This publication is presented to you through Paradigm Publishing Services
Berghahn Books
Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed
Requires Authentication
Chapter 13 From the Margins to the Mainstream: Refugees and the Successors on the Jewish Question, Antisemitism, and the Holocaust in German History
You are currently not able to access this content.
You are currently not able to access this content.
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Tables ix
- Preface xi
- Introduction. Refugees From Nazi Germany as Historians: Origins and Migrations, Interests and Identities 1
-
Part I Testimonies
- Chapter 1 It Hardly Needs Emphasis That My Own Generation, the Second, is Deeply Indebted to the First 55
- Chapter 2 “A Wanderer Betwtween Several Worlds” 59
- Chapter 3 External Eventsts, Inner Drives 72
- Chapter 4 Not Exile, but a New Life 79
- Chapter 5 History and Social Action Beyond National and Continental Borders 82
- Chapter 6 Some Issues and Experiences in German-American Scholarly Relations 97
- Chapter 7 Some Reflections on the Second Generation 102
- Chapter 8 A Life Betwtween Homelands 114
- Chapter 9 Out of Germany 130
-
Part II. Approaching the Second Generation
- Chapter 10 The Second Generation: Émigré Historians of Modern Germany in Postwar America 143
- Chapter 11 Thinking about the Second Generation Conceptually 152
-
Part III. Émigrés and the Writing of History
- Chapter 12 The Tensions of Historical Wissenschaft: The Émigré Historians and the Making of German Cultural History 177
- Chapter 13 From the Margins to the Mainstream: Refugees and the Successors on the Jewish Question, Antisemitism, and the Holocaust in German History 197
- Chapter 14 Reluctant Return: Peter Gay and the Cosmopolitan Work of a Historian 210
- Chapter 15 Out of the Limelight or In: Raul Hilberg, Gerhard Weinberg, Henry Friedlander, and the Historical Study of the Holocaust 229
- Chapter 16 Blazing New Paths in Historiography “Refugee Effect” and American Experience in the Professional Trajectory of Gerda Lerner 244
-
Part IV Comparative and Transnational Perspectives
- Chapter 17 German Émigré Historians in Israel 261
- Chapter 18 German and Austrian Émigré Historians in Britain After 1933 271
- Chapter 19 The Second-Generation Émigrés’ Impact on German Historiography 287
- Chapter 20 Encounters with Émigré Historians of the First and Second Generation 304
- Chapter 21 Influences: A Personal Comment 318
-
Part V Biobibliographic Guide
- Chapter 22 Émigrés in the Historical Disciplines: Research Perspectives 327
- Chapter 23 Biographies 339
- Chapter 24 Selected Bibliography 454
- Index 463
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Tables ix
- Preface xi
- Introduction. Refugees From Nazi Germany as Historians: Origins and Migrations, Interests and Identities 1
-
Part I Testimonies
- Chapter 1 It Hardly Needs Emphasis That My Own Generation, the Second, is Deeply Indebted to the First 55
- Chapter 2 “A Wanderer Betwtween Several Worlds” 59
- Chapter 3 External Eventsts, Inner Drives 72
- Chapter 4 Not Exile, but a New Life 79
- Chapter 5 History and Social Action Beyond National and Continental Borders 82
- Chapter 6 Some Issues and Experiences in German-American Scholarly Relations 97
- Chapter 7 Some Reflections on the Second Generation 102
- Chapter 8 A Life Betwtween Homelands 114
- Chapter 9 Out of Germany 130
-
Part II. Approaching the Second Generation
- Chapter 10 The Second Generation: Émigré Historians of Modern Germany in Postwar America 143
- Chapter 11 Thinking about the Second Generation Conceptually 152
-
Part III. Émigrés and the Writing of History
- Chapter 12 The Tensions of Historical Wissenschaft: The Émigré Historians and the Making of German Cultural History 177
- Chapter 13 From the Margins to the Mainstream: Refugees and the Successors on the Jewish Question, Antisemitism, and the Holocaust in German History 197
- Chapter 14 Reluctant Return: Peter Gay and the Cosmopolitan Work of a Historian 210
- Chapter 15 Out of the Limelight or In: Raul Hilberg, Gerhard Weinberg, Henry Friedlander, and the Historical Study of the Holocaust 229
- Chapter 16 Blazing New Paths in Historiography “Refugee Effect” and American Experience in the Professional Trajectory of Gerda Lerner 244
-
Part IV Comparative and Transnational Perspectives
- Chapter 17 German Émigré Historians in Israel 261
- Chapter 18 German and Austrian Émigré Historians in Britain After 1933 271
- Chapter 19 The Second-Generation Émigrés’ Impact on German Historiography 287
- Chapter 20 Encounters with Émigré Historians of the First and Second Generation 304
- Chapter 21 Influences: A Personal Comment 318
-
Part V Biobibliographic Guide
- Chapter 22 Émigrés in the Historical Disciplines: Research Perspectives 327
- Chapter 23 Biographies 339
- Chapter 24 Selected Bibliography 454
- Index 463