Mein Kampf The Stalag Edition: the Only Complete and Officially Authorised English Translation Ever Issued

Mein Kampf The Stalag Edition: the Only Complete and Officially Authorised English Translation Ever Issued

Adolf Hitler

Dil
English

Özet

<p><b>The only complete, unabridged, and officially authorised English translation ever issued by the Nazi party. Not to be confused with any other version.</b></p> <p>Translated by a now-unknown English-speaking Nazi party member & printed by the Franz Eher Verlag in Berlin in limited numbers during the years 1937-44.v</p> <p>Most were distributed to the camp libraries of English-speaking POW camps, and became known as the "Stalag" editions because of the camp library rubber stamp on the title page.</p> <p>Only a handful of copies survived, and the text contained in this edition has been taken directly from one of these extremely rare editions.</p> <p>This official translation is not to be confused with the "James Murphy" or "Ralph Mannheim" translations, both of which were edited, abridged and ultimately unauthorised.</p> <p>The Murphy and Mannheim editions both left out major sections of text, and contained long, clunky, badly-translated and almost unintelligibly long sentences.</p> <p>Most importantly, this only authorised edition contains the full text of the original German-and none of the deliberately-inserted racial pejoratives used in the Murphy and Mannheim versions (words which Hitler never actually used in the original).</p> <p>Cover illustration: A reproduction of an actual Stalag POW library stamp, which appeared on the original title page of this only authorised translation.</p> <p>Contrary to postwar propaganda, <i>Mein Kampf</i> does not contain a "plan for world domination" and instead consists of a short autobiography, the effect of the First World War upon Germany, a discussion of race and the Jewish Question, the constitutional and social make-up of a future German state, and the early struggles of the NSDAP up to 1923.</p> <p>Contents</p> <p>Volume 1: A Reckoning</p> <p>I: My Home. Autobiographical sketch.</p> <p>II: Learning and Suffering in Vienna.</p> <p>III: Vienna Days-General Reflections.</p> <p>IV: Munich. Move to Munich, enlistment into the German army.</p> <p>V: The World War. Experiences during the war.</p> <p>VI: War Propaganda. Discussion on the effectiveness of Allied War propaganda.</p> <p>VII: The Revolution. Account of the Marxist-led revolution in Germany in 1918.</p> <p>VIII: The Beginning of My Political Activities.</p> <p>IX: The German Labour Party.</p> <p>X: Collapse of the Second Reich.</p> <p>XI: Nation and Race. Discussion of race, Jews, and Communism.</p> <p>XII: The First Period of Development of the National Socialist German Labour Party.</p> <p>Volume 2: The National Socialist Movement</p> <p>I: Weltanschauung and Party.</p> <p>II: The State.</p> <p>III: Citizens and Subjects of the State.</p> <p>IV: Personality and the Ideal of the Völkisch State.</p> <p>V: Weltanschauung and Organisation.</p> <p>VI: The First Phase of Our Struggle-The Significance of the Spoken Word.</p> <p>VII: The Struggle with the Reds.</p> <p>VIII: The Strong Are Stronger without Allies.</p> <p>IX: Nature and Organisation of the Storm Troop.</p> <p>X: The Mask of Federalism.</p> <p>XI: Propaganda and Organisation.</p> <p>XII: The Problem of the Trade-Unions.</p> <p>XIII: The German Policy of Alliances.</p> <p>XIV: Eastern Bias or Eastern Policy.</p> <p>XV: The Right to Self-Defence.</p> <p>Epilogue.</p>

Bu kitap hakkında gönderiler

Bu kitap hakkında henüz gönderi yok. Uygulamada ilk paylaşan sen ol!

Senin Gibi Okuyan Biriyle Tanışmaya Hazır mısın?