underlay the Nazi desire to annihilate Germany's homosexuals in order to ensure the "purity" of the Master Race. Street brutalities, as well as legal formalities, are described in detail.^Painstaking study is given to the evolution of official Nazi policy toward the homosexuals, including the recurring strategies for their degradation, imprisonment, enslavement, and, finally, extermination. Directed by Himmler and his SS, the war against gays resulted in tens of thousands of arrests and thousands of deaths. How this campaign was conducted--the crackpot fantasies that fueled it, the men who made it possible, and the men who were its victims--is the subject of this book. The Nazi crusade against the gays saw friends, acquaintances--some no more than a name in someone's address book--arrested and shipped to concentration camps. There, forced to wear pink triangles, the accused constituted the lowest rung in the camp hierarchy. The horror of what camp life was like for them is revealed through diaries, documents never before translated from the German, and interviews with and letters from survivors.^The Nazi rage against the homosexuals was more than an outburst by the gangsters of Europe; it was the attempted elimination of the polluting stranger, the defiling other.--Adapted from book jacket
Table Of Contents
Before the storm -- The Roehm affair -- The grand inquisitor -- Persecution -- In camp -- Appendixes. Text of Paragraph 175 -- Chronology
Content
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