On March 16, 1941 – with European cities ablaze and Jews being herded into ghettos – The New York Times Magazine featured an illustrated story on Adolf Hitler’s retreat in the Berchtesgaden Alps.
A cautionary tale for lifestyle editors, Hitler at Home is a strange and horrifying story about the German dictator and the media’s fascination with his home interiors. Author Despina Stratigakos ...
Excerpted from Hitler at Home by Despina Stratigakos. Out now from Yale University Press. At the end of October 1939, as the American people nervously followed the German defeat of Poland and the ...
“I am investigating the many ways in which Hitler’s domestic spaces were packaged to sell the Third Reich to the German people and international audiences.” Architectural historian Despina Stratigakos ...
This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article. The Austrian government has announced that it will demolish or completely remake the house where Hitler was born ...
VIENNA (AP) — The house where Adolf Hitler was born will be torn down and replaced with a new building that has no association with the Nazi dictator, Austria's government announced Monday as it moved ...
Some of the most iconic photos of Adolf Hitler show him at his most intense, eyes alight with frenetic energy as he addresses an audience or salutes a crowd. Equally haunting, however, is another set ...
On March 16, 1941 — with European cities ablaze and Jews being herded into ghettos — The New York Times Magazine featured an illustrated story on Adolf Hitler’s retreat in the Berchtesgaden Alps.