Book Description
Historical introduction to the Holocaust of World War II
Author : Stewart Justman
Publisher : Writers & Readers Publishing
Page : 0 pages
File Size : 33,49 MB
Release : 1995
Category : Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945)
ISBN : 9780863161827
Historical introduction to the Holocaust of World War II
Author : Sam E. Anderson
Publisher : For Beginners
Page : 0 pages
File Size : 30,91 MB
Release : 2007-08
Category : Social Science
ISBN : 9781934389034
The Black Holcaust - from the start of the European slave trade to the American Civil War - is a travesty that killed millions of African human beings, yet remains a grossly underreported major event in world history. Here is a book that addresses the subject sensitively and with a strong, passionate narrative.
Author : Jordana Silverstein
Publisher : Berghahn Books
Page : 254 pages
File Size : 46,72 MB
Release : 2015-04-01
Category : History
ISBN : 178238653X
Over the last seventy years, memories and narratives of the Holocaust have played a significant role in constructing Jewish communities. The author explores one field where these narratives are disseminated: Holocaust pedagogy in Jewish schools in Melbourne and New York. Bringing together a diverse range of critical approaches, including memory studies, gender studies, diaspora theory, and settler colonial studies, Anxious Histories complicates the stories being told about the Holocaust in these Jewish schools and their broader communities. It demonstrates that an anxious thread runs throughout these historical narratives, as the pedagogy negotiates feelings of simultaneous belonging and not-belonging in the West and in Zionism. In locating that anxiety, the possibilities and the limitations of narrating histories of the Holocaust are opened up once again for analysis, critique, discussion, and development.
Author : Norman J.W. Goda
Publisher : Berghahn Books
Page : 313 pages
File Size : 31,96 MB
Release : 2014-09-01
Category : History
ISBN : 1782384421
For many years, histories of the Holocaust focused on its perpetrators, and only recently have more scholars begun to consider in detail the experiences of victims and survivors, as well as the documents they left behind. This volume contains new research from internationally established scholars. It provides an introduction to and overview of Jewish narratives of the Holocaust. The essays include new considerations of sources ranging from diaries and oral testimony to the hidden Oyneg Shabbes archive of the Warsaw Ghetto; arguments regarding Jewish narratives and how they fit into the larger fields of Holocaust and Genocide studies; and new assessments of Jewish responses to mass murder ranging from ghetto leadership to resistance and memory.
Author : David Engel
Publisher : Stanford University Press
Page : 335 pages
File Size : 40,73 MB
Release : 2009-12-07
Category : History
ISBN : 0804773467
The Nazi Holocaust is often said to dominate the study of modern Jewish history. Engel demonstrates that, to the contrary, historians of the Jews have often insisted that the Holocaust be sequestered from their field, assigning it instead to historians of Europe, Germany, or the Third Reich. He shows that reasons for this counterintuitive situation lie in the evolution of the Jewish historical profession since the 1920s. This one-of-a-kind study takes readers on a tour of twentieth-century scholars of the history of European Jewry, and the social and political contexts in which they worked, in order to understand why many have declined to view their subject from the vantage point of Jews' encounter with the Third Reich. Engel argues vehemently against this separation and describes ways in which a few exceptional scholars have used the Holocaust to illuminate key problems in the Jewish past.
Author : Firpo W. Carr
Publisher : ScholarTechnological Institute of Research
Page : 0 pages
File Size : 34,6 MB
Release : 2003
Category : African Americans
ISBN : 9780963129345
Author : Yehuda Bauer
Publisher : Wayne State University Press
Page : 296 pages
File Size : 33,4 MB
Release : 2017-12-01
Category : Social Science
ISBN : 0814343473
In this volume Yehuda Bauer describes the efforts made to aid European victims of World War II by the New York-based American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee. In this volume Yehudi Bauer describes the efforts made to aid European victims of World War II by the New York-based American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee, American Jewry's chief representative abroad. Drawing on the mass of unpublished material in the JDC archives and other repositories, as well as on his thorough knowledge of recent and continuing research into the Holocaust, he focuses alternately on the personalities and institutional decisions in New York and their effects on the JDC workers and their rescue efforts in Europe. He balances personal stories with a country-by-country account of the fate of Jews through ought the war years: the grim statistics of millions deported and killed are set in the context of the hopes and frustrations of the heroic individuals and small groups who actively worked to prevent the Nazis' Final Solution. This study is essential reading for anyone who seeks to understand the American Jewish response to European events from 1939 to 1945. Bauer confronts the tremendous moral and historical questions arising from JDC's activities. How great was the danger? Who should be saved first? Was it justified to use illegal or extralegal means? What country would accept Jewish refugees? His analysis also raises an issue which perhaps can never be answered: could American Jews have done more if they had grasped the reality of the Holocaust?
Author : Doris Bergen
Publisher : The History Press
Page : 489 pages
File Size : 42,89 MB
Release : 2016-08-04
Category : History
ISBN : 0752469398
This complete history incorporates the 'voices' of the Holocaust, not only the perspectives of the victims, but also the perpetrators and bystanders. Bergen reveals the common misunderstanding that the Holocaust was aimed solely at Jews. In actual fact the Holocaust claimed the lives of 12 million people and incorporated many different social and ethnic groups. The Nazi program of destruction not only focused on Jews, but the disabled, Gypsies, Poles, Soviet POWs, homosexual men, Afro-Germans and Jehovah's Witnesses. The Second World War enabled this carnage by conquering territories and people, turning soldiers and doctors into trained killers, and creating a veneer of legitimacy around vicious acts of 'ethnic cleansing' and genocide. Bergen's pathbreaking study uses cutting-edge and original research to reveal how these attacks were linked in a terrifying web of violence and brings to light the real extent of the most notorious and far reaching campaign of genocide in modern history.
Author : Aomar Boum
Publisher : Stanford University Press
Page : 456 pages
File Size : 43,40 MB
Release : 2018-11-06
Category : History
ISBN : 1503607062
The Holocaust is usually understood as a European story. Yet, this pivotal episode unfolded across North Africa and reverberated through politics, literature, memoir, and memory—Muslim as well as Jewish—in the post-war years. The Holocaust and North Africa offers the first English-language study of the unfolding events in North Africa, pushing at the boundaries of Holocaust Studies and North African Studies, and suggesting, powerfully, that neither is complete without the other. The essays in this volume reconstruct the implementation of race laws and forced labor across the Maghreb during World War II and consider the Holocaust as a North African local affair, which took diverse form from town to town and city to city. They explore how the Holocaust ruptured Muslim–Jewish relations, setting the stage for an entirely new post-war reality. Commentaries by leading scholars of Holocaust history complete the picture, reflecting on why the history of the Holocaust and North Africa has been so widely ignored—and what we have to gain by understanding it in all its nuances. Published in association with the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.
Author : Haim Bresheeth
Publisher : Totem Books
Page : 0 pages
File Size : 44,49 MB
Release : 1994
Category : Antisemitism
ISBN : 9781874166160
Discusses the Nazi attempt to destroy European Jews, and shows how genocide is still an ever-present threat to humanity throughout the world.