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When Memory Comes
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 196

When Memory Comes

Four months before Hitler came to power, Pavel Friedländer was born in Prague to a middle-class Jewish family. In 1939, seven-year-old Pavel and his family were forced to flee Czechoslovakia for France, but his parents were able to conceal their son in a Roman Catholic seminary before being shipped to their destruction. After a whole-hearted religious conversion, young Pavel began training for priesthood. The birth of Israel prompted his discovery of his Jewish past and his true identity. Friedländer describes his experiences, moving from Israeli present to European past with composure and elegance. The Wisconsin edition is not for sale in the British Commonwealth or Empire (excluding Canada.)

Probing the Limits of Representation
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 420

Probing the Limits of Representation

German memory, judicial interrogation, and historical reconstruction : writing perpetrator history from postwar testimony / Christopher R. Browning -- Historical emplotment and the problem of truth / Hayden White -- On emplotment : two kinds of ruin / Perry Anderson -- History, counterhistory, and narrative / Amos Funkenstein -- Just one witness / Carlo Ginzburg -- Of plots, witnesses, and judgments / Martin Jay -- Representing the Holocaust : reflections on the historians' debate / Dominick LaCapra -- Historical understanding and counterrationality : the Judenrat as epistemological vantage / Dan Diner -- History beyond the pleasure principle : some thoughts on the representation of trauma /...

Nazi Germany And The Jews: The Years Of Persecution
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 423

Nazi Germany And The Jews: The Years Of Persecution

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2014-06-05
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  • Publisher: Hachette UK

A magisterial history of the Jews in Nazi Germany and the regime's policies towards them in the years prior to World War II and the Holocaust. Written by arguably the world's leading scholar on the subject. Himself a survivor, Friedlander has been a leading figure in Holocaust studies for decades and this book represents a definitive summing up of his research and that of hundreds of other historians. NAZI GERMANY AND THE JEWS: THE YEARS OF PERSECUTION is perhaps the richest examination of the subject yet written, and, crucially, one that never loses sight of the experiences of individuals in its discussion of Nazi politics and the terrible statistics and technological and administrative sophistication of the Final Solution.

The Years of Extermination
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 900

The Years of Extermination

"Establishes itself as the standard historical work on Nazi Germany’s mass murder of Europe’s Jews. . . . An account of unparalleled vividness and power that reads like a novel. . . . A masterpiece that will endure." — New York Times Book Review The Years of Extermination, the completion of Saul Friedländer's major historical opus on Nazi Germany and the Jews, explores the convergence of the various aspects of the Holocaust, the most systematic and sustained of modern genocides. The enactment of the German extermination policies that resulted in the murder of six million European Jews depended upon many factors, including the cooperation of local authorities and police departments, and the passivity of the populations, primarily of their political and spiritual elites. Necessary also was the victims' willingness to submit, often with the hope of surviving long enough to escape the German vise. In this unparalleled work—based on a vast array of documents and an overwhelming choir of voices from diaries, letters, and memoirs—the history of the Holocaust has found its definitive representation.

Proustian Uncertainties
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 177

Proustian Uncertainties

Named a Times Literary Supplement Best Book of the Year A Pulitzer Prize–winning historian revisits Marcel Proust’s masterpiece in this essay on literature and memory, exploring the question of identity—that of the novel’s narrator and Proust’s own. This engaging reexamination of In Search of Lost Time considers how the narrator defines himself, how this compares to what we know of Proust himself, and what the significance is of these various points of commonality and divergence. We know, for example, that the author did not hide his homosexuality, but the narrator did. Why the difference? We know that the narrator tried to marginalize his part-Jewish background. Does this reflect ...

Where Memory Leads
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 299

Where Memory Leads

A Pulitzer Prize-winning historian's return to memoir, a tale of intellectual coming-of-age on three continents, published in tandem with his classic work of Holocaust literature, When Memory Comes Forty years after his acclaimed, poignant first memoir, Friedländer returns with WHEN MEMORY COMES: THE LATER YEARS, bridging the gap between the ordeals of his childhood and his present-day towering reputation in the field of Holocaust studies. After abandoning his youthful conversion to Catholicism, he rediscovers his Jewish roots as a teenager and builds a new life in Israeli politics. Friedländer's initial loyalty to Israel turns into a lifelong fascination with Jewish life and history. He s...

Hitler and the Final Solution
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 300

Hitler and the Final Solution

Pp. vii-xxxiii contain Friedländer's introduction, which did not appear in the original German edition.

Years of Persecution, Years of Extermination
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 385

Years of Persecution, Years of Extermination

This volume provides an in-depth discussion of Saul Friedlander's landmark two-volume history of the Holocaust, Nazi Germany and the Jews. It brings together a range of internationally acclaimed historians to address the manifold conceptual and historiographical issues raised in Friedlander's monumental work. It includes a major essay by Friedlander himself on the challenges of producing an integrated history of the Holocaust. The aim of this book is not simply to evaluate Friedlander's work on its own merits, but rather to use his text as a means of exploring the contours and future of Holocaust historiography. The central concern is to situate his work within the broader terrain of Holocaust studies and European history, as well as to explore the ways in which his book opens up new directions in the knowledge, study and understanding of the Shoah in particular and twentieth century genocide in general.

Kurt Gerstein, the Ambiguity of Good
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 276

Kurt Gerstein, the Ambiguity of Good

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1969
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  • Publisher: Unknown

The first full story of the S.S. officer who risked his life to alert the Pope and the neutral countries to Hilter's extermination drive.

Years of Persecution, Years of Extermination
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 386

Years of Persecution, Years of Extermination

Historians have long been confronted with the conceptual and moral difficulties inherent in trying to narrate the magnitude and monstrosity of the Holocaust. The questions that bedevil all historical undertakings about capturing the past take on particular urgency in the face of the Holocaust: how can past events be properly explained, or even satisfactorily communicated? What is to be learned? And what is it exactly that we wish to know, and how best to try to narrate it? No one has grappled with these questions more profoundly than the distinguished historian, Saul Friedlander. This volume brings together leading international historians to address the manifold issues raised in his landmar...