Hitler and the Holocaust

by Robert S. Wistrich

Paper Book, 2003

Status

Available

Call number

940.53/18

Publication

New York : Modern Library, 2003

Description

Robert Wistrich begins his history of the Holocaust by exploring the origins of anti-Semitism in Europe, and especially in Germany, to try explain how millions of Jews came to be killed systematically by the Third Reich. In the process of relating these events, he provides new and incisive answers to a number of central questions concerning the Shoah that have emerged over recent years: who, inside and outside Nazi Germany, knew that Jews were being murdered; how responsibility for the genocide should be divided between Hitler himself and ordinary Germans; and how historians have tried to make sense of the Holocaust. The book concludes by considering the legacy of Nazi crimes since 1945: the Nuremburg trials, the impact of the Holocaust on Diaspora Jewry (particularly in Israel and America), and the rise of neo-Nazism and Holocaust-denial.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member pbadeer
While well written, this book suffered from the extremes - in some cases going into so much detail that it became confusing to follow and then immediately jumping into vast generalizations making assumptions about knowledge the reader may not already have. Finally gave up with only about 50 pages
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Language

Original publication date

2001-10 (1e édition originale anglaise, Modern Library)
2005-01-19 (1e traduction et édition française, Bibliothèque Histoire, Albin Michel)

ISBN

0679642226 / 9780679642220

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