Your cart is empty now.
Report copyright infringement
by Hans Kundnani (Author)
Since the Euro crisis began, Germany has emerged as Europe's dominant power. During the last three years, German Chancellor Angela Merkel has been compared with Bismarck and even Hitler in the European media. And yet few can deny that Germany today is very different from the stereotype of nineteenth- and twentieth-century history. After nearly seventy years of struggling with the Nazi past, Germans think that they more than anyone have learned its lessons. Above all, what the new Germany thinks it stands for is peace. Germany is unique in this combination of economic assertiveness and military abstinence. So what does it mean to have a "German Europe" in the twenty-first century?
Hans Kundnani is Senior Transatlantic Fellow at the German Marshall Fund of the United States, having previously worked as a journalist for The Guardian, The Observer, Financial Times, Prospect, and the Times Literary Supplement. He is the author of Utopia or Auschwitz: Germany's 1968 Generation and the Holocaust.
Guaranteed safe checkout:
There are 0 Items In Your Cart.
Added to cart successfully!
Total Price: $0.00