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Crossing Hitler

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Crossing Hitler Synopsis

Crossing Hitler is a biography of the German trial lawyer Hans Litten (1903-1938), who dedicated his brief career to an uncompromising struggle against Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party, and suffered accordingly in Hitler's concentration camps. Through the prism of this one remarkable advocate, the book explores the rise of the Nazis, the vibrant criminal courts of the Weimar Republic, and the terror of Nazi rule in Germany after 1933. During the trial of four Nazi paratroopers in 1931, Litten grilled Hitler in a merciless three-hour examination, forcing Hitler into multiple contradictions and evasions and finally reducing him to helpless and humiliating rage. Two years later Hitler was in power, and Litten was sent to the concentration camps of the Third Reich, where he worked on translations of medieval German poetry and operated as a one-man university. After five years of torture and hard labor, Litten gave up hope of survival, and took his own life 1938.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9780195369885
Publication date: 25th September 2008
Author: Benjamin , Associate Professor of History, Hunter College Hett
Publisher: Oxford University Press Inc
Format: Hardback
Pagination: 368 pages
Genres: Biography: historical, political and military
The Holocaust
Second World War
Law: Human rights and civil liberties