The Holocaust: History and Memory

The Holocaust: History and Memory

by Jeremy Black
The Holocaust: History and Memory

The Holocaust: History and Memory

by Jeremy Black

Hardcover(New Edition)

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Overview

In The Holocaust: History and Memory, New Edition, Jeremy Black revisits his brilliant and wrenching account of the brutal mass slaughter of Jews during World War II and the subsequent remembrance and misremembering of this genocide.

Black challenges the prevailing view that separates the Holocaust from Germany's military objectives with compelling evidence that Germany's war on the Allies was deeply intertwined with Hitler's war on Jews. As Hitler expanded his control over more territories, the extermination of Jews became a significant war aim, particularly in the east. Long before the establishment of extermination camps, the German army and collaborators carried out mass shootings, resulting in the deaths of many and the extermination of entire Jewish communities. Notably, Rommel's attack on Egypt was a crucial step toward the larger goal of annihilating 400,000 Jews living in Palestine. Additionally, Hitler interpreted America's initial focus on war with Germany, rather than Japan, as evidence of influential Jewish interests in American policy, which further justified and escalated his war against Jewry through the Final Solution. In chilling detail, Black also unveils compelling evidence that many ordinary Germans must have been aware of the genocide happening around them.

The Holocaust: History and Memory, New Edition is an essential, concise, and highly readable history. Now extensively revised and updated, it continues to offer a powerful testimony to those forever silenced by the Holocaust, ensuring that their horrifying fate will never be forgotten.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780253069900
Publisher: Indiana University Press
Publication date: 06/04/2024
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 320
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.00(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Jeremy Black is a pre-eminent historian, and the author of numerous books, including A Brief History of History; Tank Warfare; and Charting the Past: The Historical Worlds of Eighteenth-Century England. He is Emeritus Professor of History at the University of Exeter and a Senior Fellow both of Policy Exchange and of the Foreign Policy Research Institute. Black is a recipient of the Samuel Eliot Morison Prize from the Society for Military History. Follow Black on his website, jeremyblackhistorian.wordpress.com.

Table of Contents

Preface
1. Until Barbarossa
2. Toward Genocide
3. Genocide
4. Germany's Allies, The Occupied and Neutrals
5. Memorialization
6. The Holocaust and Today
7. Conclusions
Notes
Index

What People are Saying About This

"Jeremy Black has a remarkable ability to present complex subjects concisely and perceptively. This work convincingly establishes the Holocaust in three contexts: the development of anti-Semitism in modern Europe, the large-scale cooperation of non-Germans in the processes of genocide, and above all the combination of vicious ideology and institutional dissonance that directly shaped the Third Reich's implementation of the Final Solution."

Ian J. Bickerton]]>

This is a valuable addition to the literature on the Holocaust. Its value is twofold. First, this excellent brief study places the Holocaust in the context of Germany's military strategy in World War II. It is a timely reminder that Hitler's genocidal determination to rid Europe of its Jewish population was a key element in Germany's conduct of the war. Black also emphasises the extent to which all of Europe was complicit in the destruction of European Jewry. Secondly, in detailing the history of the memorialization of the Holocaust in Europe and beyond, Black insightfully explores important and still unresolved questions concerning the nature and presence of evil in the world, and alerts readers to the ever-present dangers of divisiveness and prejudice in today's political and theological climate.

Dennis Showalter

Jeremy Black has a remarkable ability to present complex subjects concisely and perceptively. This work convincingly establishes the Holocaust in three contexts: the development of anti-Semitism in modern Europe, the large-scale cooperation of non-Germans in the processes of genocide, and above all the combination of vicious ideology and institutional dissonance that directly shaped the Third Reich's implementation of the Final Solution.

Herb London

For most Americans, including Jews, the Holocaust is a distant memory. The moralization of American foreign policy to which you refer has been replaced by demoralization, including a pact with the leading sponsor of state terrorism. The victimization of blacks in American history trumps the victimization of Jews. Most significantly, Israel, in the public imagination, has been converted from David to Goliath after the Six Day War. Holocaust museums are as likely to put an emphasis on the Sudan as events in Europe before and during World War II. The Holocaust itself has been so internationalized that the specific conditions associated with the slaughter of Jews has been transmogrified into any atrocity on the world stage, of which there are many. As a consequence, Holocaust studies exist in a fog of international affairs which obscure the specific conditions faced by the Jewish people.

Peter B. Brown

The Holocaust: History and Memory will stand in the ranks of Raul Hilberg's, Felix Gilbert's, and Theodor Adorno's works. A gripping sense of urgency infuses Jeremy Black's narrative as he warns us of the perils of historical inattentiveness and fallacies and the horrendous civilizational costs they can inflict.

Ian J. Bickerton

This is a valuable addition to the literature on the Holocaust. Its value is twofold. First, this excellent brief study places the Holocaust in the context of Germany's military strategy in World War II. It is a timely reminder that Hitler's genocidal determination to rid Europe of its Jewish population was a key element in Germany's conduct of the war. Black also emphasises the extent to which all of Europe was complicit in the destruction of European Jewry. Secondly, in detailing the history of the memorialization of the Holocaust in Europe and beyond, Black insightfully explores important and still unresolved questions concerning the nature and presence of evil in the world, and alerts readers to the ever-present dangers of divisiveness and prejudice in today's political and theological climate.

Dennis Showalter]]>

Jeremy Black has a remarkable ability to present complex subjects concisely and perceptively. This work convincingly establishes the Holocaust in three contexts: the development of anti-Semitism in modern Europe, the large-scale cooperation of non-Germans in the processes of genocide, and above all the combination of vicious ideology and institutional dissonance that directly shaped the Third Reich's implementation of the Final Solution.

Herb London]]>

For most Americans, including Jews, the Holocaust is a distant memory. The moralization of American foreign policy to which you refer has been replaced by demoralization, including a pact with the leading sponsor of state terrorism. The victimization of blacks in American history trumps the victimization of Jews. Most significantly, Israel, in the public imagination, has been converted from David to Goliath after the Six Day War. Holocaust museums are as likely to put an emphasis on the Sudan as events in Europe before and during World War II. The Holocaust itself has been so internationalized that the specific conditions associated with the slaughter of Jews has been transmogrified into any atrocity on the world stage, of which there are many. As a consequence, Holocaust studies exist in a fog of international affairs which obscure the specific conditions faced by the Jewish people.

Peter B. Brown]]>

The Holocaust: History and Memory will stand in the ranks of Raul Hilberg's, Felix Gilbert's, and Theodor Adorno's works. A gripping sense of urgency infuses Jeremy Black's narrative as he warns us of the perils of historical inattentiveness and fallacies and the horrendous civilizational costs they can inflict.

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