Cookies help us deliver our services. By using our services, you agree to our use of cookies. Learn more.
  • Log In
  • Register
CEEOL Logo
Advanced Search
  • Home
  • SUBJECT AREAS
  • PUBLISHERS
  • JOURNALS
  • eBooks
  • GREY LITERATURE
  • CEEOL-DIGITS
  • INDIVIDUAL ACCOUNT
  • Help
  • Contact
  • for LIBRARIANS
  • for PUBLISHERS

Content Type

Subjects

Languages

Legend

  • Journal
  • Article
  • Book
  • Chapter
  • Open Access
  • History
  • Special Historiographies:
  • History of the Holocaust

We kindly inform you that, as long as the subject affiliation of our 300.000+ articles is in progress, you might get unsufficient or no results on your third level or second level search. In this case, please broaden your search criteria.

Result 1421-1440 of 2005
  • Prev
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • ...
  • 71
  • 72
  • 73
  • ...
  • 99
  • 100
  • 101
  • Next
Arnošt Lustig a ti druzí

Arnošt Lustig a ti druzí

Author(s): Jiří Holý / Language(s): Czech Issue: 1/2018

This article examines changes in the Holocaust/Shoah presentation in literature throughout the several past decades. According to Alvin H. Rosenfeld, the Holocaust is not percieved as an authentic historical event these days and slowly becomes a shared symbol of evil or entertainment. Rosenfeld warns about the possible “end of the Holocaust” in public consciousness. Short stories and novels by Arnošt Lustig are good examples of these changes. Later books by the author accentuate the harsher side of life in the camps (violence, brutality, hetero- and homosexual prostitution, lack of unity among the prisoners etc.). He often records stories of young Jewish girls and women. Their beauty and youth form a moving contrast to the horrors of the Shoah. In the novelette Colette, for instance, many conventional images are used in the narrative. Credibility of presented figures disappears very often, they are “omnipresent” and “omniscient” almost like the famous Forrest Gump. By using various information and statements reproduced by these characters, the author constructs a kind of Auschwitz-Birkenau encyclopedia. The result of this is the loss of authenticity. At the same time, though, a lot of data of this “encyclopedia” is inaccurate. Lustig uses elements of thriller and romance. In works by other well-known authors who write about the Holocaust, various elements can be found: elements of thriller (Jonathan Littell), fantasy, comics, horror as well as porn films (Igor Ostachowicz). Literary texts by both Littel and Ostachowicz are full of violence, brutality and sexual scenes. Like Lustig, Jonathan Littell has created an encyclopedia of Nazi crimes during the WWII with implausible characters and situations in his novel The Kindly Ones. In contrast to Lustig and Littell, Night of the Living Jews by Ostachowicz is more original and impressive. It also brings actual questions concerning the past and relations between Poles and Jews.

More...
Trajectories of Romani Migrations and Mobilities in Europe and Beyond (1945–present)

Trajectories of Romani Migrations and Mobilities in Europe and Beyond (1945–present)

Author(s): Eszter Varsa / Language(s): English Issue: 8/2020

The conference Trajectories of Romani Migrations and Mobilities in Europe and Beyond (1945–present) was held in Villa Lanna in Prague on 16–18 September 2019. It examined multiple dimensions of Romani mobilities since 1945 and analyzed connections between forms of past mobilities and migrations and the most recent movements of various Romani groupings. It was intended as a response to a lack of reflection in the emerging field of Romani migration and mobilities studies on historical continuities and social trajectories. The conference pointed to the need for more comparative, intersectional and historically rooted research.

