Justice Imperiled: The Anti-Nazi Lawyer Max Hirschberg in Weimar Germany (Social History, Popular Culture, and Politics in Germany) | 
| Author: Douglas G. Morris Publisher: University of Michigan Press Category: Book
List Price: $35.00 Buy New: $19.95 You Save: $15.05 (43%)
New (12) Used (9) from $13.84
Avg. Customer Rating: 2 reviews Sales Rank: 1083163
Media: Hardcover Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 464 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.7 Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 6.1 x 1.3
ISBN: 047211476X Dewey Decimal Number: 345.430092 EAN: 9780472114764 ASIN: 047211476X
Publication Date: July 14, 2005 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Condition: {c} First University of Michigan Press 2007 Hardcover Edition / ISBN: 047211476X / Douglas G Morris / Standard Shipping,{MediaMail}, will be in transit from 4 to 21 days dependent on U.S.Postal Service delivery protocol & distance traveled over the road. Need this purchase fast?? ***Accelerate to AirSpeed*** Expedited is a 2 to 3 day delivery in the contiguous 48 States.
|
| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description
"This book reads like a legal thriller; it will leave you thinking about the nature of justice and inspired by the human spirit." -Sister Helen Prejean
Justice Imperiled is the story of the brilliant lawyer Max Hirschberg, one of Germany's most courageous defenders of justice in the face of Hitler's rise to power.
Hirschberg lived an extraordinary life at a defining moment in German and European history. By the time he fled Nazi Germany in 1934, he had argued a series of cases in Munich's courtrooms that shed light on the history of political justice in pre-Nazi Germany and, by extension, the miscarriage of justice in all Western democracies.
Hirschberg was a rare figure: he fought for cases that reflected the new democracy rather than the old monarchy, that valued equality rather than hierarchy, and that showed respect for workers as well as aristocrats.
Throughout the Weimar period Hirschberg squared off in court against Munich's conservatives, reactionaries, and Nazis-twice facing Hitler himself. As he litigated politically charged disputes, he also began fighting to reverse the criminal convictions of innocent defendants and to study what mistaken verdicts teach us about the criminal justice system as a whole.
In a unique blend of biography and courtroom drama, Justice Imperiled captures the excitement of Hirschberg's actual cases and presents legal battles that still rage, in different circumstances, to this day.
|
| Customer Reviews:
brave but futile June 11, 2007 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
Morris writes of a brave man fighting in the last years of Weimar, against an inexorably rising Nazi tide. Hirschberg deserves to be remembered as a conscientious individual who saw the Nazi menace and fought against it with all the legal means he had.
The book takes us into the legal structure of Weimar justice. But it deals just as much with the unrest of Germany after World War 1. From hyperinflation to the bitterness of defeat. Familiar strands to anyone who has read German history. What is distinctive about the book is how it combine these accounts with a detailed look at the legal procedures of a now defunct state.
The only problem with all of Hirschberg's travails is that he ultimately failed. He, and others, made the mistake of trying to combat Hitler under the assumption that the Nazis would obey some laws and conventions. But they did neither.
Well told, accurate research, good read April 30, 2007 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
The minute I saw this book reviewed in the New York Law Journal I had to have it. While I'd recommend it to anyone interested in the subject matter, it's only fair to say that you are likely to get more out of it on the first read if you are a lawyer. This book was tailor made for me, I have been interested in German law, procedure and politics during the Weimar period since I was in college (long ago). I'm not an expert, but I have read extensively, including the German codes in effect at the time, and the author's research is meticulous and accurate, including the German legal terminology. If you don't know German, don't worry, because he gives both the German term and its English translation in every instance. He also provides an appendix of abbreviations with the German and English terms. The book is much more than a biography of Hirschberg. Besides an analysis of the legal system in the pre-Hitler period and a detailed discussion of Hirschberg's major political and criminal cases, the author covers the major political events of the time, including the numerous assassinations and clashes between right and left wing groups. This doesn't read like a textbook; it puts the reader right on the scene. See Adolf Hitler in a courtroom, up close, the way he really was. I found it scary. Hirschberg himself is a fascinating figure, one of the greatest trial lawyers of the time and very astute and farsighted. Since this isn't a novel, and it was the first thing we wanted to know at the office, I'll say he got out of Germany and lived a long time after the war. Unlike other lawyers who opposed Hitler in court (e.g., Hans Litten) he had his eye on the ball. While I know something about the period and the subject matter, I found I learned a lot from this book. The author's writing is well reasoned and organized, and very frankly, I couldn't put the book down. If the author had a web site, I'd congratulate him there.
|
|
|