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The Cambridge History of the Holocaust offers a comprehensive overview of the complex field of Holocaust history. The first volume outlines the evolution of Holocaust historiography and the conceptual and methodological questions facing historians, and provides insights into the longer-term origins and immediate preconditions of the Holocaust.
List of contents
General Editor's Introduction Mark Roseman; Introduction to volume I Mark Roseman and Dan Stone; 1. Historiography of the holocaust: early developments Boaz Cohen; 2. The historiography of the holocaust: the years of diversification and integration Dan Stone; 3. From 'final solution' to 'holocaust'. Autobiographical reflections Jane Caplan; 4. The holocaust, genocide, and the origins of the commensurability problem A. Dirk Moses; 5. Fascism and holocaust Aristotle Kallis; 6. The holocaust and modernity Mark Roseman; 7. Integrated approaches and boundaries in holocaust scholarship Dan Stone; 8. Mapping the holocaust Tim Cole; 9. Archiving the holocaust Jan Lambertz; 10. Antisemitism in interwar Europe Ulrich Wyrwa; 11. Race-thinking, Völkisch-nationalism, and eugenics Eric Kurlander; 12. Inter-ethnic violence in Europe before the holocaust Robert Gerwarth; 13. Communism and anti-Communism Andreas Wirsching; 14. Weimar Germany's vanishing point: politics, violence and the rise of the nazis, 1918-1933 Annemarie Sammartino; 15. Hitler and the Nazi party Thomas Weber; 16. Hitler, state and party Helmut Walser Smith; 17. Anti-semitic policy in the early years of the third Reich Hans Christian Jasch; 18. Popular participation in anti-Jewish policy up to 1938 Michael Wildt; 19. Nazi biopolitics: eugenics, racial policy, and the persecution of 'Asoziale,' 1933-1939 Richard F. Wetzell; 20. 'Judenforschung' -Nazi Jewish studies Dirk Rupnow; 21. Belonging and belongings: the dispossession of German Jews Christoph Kreutzmüller and Jonathan Zatlin; 22. Kristallnacht Alan E. Steinweis; 23. Lebensraum, autarky and a new imperial order Richard Overy; 24. International responses to nazi race and Jewish policy, 1933-1939 Jonathan Wiesen.
About the author
Mark Roseman is Distinguished Professor in History and Pat M. Glazer Chair in Jewish Studies at Indiana University. His research focuses on the history of the Holocaust, modern German history, and the comparative history of genocide. Previous publications include Lives Reclaimed: A Story of Rescue and Resistance in Nazi Germany (2019), Beyond the Racial State (Cambridge, 2017) and The Villa, The Lake, The Meeting: Wannsee and the Final Solution (2002).Dan Stone is Professor of Modern History and Director of the Holocaust Research Institute at Royal Holloway, University of London. He holds particular research interests in the history and historiography of the Holocaust. Previous publications include Fate Unknown: Tracing the Missing after World War II and the Holocaust (2023) and The Holocaust: An Unfinished History (2023).