“An immensely rich and yet concisely written analysis, Redeeming Objects invites the reader to savour each page. Scholz’s text lingers at the symbiotic intersection of history and memory, deftly combining nuanced theoretical interpretation with rigorous archival research. . . . A fresh and insightful contribution.”
— German History
“Stimulating. . . . A rich rereading of West Germany’s early material culture, one that opens up a range of unsettling questions about how the ghosts of the past hid in plain sight at the time.”
— Journal of Design History
“A well-written, persuasive, and, above all, engaging account of West German consumer culture in the early post-war years.”
— Modern Language Review
“Highly engaging. . . . Scholz’s book is significant for its integration and careful examination of many media types and the seriousness with which it scrutinizes film and advertising as elemental initiators of our pasts, present, and futures.”
— Film & History
“Helpfully unites long-running scholarly discussions of Nazi continuities in the FRG with the history of consumer culture and postcolonial studies, while calling due attention to the affective and symbolic ambiguities of these objects.”
— German Studies Review
“This remarkable book offers a new way to conceptualize postwar West German history, which integrates familiar historical topics: sites of memory, the Nazi past, consumer society, racial ideologies, and imperialist imaginaries. What emerges is an uncanny whole, a broad perspective on the time period that should spark further historical studies. . . . Redeeming Objects offers a fresh take on postwar West German history but also a new way to think about other nations, other imaginaries, other traumas, other myths.”
— Joe Perry, George L. Mosse Program in History Blog
“Bold, meticulous, and unflinching. . . . A thoroughly researched, thought-provoking study. . . . Scholz’s innovative study of West Germany’s material culture reveals the unbroken continuity of entrenched postwar Nazi beliefs and worldviews in a visceral manner.”
— Central European History