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Diario de La Segunda Guerra Mundial: Septiembre 1943 [World War II Diary: September 1943]
- Narrated by: Carlos Urrutia
- Length: 55 mins
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Publisher's summary
La Segunda Guerra Mundial se alza en su inmensidad y complejidad sobre el resto de la historia humana. Un número de víctimas difícil de concebir, jamás superado por ningún otro conflicto; las masas de hombres, mujeres y recursos movilizados en una guerra que sacudió hasta los confines más remotos del planeta; la batalla ideológica entre el totalitarismo y la democracia, entre el fascismo y el comunismo, las pasiones y odios que despertó; el horror inimaginable y el fanatismo del holocausto; los juegos geopolíticos; la repetición de la Primera Guerra Mundial en una escala aún más calamitosa.
Este Diario de la Segunda Guerra Mundial es el fruto de años de trabajo, de tenaces investigaciones, que han hilado una madeja de incontables sucesos para darnos una imagen amplia de la totalidad de la guerra. No solo es extraordinario el alcance de esta obra, que cubre seis años de un conflicto que se extendió por los cinco continentes, también lo es el método que emplea para capturar de manera concisa sus distintos aspectos.
Sigue las distintas campañas militares, la evolución de los frentes, el esfuerzo bélico y la crucial retaguardia, el terrible desarrollo del holocausto, el cambiante contexto político de la guerra, las vidas y pensamientos de sus protagonistas. Salta de lo local a lo global, de lo personal a lo colectivo, de lo militar a lo geopolítico, desde la pequeña razia de un grupo de partisanos bosnios a una decisiva ofensiva por la estepa Calmuca, de una huelga antifascista en Ámsterdam a la Carta del Atlántico. Se relata de manera fidedigna la evolución molecular de la guerra.
Este Diario de la Segunda Guerra Mundial es una obra fundamentalmente empírica, que narra los acontecimientos tal y como ocurrieron, rechazando los juicios de valor, y ahí reside su valía.
Este audiolibro contiene el mes de Septiembre de 1943.
Please note: This audiobook is in Spanish.
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