id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt en-wikipedia-org-715 Claudia Koonz - Wikipedia .html text/html 2371 353 68 Together with Renate Bridenthal, she edited the first anthology of European women's history, Becoming Visible.[7] She subsequently published two books, Mothers in the Fatherland: Women, the Family and Nazi Politics and The Nazi Conscience, which analyze the sources of ordinary Germans' support for the Nazi Party during Weimar and Nazi Germany.[5] The Nazi Conscience has been translated into Spanish, Japanese, and Russian.[8] Her current book on stereotypes in French media (forthcoming with Duke University Press) is Between Foreign and French: Prominent French Women from Muslim Backgrounds in the Media Spotlight, 1989-2020.[8] Mothers in the Fatherland integrates archival research into an exploration of "the nature of feminist commitment, complicity in the Holocaust, and the meaning of Germany's past."[14][15] The Nazis promised "emancipation from emancipation," an appeal that resonated with Germans who feared that male-female equality meant "social and family disintegration." But Koonz highlights the paradoxes produced by the Third Reich's dependence on women's participation (as subordinates, to be sure) in child-bearing, social work, education, surveillance, health care, and compliance with race policy. ./cache/en-wikipedia-org-715.html ./txt/en-wikipedia-org-715.txt