Survivors of Nazi persecution in Europe after the Second World War

Titel: Survivors of Nazi persecution in Europe after the Second World War / ed. by David Cesarani ...
Beteiligt:
Veröffentlicht: London : Vallentine Mitchell, 2010
Umfang: XII, 236 Seiten ; 24 cm
Format: Buch
Sprache: Englisch
Schriftenreihe/
mehrbändiges Werk:
Landscapes after battle ; 1
RVK-Notation:
Schlagworte:
ISBN: 9780853039020
  • List of Illustrations
  • p. vii
  • list of Contributors
  • p. ix
  • Preface
  • p. xiii
  • Acknowledgements
  • p. xv
  • Introduction
  • p. 1
  • Part 1
  • Identifying The Survivors
  • 1
  • Jewish Survivors, Displaced Persons and Germans in British Eyes
  • p. 15
  • 2
  • 'Please report only true nationalities': The Classification of Displaced Persons in Post-Second World War Germany and its Implications
  • p. 35
  • 3
  • From Illustrations to Sources: A Survey of Photographs of and about Displaced Persons
  • p. 54
  • Part 2
  • Receptions and Resentments
  • 4
  • Minorities, Violence and the Establishment of Communist Rule in Poland
  • p. 71
  • 5
  • Returning Home after Forced Labour in the Reich: The Example of the French of Service du Travail Obligatoire
  • p. 91
  • 6
  • Roles and Merits of the Polish Association of Ex-Political Prisoners of German Prisons and Concentration Camps: Polish Survivors in Great Britain
  • p. 109
  • 7
  • Surviving Behemoth's Fury Inside the Cage: Stephan Prager, Philipp Rappaport and Others in the Years Before and After 1945
  • p. 126
  • Part 3
  • The Post-War Worlds of Women and Children
  • 8
  • Lost Homelands and Reconstructed Homes: Gender and Displacement in Post-War Germany
  • p. 149
  • 9
  • German Women from the Pinzgau (Salzburg) as Victims of Nazi Racial Politics
  • p. 162
  • 10
  • Dealing with Survivor Youth in West European Jewish Communities After the War
  • p. 181
  • 11
  • Between Worlds: The Submerged Narratives of Soviet Child Survivors of the Holocaust
  • p. 198
  • 12
  • 'It Wasn't That Bad in the Ghetto, was it?': Living on in the USSR After the Nazi Genocide
  • p. 218