More...
Jozef Tiso pohledem polského historika a diplomata

Jozef Tiso pohledem polského historika a diplomata

Author(s): Aleš Černý / Language(s): Czech Issue: 1/2022

The subject of the review is a biography of the Slovak Catholic priest and politician Jozef Tiso (1887–1947). Tiso was the head of the independent Slovak Republic from 1939 to 1945 under the patronage of Nazi Germany and was executed as a collaborator in April 1947, following a judgment of the National Court in Bratislava. The book "Kněz prezidentem: Slovensko Jozefa Tisa" [Priest as President: Jozef Tiso’s Slovakia] is a translation of the Polish original "Słowacja księdza-prezydenta: Jozef Tiso 1887–1947" (Kraków, Znak 2015). Its author, Andrzej Krawczyk, is a Polish historian and diplomat, the former ambassador to the Czech Republic and then to Slovakia. The reviewer criticizes the publication for its factual shortcomings but sees its contribution in its new perspectives and interesting questions as well as in its very readable presentation. In the reviewer’s opinion, the author is well versed in the modern history of the territory of the former Czechoslovakia and does not deviate from the role of an unbiased observer. In the dispute between Tiso’s historical apologists and critical biographers, however, Krawczyk is much closer to the latter group. He considers the first Slovak president to be a moderate conservative politician looking for a compromise, but also gives evidence of Tiso’s anti-Semitism, his responsibility for the alliance with Nazi Germany, and of his conscious participation in the Holocaust of Slovak Jews.

More...
Nová Tisova biografia nedosahuje úroveň dnešného historického poznania

Nová Tisova biografia nedosahuje úroveň dnešného historického poznania

Author(s): Miloslav Szabó / Language(s): Slovak Issue: 1/2022

The subject of the review is a biography of the Slovak Catholic priest and politician Jozef Tiso (1887–1947). Tiso was the head of the independent Slovak Republic from 1939 to 1945 under the patronage of Nazi Germany and was executed as a collaborator in April 1947, following a judgment of the National Court in Bratislava. The book "Kněz prezidentem: Slovensko Jozefa Tisa" [Priest as President: Jozef Tiso’s Slovakia] is a translation of the Polish original "Słowacja księdza-prezydenta: Jozef Tiso 1887–1947" (Kraków, Znak 2015). Its author, Andrzej Krawczyk, is a Polish historian and diplomat, the former ambassador to the Czech Republic and then to Slovakia. According to the reviewer, the attempt to show the personality of Jozef Tiso in an objective light, without demonizing or praising him, is sincere and sympathetic, but unfortunately the author contributes almost no new findings to our understanding of Tiso. Moreover, the terminological ambiguity prevents him from grasping the dynamics of Tiso’s ideological development. The book includes several factual errors and some contradictions, which cannot be justified even by the fact that this is not a scholarly study, but rather a popular publication intended for a foreign audience.

More...
Pokus o objektívny pohľad na Jozefa Tisa

Pokus o objektívny pohľad na Jozefa Tisa

Author(s): Michaela Lenčéšová / Language(s): Slovak Issue: 1/2022

The book "Kněz prezidentem: Slovensko Jozefa Tisa" [Priest as President: Jozef Tiso’s Slovakia] is a translation of the Polish original "Słowacja księdza-prezydenta: Jozef Tiso 1887–1947" (Kraków, Znak 2015). Its author, Andrzej Krawczyk, is a Polish historian and diplomat, the former ambassador to the Czech Republic and then to Slovakia. According to the reviewer, the book has a rather compilatory character, as it is based mainly on published sources and contains some outdated and now obsolete theses. When Krawczyk stresses Tiso’s pragmatism, his search for compromises and moderation when compared with local fascist radicals, he wrongly assumes that this meant that Tiso did not try to link Catholicism with Nazism. In his quest for objectivity, the author often, but not very successfully, puts himself in the role of an arbiter in the dispute among Slovak historians over the interpretation of certain events and burdens his work with moralizing judgements that do not promote historical understanding.

More...
Američtí zachránci ve stínu Nicholase Wintona

Američtí zachránci ve stínu Nicholase Wintona

Author(s): Radovan Lovčí / Language(s): Czech Issue: 1/2022

The heroes of the book "Vzdorovali nacistům: Sharpovi a jejich válka", originally published in English as "Defying the Nazis: The Sharps’ War" (Boston, Beacon Press 2016), are the Unitarian reverend Waitstill Sharp (1902–1985) and his wife, Martha Sharp (1905–1999) of Massachusetts. Both received outstanding credit for humanitarian missions commissioned by the American Unitarians to provide asylum, on the eve of and during the Second World War, to those at risk in the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia and Vichy France. The author of the book is the American publicist and documentary filmmaker Artemis Jukowsky, the Sharps’ grandson. In his biography he concludes that his grandparents saved at least 125 lives and significantly helped hundreds of others at risk. Jukowsky uncovers in a popular and readable style a fascinating story that remains in the shadow of Sir Nicholas Winton’s famed rescue mission, but much remains unsaid of the post-war fate of the Sharps and the story of their private lives.

