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1. Can—or Should—There Be a Political Science of the Holocaust?
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Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Preface and Acknowledgments ix
- Introduction: A Response Delayed 1
- 1. Can—or Should—There Be a Political Science of the Holocaust? 21
- 2. Histories in Motion: The Holocaust, Social Science Research, and the Historian 53
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Part I SITES OF VIOLENCE
- 3. Pogrom Violence and Visibility during the Kristallnacht Pogrom 67
- 4. Historical Legacies and Jewish Survival Strategies during the Holocaust 87
- 5. A Common History of Violence?: The Pogroms of Summer 1941 in Comparative Perspective 104
- 6. Mass Violence without Mass Politics: Political Culture and the Holocaust in Lithuania 124
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Part II NEW USES FOR OLD DATA ON ANTISEMITISM AND THE HOLOCAUST
- 7. Territorial Loss and Xenophobia in the Weimar Republic: Evidence from Jewish Bogeymen in Children’s Stories 137
- 8. Defeating Typhus in the Warsaw Ghetto: A Scientific Look at Historical Sources 159
- 9. Holocaust Survival among Immigrant Jews in the Netherlands: A Life Course Approach 177
- 10. Normalizing Violence: How Catholic Bishops Facilitated Vichy’s Violence against Jews 196
- 11. Using the Yad Vashem Transport Database to Examine Gender and Selection during the Holocaust 211
- 12. Addressing the Missing Voices in Holocaust Testimony 226
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Part III LEGACIES OF THE HOLOCAUST
- 13. Remembering Past Atrocities: Good or Bad for Attitudes toward Minorities? 243
- 14. Legitimating Myths and the Holocaust in Postsocialist States 267
- 15. The International Relations of Holocaust Memory 283
- Conclusion: From the Micro to the Macro 297
- Notes 307
- Notes on Contributors 319
- Index 325
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Preface and Acknowledgments ix
- Introduction: A Response Delayed 1
- 1. Can—or Should—There Be a Political Science of the Holocaust? 21
- 2. Histories in Motion: The Holocaust, Social Science Research, and the Historian 53
-
Part I SITES OF VIOLENCE
- 3. Pogrom Violence and Visibility during the Kristallnacht Pogrom 67
- 4. Historical Legacies and Jewish Survival Strategies during the Holocaust 87
- 5. A Common History of Violence?: The Pogroms of Summer 1941 in Comparative Perspective 104
- 6. Mass Violence without Mass Politics: Political Culture and the Holocaust in Lithuania 124
-
Part II NEW USES FOR OLD DATA ON ANTISEMITISM AND THE HOLOCAUST
- 7. Territorial Loss and Xenophobia in the Weimar Republic: Evidence from Jewish Bogeymen in Children’s Stories 137
- 8. Defeating Typhus in the Warsaw Ghetto: A Scientific Look at Historical Sources 159
- 9. Holocaust Survival among Immigrant Jews in the Netherlands: A Life Course Approach 177
- 10. Normalizing Violence: How Catholic Bishops Facilitated Vichy’s Violence against Jews 196
- 11. Using the Yad Vashem Transport Database to Examine Gender and Selection during the Holocaust 211
- 12. Addressing the Missing Voices in Holocaust Testimony 226
-
Part III LEGACIES OF THE HOLOCAUST
- 13. Remembering Past Atrocities: Good or Bad for Attitudes toward Minorities? 243
- 14. Legitimating Myths and the Holocaust in Postsocialist States 267
- 15. The International Relations of Holocaust Memory 283
- Conclusion: From the Micro to the Macro 297
- Notes 307
- Notes on Contributors 319
- Index 325