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The Third Reich's first genocide
Episode 2297

The Third Reich's first genocide

Dagmar Herzog explores how years of eugenic theorising and propaganda against people with disabilities culminated in mass murder in Nazi Germany

HistoryExtra podcast · Immediate

June 8, 202538m 24s

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Show Notes

Between 1939 and 1945, the Nazis killed nearly 300,000 people with learning disabilities or psychiatric illnesses. Some 400,000 more were forcibly sterilised. Historian Dagmar Herzog speaks to Ellie Cawthorne about how decades of eugenic theorising and propaganda led so many institutions to become complicit in this programme of sterilisation and mass murder – and why Germany took so long to fully recognise it as a crime.


(Ad) Dagmar Herzog is the author of The Question of Unworthy Life: Eugenics and Germany’s Twentieth Century (Princeton University Press, 2024). Buy it now from Amazon: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Question-Unworthy-Life-Eugenics-Twentieth/dp/0691261709/?tag=bbchistory045-21&ascsubtag=historyextra-social-histboty.


The HistoryExtra podcast is produced by the team behind BBC History Magazine.

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