More...
Orte und Opfer der NS-Militärgerichtsbarkeit in Wien. Simon Wiesenthal, Deserteure und deren Rehabilitierung: Bericht über einen Stadtrundgang mit Podiumsdiskussion

Orte und Opfer der NS-Militärgerichtsbarkeit in Wien. Simon Wiesenthal, Deserteure und deren Rehabilitierung: Bericht über einen Stadtrundgang mit Podiumsdiskussion

Author(s): Mathias Lichtenwagner,Philipp Rohrbach / Language(s): German Issue: 2/2022

Am 21. Oktober 2009 beschloss der Nationalrat mit den Stimmen von Grünen, ÖVP und SPÖ ein Gesetz, mit dem Wehrmachtsdeserteure und andere Opfer der NS-Militärjustiz pauschal rehabilitiert wurden. Dafür waren gesellschaftliche und politische Debatten ausschlaggebend, die in den späten 1990er-Jahren ihren Ausgang nahmen, eine umfassende gesellschaftliche Diskussion über die NS-Militärgerichtsbarkeit und ihre Opfer anregten und neben der Rehabilitierung auch in der 2014 erfolgten Errichtung des Denkmals für die Verfolgten der NS-Militärjustiz am Wiener Ballhausplatz mündeten. Bei einem gemeinsam organisierten Stadtrundgang wollten sich das Wiener Wiesenthal Institut für Holocaust-Studien (VWI) und das Personenkomitee „Gerechtigkeit für die Opfer der NS-Militärjustiz“ (PK) den Orten nationalsozialistischer Militärgerichtsbarkeit in Wien widmen: Wo waren die Orte der Verfolgung, wo wurden Todesurteile und Folterungen angeordnet, wie wird vor Ort daran erinnert? Des Weiteren wollten die Organisatoren im Rahmen des Rundgangs der Frage nachgehen, wie Simon Wiesenthal, der zeitlebens einen Blick auf ‚andere‘ Opfergruppen abseits politischer und rassistischer Verfolgung hatte, zu Deserteuren und deren Rehabilitierung stand.

More...
The Tale of the Jew. The Codes of Post-World War Two Antisemitism in Hungary (1944–1946)

The Tale of the Jew. The Codes of Post-World War Two Antisemitism in Hungary (1944–1946)

Author(s): Péter Apor / Language(s): English Issue: 2/2022

This article focuses on the themes and tropes of the antisemitic imagination in the immediate post-World War Two period in Hungary. It argues that, during this period, the notion of the “Jew” represented a malleable identity that encapsulated qualities and modes of behavior which industrial and agricultural workers attached to the definitions of their alleged enemies. The article first explores how debates of property restitution framed the struggle for material survival in the countryside as an essentially Christian-Jewish conflict and, hence, affirmed the idea of discernible “Jewish” interests and a “Jewish” social class. Second, it follows the perceptions of material conflicts and interprets the rumours against surviving Jewish communities which were accused of kidnapping Christian children to allegedly make sausages out of them, which was the most common form of antisemitic accusation during the immediate post-war months. Second, the article argues that these accusations framed by notions of food and nutrition were tales that metaphorically encapsulated popular perceptions of the Jews. The Jews in these stories acted as shortcuts to the broader social category of privileged and better-off groups. Third, the article highlights how the belief that Jews were wealthier than others had been crafted in the interwar period and particularly during the war. As the article points out, the politics of discrimination were stimulated by a desire to discover and acquire “Jewish wealth”, which was a central theme of the contemporary anti-Semitic imagination. Nonetheless, as the article argues, “Jewish wealth” was the product of ghettoisation and of institutionalised robbery, which garnered petty property from deported Jewish citizens together and, thus, rendered the previously only imaginary “Jewish treasures” visible.

