Holocaust: Hitler, Nazism and the "racial state"

Portada
David Cesarani, Sarah Kavanaugh
Psychology Press, 2004 - 424 pŕgines
 

Continguts

PART
1
Responses inside Nazidominated Europe
9
flight accommodation
11
Central decisions for a Europeanwide genocide against
13
Psychiatry German society and the Nazi euthanasia
17
Antisemitism and racism in German society
19
on
29
continuity and change
50
Auschwitz partially decoded
185
PART 3
203
Jewish women children and the family in the face
205
What about the ordinary men? The German order police
206
Could the Allies have bombed AuschwitzBirkenau?
212
Index 405
217
Malice in action
223
The German military command in Paris and the deportation
229

The Soviet partisan movement and the Holocaust
73
The end of the Final Solution? Nazi plans to ransom Jews
80
PART 2
83
The genesis of the Final Solution from the spirit of science
93
Gypsies and Jews under the Nazis
130
The Nazi assault on the Jews of Poland
137
The responses of the Allied powers
141
Ideological legitimization and political practice of
152
Early news of the Holocaust from Poland
157
reflections on the nature of
164
individuals and agencies
181
Hitler and the pogrom of November 910 1938
183
The development of Nazi policy towards the GermanJewish
239
Different worlds British perceptions of the Final Solution
255
Constructing Allied humanitarian policy
277
an analysis of the BBCs
298
Killing fields death camps
299
The German Council of Municipalities Deutscher
312
Catholics Protestants and Christian antisemitism in Nazi
342
the decisionmaking
351
Jewish selfdefense under the constraints of National
362
Jewish womens
379
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Sobre l'autor (2004)

David Cesarani was born in London, England on November 13, 1956. He received a bachelor's degree in history from Cambridge University, a master's degree in Jewish history from Columbia University, and a doctorate in history from Oxford University. He was a scholar of contemporary Jewish history. He taught at the University of Leeds, Queen Mary University of London, the University of Southampton, and Royal Holloway, a constituent college of the University of London. He wrote several books including The Jewish Chronicle and Anglo-Jewry, 1841-1991; The Holocaust; Justice Delayed: How Britain Became a Refuge for Nazi War Criminals; Arthur Koestler: The Homeless Mind; Major Farran's Hat: Murder, Scandal and Britain's War Against Jewish Terrorism, 1945-1948; and Final Solution: The Fate of the Jews, 1933-49. Eichmann: His Life and Crimes was published as Becoming Eichmann: Rethinking the Life, Crimes, and Trial of a 'Desk Murderer' in the United States and received a National Jewish Book Award in 2006. He was named to the Order of the British Empire in 2005 for his work in helping Britain establish Holocaust Memorial Day. He died from complications of recent surgery on October 25, 2015 at the age of 58.

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