- Henry Ashby Turner
Henry Ashby Turner, Jr. (born 1932) is an American
historian ofGermany .Life and career
Turner was born in Atlanta, Georgia, and attended public schools in Maryland. He received his B.A. from
Washington and Lee University in 1954 and spent the 1954-1955 academic year as a Fulbright scholar at theUniversity of Munich and theFree University of Berlin . In the fall of 1955 he began graduate study atPrinceton University . He completed his M.A. in 1957 and his Ph.D. in 1960 under the supervision ofGordon A. Craig . Turner was hired byYale University as an instructor in history in 1958. He was elevated to assistant professor in 1961, associate professor in 1964 and professor in 1971. From 1976 to 1979 he was chairman of the Yale History Department. During his career he held a number of endowed chairs in history at Yale and trained numerous graduate students in modern German history. From 1981 to 1991 Turner also served as Master of Davenport College, one of 12 residential colleges at Yale. He retired in 2002 as the Stillé Professor of History. His papers are housed in the Manuscripts and Archives Division of Sterling Memorial Library at Yale University.cholarship
In his essay, "Fascism and Modernization" from the book "Reappraisals of Fascism", following the arguments first made by
David Schoenbaum , Turner argued National Socialism sought the total destruction of modern industrial society and its replacement with agrarian society where Germans obtain "Lebensraum " in Eastern Europe where German colonists would settle the land and reduce the Slavic peoples to the slaves [Kershaw, Ian "The Nazi Dictatorship" London: Edward Arnold 2000 page 168.] . However to accomplish these goals, the Nazis forced despite the anti-modernist nature of their ideology to further modernize German society [Kershaw, Ian "The Nazi Dictatorship" London: Edward Arnold 2000 page 168.] . Turner called Nazi anti-modernism a "double" form of utopianism in that it was a vision that was both impractical and unachievable [Kershaw, Ian "The Nazi Dictatorship" London: Edward Arnold 2000 page 168.] .Turner is best known for his book "German Big Business and the Rise of Hitler", published in 1985. In it he rebutted the claim that it was German big business which primarily financed and otherwise promoted the attainment of power by
Adolf Hitler . He argued that the extent of business support for Hitler and hisNazi Party had been much exaggerated. On the basis of careful examination of unpublished records of major German corporations and of Hitler's party, Turner concluded that the bulk of the Nazis' funds during their rise came from their party's members and other ordinary Germans and that the principal political recipients of big business funding were the traditional right-of-center parties, theGerman People's Party and theGerman National People's Party . The only election campaign in which big business contributed significant amounts of money to the Nazis was that of March 5, 1933, after they were already in powerIn Turner's view, the
Third Reich was a possible but by no means inevitable result of German history, thus leading Turner to oppose the "Sonderweg " thesis. He has contended that the acquisition of power byAdolf Hitler was heavily influenced by contingency and that military rule was a viable alternative to the Third Reich. In his 1996 book "Hitler's Thirty Days To Power: January 1933", he maintained that it was the actions of a few individuals, such as German presidentPaul von Hindenburg and chancellorsFranz von Papen andKurt von Schleicher , which enabled Hitler to come to power through semi-legal means. Political incompetence and personal rivalry between Papen and Schleicher ultimately led to Hitler's being appointed chancellor of Germany by President Hindenburg on January 30, 1933, without ever having won a majority in a national election.Turner's "General Motors and the Nazis" (2005) examined the history during the Third Reich of
Adam Opel AG , the German subsidiary of General Motors.
=David Abraham Affair= In the early 1980s, Turner was one of the critics of the book "The Collapse of the Weimar Republic" byDavid Abraham , then an assistant professor of history at Princeton University. Abraham, a Marxist who received a Ph.D. from theUniversity of Chicago for a dissertation that was the basis for his book, maintained that big business bore major responsibility for Hitler's rise to power. Turner, working on the same topic from a non-Marxist perspective, was familiar with the archives and documents cited by Abraham and challenged Abraham's use of evidence from those sources, which led to a controversy over erroneous citations, inaccurate quotations, and other misrepresentations in Abraham's book. In this effort Turner was seconded byGerald D. Feldman , history professor at the University of California, Berkeley, who subjected Abraham's book to thorough scrutiny in a lengthy article in a scholarly journal. Abraham was denied tenure at Princeton and eventually left the historical profession, later becoming a professor of law. Abraham is now a legal scholar at the University of Miami School of Law. [Peter Novick, "That Noble Dream: The 'Objectivity Question' and the American Historical Profession" (University of Cambridge Press, 1988), 612-621.]Works
*"Stresemann and the Politics of the Weimar Republic", Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1963.
*"Nazism and the Third Reich", New York: Quadrangle Books, 1972
*"Faschismus und Kapitalismus in Deutschland", Goettingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1972
*"Reappraisals of Fascism" (editor), New York: New Viewpoints, 1975.
*"Hitler aus nächster Nähe: Aufzeichnungen eines Vertrauten 1929-1932" (editor), Frankfurt/M, Berlin, Wien: Ullstein, 1978.
*"German Big Business and the Rise of Hitler", New York: Oxford University Press, 1985, translated as "Die Grossunternehmer und der Aufstieg Hitlers", Berlin: Siedler Verlag, 1985.
*"Hitler: Memoirs of a Confidant" (editor), New Haven: Yale University Press, 1985.
*"The Two Germanies since 1945", New Haven: Yale University Press, 1987, revised as
*"Germany from Partition to Reunification", New Haven: Yale University Press, 1992.
*"Geissel des Jahrhunderts: Hitler und seine Hinterlassenschaft", Berlin: Siedler Verlag, 1989.
*"Hitler's Thirty Days to Power: January 1933", Reading, Mass.: Addison-Wesley, 1996.
*"General Motors and the Nazis: The Struggle for Control of Opel, Europe's Biggest Carmaker", New Haven: Yale University Press, 2005.Endnotes
External links
* [http://www.davidfrum.com/archive.asp?YEAR=1997 Hitler Could Have Been Stopped] Review of "Hitler's Thirty Days to Power" by
David Frum
* [http://pages.prodigy.net/aesir/htdtp.htm Hitler's Thirty Days to Power: January 1933] by John J. Reilly
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