More...
Under Nichifor Crainic’s Mantle: Far-Right Topics in the Orthodox Clergymen’s Contributions to Gândirea, Calendarul, and Sfarmă-Piatră
5.00 €
Preview

Under Nichifor Crainic’s Mantle: Far-Right Topics in the Orthodox Clergymen’s Contributions to Gândirea, Calendarul, and Sfarmă-Piatră

Author(s): Nicolae Drăguşin / Language(s): English Issue: 15/2022

Using as a primary source articles written by clergymen of the Romanian Orthodox Church in the press sponsored by Nichifor Crainic, the present study aims at exploring Crainic’s status as a mentor for a certain part of the Romanian Orthodox clergy. This will be done by inventorying the articles written by Orthodox clergymen in these publications and the themes they addressed, and also by analyzing the overlap of themes specific to far-right rhetoric with the broader register of Crainic’s ideological conception. Finally, the study will show that Nichifor Crainic exercised a significant influence on a significant part of the Orthodox priesthood (the most notable being Fr. Dumitru Stăniloae), although relations with the upper hierarchy (except for Metropolitan Nicolae Bălan) where not always cordial and by no means simple. The study does not claim to be exhaustive, because the research purpose can be extended to the case of lay professors of theology and also be supplemented with the use of primary sources other than those strictly relating to the journalistic activity of the clergy.

More...
George R. Mastroianni, Of Mind and Murder: Toward a More Comprehensive Psychology of the Holocaust
4.50 €
Preview

George R. Mastroianni, Of Mind and Murder: Toward a More Comprehensive Psychology of the Holocaust

Author(s): Karina El Sayegh / Language(s): English Issue: 15/2022

Review of: George R. Mastroianni Of Mind and Murder: Toward a More Comprehensive Psychology of the Holocaust Oxford University Press, New York, 2019, 418 pp.

More...
Jacek Nowak, Sławomir Kapralski, Dariusz Niedźwiedzki: On the Banality of Forgetting. Tracing the Memory of Jewish Culture in Poland

Jacek Nowak, Sławomir Kapralski, Dariusz Niedźwiedzki: On the Banality of Forgetting. Tracing the Memory of Jewish Culture in Poland

Author(s): Klaus-Peter Friedrich / Language(s): German Issue: 4/2022

Review of: Jacek Nowak, Sławomir Kapralski, Dariusz Niedźwiedzki: On the Banality of Forgetting. Tracing the Memory of Jewish Culture in Poland. (Studies in Jewish History and Memory, Bd. 9.) Peter Lang. Berlin u. a. 2018. 273 S. ISBN 978-3-631-74142-9. (€ 59,95.)

More...
Biographies of Belonging in the Holocaust
20.00 €
Preview

Biographies of Belonging in the Holocaust

Author(s): Natalia Aleksiun,Hana Kubátová / Language(s): English Issue: 01/2023

This introduction highlights the analytical potential of “belonging” for those studying the social processes of Jewish exclusion in the Holocaust. It does so by proposing a tripartite definition of “belonging,” one that bridges emotions, everyday practices, and generational memory. Offering a close reading of diaries, memoirs, memorial books, testimonies, trial records, oral interviews, and individual and group chronicles, articles included in this special section capture the experiences of those who have been rejected from historically multiethnic and multireligious communities and the ways in which this process took place at the time and was narrated later. By examining physical and symbolic encounters between individuals and groups, we show how those at the margins negotiated and expressed their changing place in the broader community, how they interpreted and appropriated social engineering by the regime, and how they responded to their categorization by neighbors and the authorities which ultimately marked them for murder. The advantage of this approach lies in inviting and enabling comparison, and in its relevance for individuals and groups that were either included in or excluded from the locally redrawn categories of “national communities.”

