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Informationen zum Autor Michael Schuldiner was born in 1948 in a displaced persons camp in Wetzlar, Germany, the son of Polish Jews who had fled eastward into Russia after the Nazi invasion. He is chair of the department of English at the University of Akron, where he teaches Holocaust Literature and American Literature, and is the author of Gifts and Works: Spiritual Controversy in Seventeenth-Century Massachusetts and editor of The Tayloring Shop: Essays on the Poetry of Edward Taylor and The Selected Writings of Mordecai Noah. Klappentext Starting with popular objections to America's entry into World War I and ending with recent academic debates between Christopher Browning and Daniel Goldhagen over the legacy and meaning of the Holocaust, Schuldiner provides readers with a longer historical context and a deeper study of the Holocaust's reception and place in American historiogra... Zusammenfassung Starting with popular objections to America’s entry into World War I and ending with recent academic debates between Christopher Browning and Daniel Goldhagen over the legacy and meaning of the Holocaust, this provides readers with a longer historical context and a deeper study of the Holocaust’s reception and place in American historiography.