Beyond "Ordinary men" : : Christopher R. Browning and Holocaust historiography / / Thomas Pegelow Kaplan, Jürgen Matthäus, Mark W. Hornburg (eds.).

Reflecting on the work of one of the field's most influential scholars, the twenty essays in this book explore the evolution and application of Holocaust historiography, identify key insights into genocidal settings and point to gaps in our knowledge of humanity's most haunting problem.Why...

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Place / Publishing House:Paderborn : : Ferdinand Schöningh, Brill Deutschland,, [2019]
©2019
Year of Publication:2019
Language:English
Physical Description:1 online resource (xii, 335 pages) :; illustrations
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Other title:Front Matter --
Copyright page --
Illustrations --
Foreword /
Introduction /
Ordinary Men, Ordinary Women: Perpetrator Research Reconsidered --
Ordinary Men and the Women in Their Shadows: Gender Issues in the Holocaust Scholarship of Christopher R. Browning /
“Ordinary Drinkers” and Ordinary “Males”? Alcohol, Masculinity, and Atrocity in the Holocaust /
“Ordinary Christians” in Nazi Germany /
The Perpetrators of the November 1938 Pogrom through German-Jewish Eyes /
Contexts of Agency and the Holocaust --
Exploitation and Extermination: Jewish Slave Labour on the Baltic Coast, 1941-19431 /
“Palästina-Austausch”: Jewish Emigration from Europe to Palestine during the Final Solution /
More than Helpers: Women’s Roles in “Communities of Rescue” in the Bohemian Lands, 1938-1939 /
Lutétia: A Luxury Hotel in Paris Meets the Holocaust /
Interpreting Ideology and Social Practice --
Nazi Plans for Addressing the Jewish Problem: From “Fringe Irritant” (1929) to the “Machtergreifung” (1933) /
The Nazi Glorification of Death and Denigration of Suffering /
What Remains of “the Banality of Evil”? /
The Historian and the Public --
The Universalisation of the Holocaust as a Moral Standard /
History of Society and Holocaust Research: Thoughts on a Tenuous Relationship /
The Three-Legged Antisemitic Stool of Holocaust Denial: Illogic, Wilful Distortions, and Camouflaged Discourse1 /
Police, History, Responsibility: The Impact of Ordinary Men on the Perpetration Debate at German Memorial Sites and in Current Police Training /
Sources and Their Readings --
The “Euthanasia” Murders Archive: Confronting the New Findings /
Depicting “Ordinary Men”: Browning, Goldhagen, and the Historiographic Use of Perpetrator Photographs /
Unravelling Janowska: Excavating an Understudied Camp through Spatial Testimonies /
Particularist and Universalist Interpretations of the Holocaust: A Complex Relationship /
Ordinary Men and Beyond: Reflections on an Historiographical Journey /
Back Matter --
List of Publications by Christopher R. Browning --
About the Contributors --
Index.
Summary:Reflecting on the work of one of the field's most influential scholars, the twenty essays in this book explore the evolution and application of Holocaust historiography, identify key insights into genocidal settings and point to gaps in our knowledge of humanity's most haunting problem.Why do they kill?The publication in 1992 of Christopher R. Browning's "Ordinary Men" raised crucial, previously unasked questions about the Holocaust: what made the members of a German police battalion - "middle-aged family men of working- and lower-class background" - become mass murderers of Jewish children, women, and men? How does motivation tie in with other factors that prompt participation in the "final solution"? And what can survivor accounts convey about genocide perpetration? Reflecting on the work of one of the field's most influential scholars, the twenty essays in this book explore the evolution and application of Holocaust historiography, identify key insights into genocidal settings and point to gaps in our knowledge of humanity's most haunting problem.
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN:365779266X
9783657792665
Hierarchical level:Monograph
Statement of Responsibility: Thomas Pegelow Kaplan, Jürgen Matthäus, Mark W. Hornburg (eds.).