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Episode details

Radio 4,21 May 2026,14 mins

Available for 29 days

The story of the residents of Weimar during the rise and reign of Hitler. Weimar – On the Edge of Catastrophe is written by Katja Hoyer. The reader is Sian Thomas. The abridger is Julian Wilkinson. The producer is Lu Kemp. 1937, the construction of Buchenwald concentration camp begins in earnest. An argument over the name breaks out with the town of Weimar objecting to the name being linked so closely to German classism. The sign for Buchenwald ‘To Each What He Deserves’ is designed by ex-Bauhaus student, Franz Erlich - an inmate of the concentration camp. Weimar explores ‘the question of how and why a nation that prided itself on its culture and civility enabled the catastrophe of Nazism haunts us to this day because we fear a repeat.’ The book is about the tension between individual and collective responsibility and sounds a warning for our own times. Weimar explores ‘the question of how and why a nation that prided itself on its culture and civility enabled the catastrophe of Nazism haunts us to this day because we fear a repeat.’ The book is about the tension between individual and collective responsibility and sounds a warning for our own times. Katja Hoyer is a German-British historian, journalist and the author of the international bestseller Beyond the Wall as well as Blood and Iron. A visiting Research Fellow at King's College London and a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society, she writes for Bloomberg and Berliner Zeitung and is a commentator on German current affairs for many British newspapers. She was born in Germany and is now based in the UK.

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