More...
Home as an Uncanny Site of Violence in Polish-Jewish Autobiographical Texts on the Holocaust
20.00 €
Preview

Home as an Uncanny Site of Violence in Polish-Jewish Autobiographical Texts on the Holocaust

Author(s): Natalia Aleksiun,Karolina Szymaniak / Language(s): English Issue: 01/2023

Autobiographies frequently feature the author’s understanding of home as an anchoring ground for the creation of the self. While home in such texts often invokes childhood and family, in the context of Jewish life in twentieth-century Eastern Europe, home became a complex site with a double function. Because the German authorities targeted Jewish material culture early in World War II, the destruction of communal buildings and family dwellings was unavoidable; for many, it was the first encounter with what would become the Nazi project to murder the Jews of Europe. We argue that home in Jewish wartime autobiographical texts is made to signify both a nostalgic longing for the place and objects that represent intimacy, shelter, and belonging, and at the same time, a marker of profound losses. We trace this double meaning of home by analyzing a range of Polish-Jewish ego-documents from the 1940s. Through this analysis, we show that home’s double function allowed the authors to inhabit (textually) a place of memory, asserting a claim to a prewar life with its own specific material culture, while also depicting a haunted emptiness that stands in for other losses that the writer cannot represent through language. To develop this elaboration of home’s function in the texts, we draw on and expand the concept of domicide, which identifies the loss of home as a specific type of violence. We conclude that the impact of anti-Jewish violence on the self is expressed through memory and uncanny hauntings of material culture.

More...
Terror in Przedbórz: The Night of 26 May 1945
20.00 €
Preview

Terror in Przedbórz: The Night of 26 May 1945

Author(s): Joanna Tokarska-Bakir / Language(s): English Issue: 01/2023

This article reconstructs the events leading up to the killing, on the night of 26 May and early morning of 27 May 1945, of Jewish survivors who returned to their home town of Przedbórz near Radomsko after they had survived the Holocaust. This careful examination rests on both oral witness accounts and written sources, including interrogations and trial records, deposited at the Institute of National Remembrance, Poland. It examines one of the earliest anti-Jewish attacks in Poland after World War II and the events that followed to propose a new interpretation of postwar anti-Jewish violence. In doing so, this article sheds new light on how collective violence affects communal belonging, directly after the events and decades later.

More...
"Nie ma Ojczyzny , gdzie jest krzywda ludzka". Problematyka żydowska w biografii i twórczości Emila Zegadłowicza
4.50 €
Preview

"Nie ma Ojczyzny , gdzie jest krzywda ludzka". Problematyka żydowska w biografii i twórczości Emila Zegadłowicza

Author(s): Mirosław Wójcik / Language(s): Polish Issue: 9/2005

Problematyka żydowska obecna była w życiu i twórczości Emila Zegadłowicza na różnych płaszczyznach. Artykuł prof. Mirosława Wójcika jest próbą naszkicowania najistotniejszych wymiarów zainteresowań okazywanych przez pisarza z Gorzenia losowi wadowickich i ogólnie polskich Żydów. Kulminacją tej wyjątkowej relacji jest nieukończony dramat poświęcony problematyce martyrologii Żydów pt. "Sind Sie Jude?".

More...
Tradition, Nationalism and Holocaust Memory: Reassessing Antisemitism in Post-Communist Romania

Tradition, Nationalism and Holocaust Memory: Reassessing Antisemitism in Post-Communist Romania

Author(s): Valeria Chelaru / Language(s): English Issue: 2/2022

This article is a re-evaluation of the Holocaust memory in the contemporary Romanian society. It shows that from its inception Romania’s nation-building process went hand in hand with antisemitism. Furthermore, it points out that after 1989 the country’s sense of frustration at its communist past managed to obscure the memory of the Holocaust. Despite Romania’s government recognition of the country’s involvement in the Holocaust (2004), a wholehearted acknowledgement of the issue remains improbable at the general level of Romania’s society. A new law meant to counteract Holocaust denial was adopted in Romania in 2015. However, the country has proved ever since that it has barely come to terms with its historical legacy.

