Freshly Printed - allow 8 days lead
Missiles for the Fatherland
Peenemünde, National Socialism, and the V-2 Missile
A scholarly investigation of the culture underpinning missile development at Germany's secret missile base at Peenemünde.
Michael B. Petersen (Author)
9780521882705, Cambridge University Press
Hardback, published 2 February 2009
290 pages
22.9 x 16 x 2.5 cm, 0.6 kg
'Peterson's sophisticated analysis is well written and belongs in every World War II library.' Central European History
Missiles for the Fatherland tells the story of the scientists and engineers who built the V-2 missile in Hitler's Germany. This text was the first scholarly history of the culture and society that underpinned missile development at Germany's secret missile base at Peenemünde. Using mainly primary source documents and publicly available oral history interviews, Michael Petersen examines the lives of the men and women who worked at Peenemünde and later at the underground slave labor complex called Mittelbau-Dora, where concentration camp prisoners mass-produced the V-2. His research reveals a complex interaction of professional ambition, internal cultural dynamics, military pressure, and political coercion, which coalesced in daily life at the facility. The interaction of these forces made the rapid development of the V-2 possible but also contributed to an environment in which stunning brutality could be committed against the concentration camp prisoners who manufactured the missile.
1. Help build the spaceship!
2. At Peenemunde, they have created a paradise
3. It was a fantastic life!
4. Production by convicts: no objections
5. At the limits of existence
6. We still had a fatherland to fight for
7. Engineering consent at Peenemunde.
Subject Areas: History of science [PDX], 20th century history: c 1900 to c 2000 [HBLW], European history [HBJD]