The Holocaust EncyclopediaYale University Press, 1 בינו׳ 2001 - 765 עמודים The Holocaust has been the subject of countless books, works of art, and memorials. Fiftyfive years after the fact the world still ponders the enormity of this disaster. The Holocaust Encylopedia is the only comprehensive single-volume work of reference providing both a reflective overview of the subject and abundant detail concerning major events, policy, decisions, cities, and individuals, Up-to-date and designed for easy access, the encyclopedia presents information on the major aspects of the Holocaust in essays by scholars from eleven countries who draw on a number of sources - including recently uncovered evidence from the former Soviet bloc - to provide in-depth studies on the political, social, religious, and moral issues of the Holocaust as well as short entries identifying events, sites, and individuals. The book also has more than 250 photographs, many of them rare, and 19 maps. The volume includes: Raul Hilberg on concentration camps and Gypsies; Ruth Bondy, Israel Gutman, and Dina Porat on major ghettoes; Roger Greenspun on the Holocaust in cinema and television; Richard Breitman on American policy; Michael Berenbaum on theological and philosophical responses; Saul Friedlander on Nazi policy; Michael Hagemeister on the Protocols of the Elders of Zion; Michael R. Marrus on historiography; Christopher R. Browning on the Madagascar Plan; Robert S. Wistrich on Holocaust denial; James E. Young on Holocaust literature; |
תוכן
I | 323 |
J | 341 |
K | 379 |
L | 393 |
M | 407 |
N | 427 |
O | 457 |
Y | 697 |
Z | 715 |
Bibliographical Essay | 721 |
Contributors | 737 |
Credits | 743 |
Index | 751 |
מהדורות אחרות - הצג הכל
The Holocaust Encyclopedia <span dir=ltr>Walter Laqueur</span>,<span dir=ltr>Judith Tydor Baumel</span> אין תצוגה מקדימה זמינה - 2001 |
מונחים וביטויים נפוצים
activities Adolf Aliyah Allied American anti-Jewish antisemitism April army Aryan August Auschwitz became Belzec Berlin British Bulgarian collaboration Committee Communist concentration camps countries cultural deportation Eastern Europe economic Eichmann Einsatzgruppen emigration established European Jews extermination camps fascist Final Solution forced labor foreign France French gas chambers gassing German Gestapo groups Gypsies Himmler Hitler Holocaust Hungarian Hungary immigration inmates Israel January Jewish Agency Jewish community Jewish population Jewish property Jewish refugees Jewry Jews Judenrat July June killed leaders liberation Lodz Majdanek March mass murder ment military million Mischlinge Nazi Nazi Germany November Nuremberg occupied October Office operation organizations Palestine partisans party persecution pogrom Poland Polish political prisoners protest racial regime Reich rescue resistance Romanian sent September Slovakia Soviet Union survived survivors territory Theresienstadt thousands tion Transnistria Treblinka underground United Vichy victims Vilna Warsaw ghetto World Yishuv Zionist