More...
The Violence of Being. The Holocaust in the Philosophy of Emmanuel Levinas

The Violence of Being. The Holocaust in the Philosophy of Emmanuel Levinas

Author(s): Didier Pollefeyt / Language(s): English Issue: Suppl./2022

This contribution shows how the Jewish philosopher Emmanuel Levinas has been confronted autobiographically with National-Socialism (1933-1945) and how his personal experience and the experience of the Jewish people under Hitlerism were translated in his philosophical understanding of ‘being’ as ‘il y a’ (in English: ‘there is’). The Holocaust provides a unique negative point of entry to understand Levinas’ ontological category which is as such not understandable since in the il y a, there is no longer a subject that stands before the objectivity of reality. On the contrary, the il y a is exactly the category that expresses a situation where the subject itself has no longer the ‘right’ to exist as such but still does not stop to exist. This violence of being is exactly what Hitlerism wanted to do in creating the Holocaust and submitting the Jewish people to it. This makes understandable how the whole philosophy of Levinas is an effort to overcome the il y a through a moral answer to the Holocaust.

More...
Vzkaz v láhvi: Paul Celan a Martin Heidegger

Vzkaz v láhvi: Paul Celan a Martin Heidegger

Author(s): Ivan Blecha / Language(s): Czech Issue: 1/2023

The article deals with the problematic relationship between Paul Celan and Martin Heidegger. The two knew and respected each other intellectually, but the obstacle in their relationship was Heidegger’s involvement in the Nazi movement, which was unacceptable to Celan as a direct witness to the Holocaust. The main difference between them was in their view of the role of language: Heidegger wanted to use ‘poetic’ thought to overcome the crisis of metaphysics and reformulate the question of being, while Celan to give a voice to all the martyred. Though Celan never succeeded in getting Heidegger to apologize in any way for his involvement with the Nazis, his moral superiority – both in his thought world and during their mutual encounters – is obvious.

More...
Korczakowska spuścizna – między znakiem Holokaustu a prawami dziecka

Korczakowska spuścizna – między znakiem Holokaustu a prawami dziecka

Author(s): Barbara Smolińska-Theiss / Language(s): Polish Issue: 2/2021

The legacy of Janusz Korczak continues to attract attention of various social and academic circles. It is interpreted differently by historians, educators and writers. Social research methodologists associate this process with the deconstruction of the existing narratives and the construction of new approach. They do not bring new facts or events but give a new meaning to achievements instead. Thera are two images of Janusz Korczak’s work which dominate in the public space. First one is the Perspective of the Holocaust, which underline personal sign of heroism against the inhuman world that was the Warsaw ghetto. The second perspective show Korczak as a teacher, discoverer and researcher of children and childhood. He is a charismatic educator, Master, defender, and informal advocate for the rights of children.

More...
Result 1421-1440 of 2005
  • Prev
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • ...
  • 71
  • 72
  • 73
  • ...
  • 99
  • 100
  • 101
  • Next

About

CEEOL is a leading provider of academic eJournals, eBooks and Grey Literature documents in Humanities and Social Sciences from and about Central, East and Southeast Europe. In the rapidly changing digital sphere CEEOL is a reliable source of adjusting expertise trusted by scholars, researchers, publishers, and librarians. CEEOL offers various services to subscribing institutions and their patrons to make access to its content as easy as possible. CEEOL supports publishers to reach new audiences and disseminate the scientific achievements to a broad readership worldwide. Un-affiliated scholars have the possibility to access the repository by creating their personal user account.

Contact Us

Central and Eastern European Online Library GmbH
Basaltstrasse 9
60487 Frankfurt am Main
Germany
Amtsgericht Frankfurt am Main HRB 102056
VAT number: DE300273105
Phone: +49 (0)69-20026820
Email: info@ceeol.com

Connect with CEEOL

  • Join our Facebook page
  • Follow us on Twitter
CEEOL Logo Footer
2025 © CEEOL. ALL Rights Reserved. Privacy Policy | Terms & Conditions of use | Accessibility
ver2.0.428
Toggle Accessibility Mode

Login CEEOL

{{forgottenPasswordMessage.Message}}

Enter your Username (Email) below.

Institutional Login