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9780674074057

Biologists Under Hitler

by ;
  • ISBN13:

    9780674074057

  • ISBN10:

    067407405X

  • Edition: Reprint
  • Format: Paperback
  • Copyright: 1999-05-15
  • Publisher: Harvard Univ Pr
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Summary

On the subject of science in Nazi Germany, we are apt to hear about the collaboration of some scientists, the forced emigration of talented Jewish scientists, the general science phobia of leaders of the Third Reich--but little detail about what actually transpired. Biologists under Hitler is the first book to examine the impact of Nazism on the lives and research of a generation of German biologists. Drawing on previously unutilized archival material, Ute Deichmann, herself a biologist, explores not only what happened to the biologists forced to emigrate but also the careers, science, and crimes of those who stayed in Germany. Biologists under Hitler combines exhaustive research with capsule biographies of key scientists to overturn certain assumptions about science under the Nazi regime. Biological research, for instance, was neither neglected nor underfunded during World War II; funding by the German Research Association (DFG) in fact increased tenfold between 1933 and 1938, and genetic research in particular flourished. Deichmann shows that the forced emigration of Jews had a less significant impact in biology than in other fields. Furthermore, she reveals that the widely observed decline in German biology after 1945 was not caused primarily by the Third Reich's science policy or by the expulsion of biologists but was due to the international isolation of German scientists as part of the legacy of National Socialism. Her book also provides overwhelming evidence of German scientists' conscious misrepresentation after the war of their wartime activities. In this regard, Deichmann's capsule biography of Konrad Lorenz is particularly telling. Certain to be regarded as the most thorough and comprehensive account of biological science in Nazi Germany, Biologists under Hitler will interest historians of science, historians of the Nazi era, and biologists, as well as those who wish to learn about the relationship between scientific truth and political realities.

Table of Contents

Foreword ix
Benno Muller-Hill
Acknowledgments xvii
Introduction 1(9)
The Expulsion and Emigration of Scientists, 1933--1939
10(49)
A Brief Summary of Legal Measures
10(5)
``Non-Aryan'' Dismissals and Emigrations
15(8)
Political Dismissals and Emigrations
23(2)
The Impact of the Expulsion of Biologists on Research in Germany
25(5)
Viktor Hamburger and Johannes Holtfreter: The Expulsion of Two Eminent Experimental Embryologists
30(8)
Dismissed Biologists Able to Continue Their Work in Germany
38(2)
Karl von Frisch, the Mischling, and the Solidarity of His Collegues
40(8)
The Return of Emigre Biologists to Scientific Institutes in Germany after 1945
48(2)
Wiedergutmachung in Public and Civil Service
50(2)
Gerta von Ubisch: The Emigration and Return of a Professor
52(7)
NSDAP Membership, Careers, and Research Funding
59(73)
NSDAP Membership
61(3)
The Significance of NSDAP Membership for Habilitation and Appointments
64(8)
The Chair in Zoology in Munster, 1935--1937
72(2)
``German Biology'': The Example of Ernst Lehmann
74(15)
The Notgemeinschaft (Emergency Association) of German Science, the German Research Association, and the Reich Research Council under National Socialism
89(5)
Funding for Biological Projects by the DFG and the RFR, 1933--1945, and the Significance of NSDAP Membership
94(3)
Research Funding for Biologists at Universities and Kaiser Wilhelm Institutes
97(2)
Research Funding and the Quality of Research
99(5)
Funding according to Individuals and Specialities
104(1)
The Political and Ideological Background to Research Funding
105(27)
The Content and Result of Research at Universities
132(74)
Botany
133(17)
Zoology
150(29)
Konrad Lorenz, Ethology, and National Socialist Racial Doctrine
179(27)
The Content and Result of Research at Kaiser Wilhelm Institutes
206(45)
The KWI for Biology, Berlin-Dahlem
206(4)
The Division for Virus Research of the KWIs for Biology and Biochemistry, Berlin-Dahlem
210(4)
The KWI for Cultivated Plant Research, Tuttenhof
214(4)
The KWI for Breeding Research (Erwin Baur Institute), Muncheberg
218(1)
The Genetics Department of the KWI for Brain Research, Berlin-Buch
219(8)
The KWI for Biophysics, Frankfurt
227(2)
The Department of Hereditary Pathology of the KWI for Anthropology, Human Genetics, and Eugenics, Berlin-Dahlem: The Example of Hans Nachtsheim
229(22)
Scientific Research by the SS
251(26)
The Scientific Interests of Heinrich Himmler
251(3)
The SS Research and Teaching Society Das Ahnenerbe
254(4)
Heinz Brucher at the Ahnenerbe's Institute for Plant Genetics, Lannach
258(6)
Eduard May at the Ahnenerbe's Entomological Institute, Dachau
264(5)
SS Research at the University of Jena: Gerhard Heberer, Human Origins, and the Nordic Race
269(8)
Research to Develop Biological Weapons
277(13)
The Working Group Blitzableiter
278(4)
Biological Warfare Research under Deputy Reich Physician Fuhrer Kurt Blome
282(8)
Aftereffects of National Socialism
290(28)
The RFR and the DFG after 1945
290(4)
The Effects of National Socialism on the Development of Molecular Genetics in Germany
294(24)
Conclusion 318(1)
Expulsion and Emigration 319(2)
Science in Nazi Germany: Ideology and Scientific Reality 321(5)
Continuity and Freedom of Research under National Socialism and in the Soviet Union under Stalin 326(7)
Epilogue 333(4)
Appendix A: Career Information 337(38)
Appendix B: Biologists in the Study 375(4)
Abbreviations 379(2)
Notes 381(42)
Sources 423(34)
Index 457

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