A new approach that places the history of Nazism in a bold international perspective, revealing the moral arguments and debates which it provoked, and the dilemmas faced by British Christians. This volume shows how British men and women intervened, protested, and campaigned against Hitler's regime, while supporting its victims.
The Boxing Day Paradox is a full-length playfor 9+ actors (4+ males, 4+ females), with 5+ set locations. Please contact webmaster@andrewchandler.net for performance rights.
Part I. An Inhabited Landscape: 1. Observing British Christianity after the Great War; 2. The public and private world of British Christianity; Part II. The German National Revolution, 1933-1934: 3. Tumult in 1933; 4. Escalation and controversy: 1933-1934; 5. The deepening crisis: 1933-1934; Part III. Resisting a Rapprochement, 1935-1937: 6. Uneasy calm: 1935; 7. A dubious stability: 1936; 8. A world of conference and a single arrest: 1937; Part IV. Crisis, 1938-1939: 9. The destruction of peace: 1938; 10. The coming of war: 1938-1939; Part V. The Onslaught, 1939-1943: 11. A righteous war: 1939-1941; 12. New alliances: 1941-1943; Part VI. A Gathering Judgement, 1944-1949: 13. Unconditional realities; 14. Peace aims and retribution; 15. Justice in 1945 and after; Part VII. Endings and Legacies.