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Tables of Contents for The Holocaust
Chapter/Section Title
Page #
Page Count
VOLUME I HITLER, NAZISM, AND THE 'RACIAL STATE'
Acknowledgements
xvii
 
Chronological table
xix
 
Abbreviations
xxix
 
General Introduction
1
10
Introduction to Volume I
11
8
PART 1 Anti-semitism and racism in German society
19
72
1 Antisemitism, the Holocaust, and reinterpretations of National Socialism
21
29
OMER BARTOV
2 Solving the "Jewish Problem": continuity and change in German antisemitism, 1871-1945
50
41
DONALD L. NIEWYCK
PART 2 Hitler, Nazism, and the 'racial state'
91
112
3 The genesis of the "Final Solution" from the spirit of science
93
19
DETLEV J.K. PEUKERT
4 Psychiatry, German society and the Nazi 'euthanasia' programme
112
18
MICHAEL BURLEIGH
5 Gypsies and Jews under the Nazis
130
22
GUENTER LEWY
6 Ideological legitimization and political practice of the leadership of the National Socialist secret police
152
12
ULRICH HERBERT
7 Working towards the Fuhrer': reflections on the nature of the Hitler dictatorship
164
19
IAN KERSHAW
8 Hitler and the pogrom of November 9-10, 1938
183
20
STEFAN KLEP
PART 3 Anti-Jewish policy and German Jewish responses
203
 
9 Before the "Final Solution": the Judenpolitik of the SD, 1935-1938
205
34
MICHAEL WILDT
10 The development of Nazi policy towards the German-Jewish "Mischlinge" 1933-1945
239
73
JEREMY NOAKES
11 The German Council of Municipalities (Deutscher Gemeindetag) and the coordination of anti-Jewish local politics in the Nazi state
312
30
WOLF GRUNER
12 Catholics, Protestants, and Christian antisemitism in Nazi Germany
342
20
DORIS L. BERGEN
13 Jewish self-defense under the constraints of National Socialism: the final years of the Centralverein
362
17
DANIEL FRAENKEL
14 Keeping calm and weathering the storm: Jewish women's responses to dally life in Nazi Germany, 1933-1939
379
 
MARION KAPLAN
VOLUME II FROM THE PERSECUTION OF THE JEWS TO MASS MURDER
Acknowledgements
vii
 
Introduction to Volume II
1
10
PART 1 The despoliation and destruction of German and Austrian Jewry
11
126
15 The beneficiaries of "Aryanization": Hamburg as a case study
13
21
FRANK BAJOHR
16 Expediting expropriation and expulsion: the impact of the "Vienna Model" on anti-Jewish policies in Nazi Germany, 1938
34
25
HANS SAFRIAN
17 Forced labour of German Jews In Nazi Germany
59
23
KONRAD KWIET
18 Poverty and persecution: the Reichsvereinigung, the Jewish population, and anti-Jewish policy in the Nazi state, 1939-1945
82
28
WOLF GRUNER
19 In the shadow of Auschwitz. The murder of the Jews of East Upper Silesia
110
27
SYBILLE STEINBACHER
PART 2 The Nazi assault on the Jews of Poland
137
102
20 The economics of the Final Solution: a case study from the General Government
139
42
GÖTZ ALY AND SUSANNE HEIM
21 The origins of "Operation Reinhard": the decision-making process for the mass murder of the Jews in the Generalgouvernement
181
30
BOGDAN MUSIAL
22 Jewish workers in Poland. Self-maintenance, exploitation, destruction
211
28
CHRISTOPHER BROWNING
PART 3 Local initiatives, 'ethnic cleansing', and regional genocides
239
 
23 The extermination of the Jews in Serbia
241
21
WALTER MANOSCHEK
24 The war and the killing of the Lithuanian Jews
262
33
CHRISTOPH DIECKMANN
25 German economic interests, occupation policy, and the murder of the Jews in Belorussia, 1941/43
295
27
CHRISTIAN GERLACH
26 Improvised genocide? The emergence of the 'Final Solution' in the 'Warthegau'
322
29
IAN KERSHAW
27 From "ethnic cleansing" to genocide to the "Final Solution": the evolution of Nazi Jewish policy, 1939-1941
351
 
CHRISTOPHER BROWNING
VOLUME III THE 'FINAL SOLUTION'
Acknowledgements
ix
 
Introduction to Volume III
1
12
PART 1 Central decisions for a European-wide genocide against the Jews
13
168
28 Forced emigration, war, deportation and Holocaust
15
22
GÖTZ ALY AND SUSANNE HEIM
29 Two decisions concerning the "Final Solution to the Jewish Question": deportations to Lodz and mass murder in Chelmno
37
29
PETER WITTE
30 The Wannsee Conference, the fate of German Jews, and Hitler's decision in principle to exterminate all European Jews
66
55
CHRISTIAN GERLACH
31 The Wannsee Conference in the development of the 'Final Solution'
121
33
PETER LONGERICH
32 Nazi policy: decisions for the Final Solution
154
27
CHRISTOPHER BROWNING
PART 2 Implementing genocide: individuals and agencies
181
118
33 Killing fields. The Wehrmacht and the Holocaust in Belorussia, 1941-1942
183
23
HANNES HEER
34 What about the "ordinary men"? The German order police and the Holocaust in the occupied Soviet Union
206
17
JURGEN MATTHAUS
35 Malice in action
223
31
YAACOV LOZOWICK
36 The German military command in Paris and the deportation of the French Jews
254
31
ULRICH HERBERT
37 A public enterprise in the service of mass murder: the Deutsche Reichsbahn and the Holocaust
285
14
ALFRED C. MIERZEJEWSKI
PART 3 Killing fields, death camps
299
72
38 The murder of Jews in the General Government
301
19
DIETER POHL
39 Anti-Jewish policy and the murder of the Jews in the district of Galicia 1941/42
320
22
THOMAS SANDKUHLER
40 Belzec - the 'Forgotten' death camp
342
14
ROVIN O'NEIL
41 The number of victims
356
15
FRANCISZEK PIPER
PART 4 The profits of genocide: plunder and exploitation
371
102
42 State policy and corporate involvement in the Holocaust
373
27
PETER HAYES
43 Plunder of Jewish property in the Nazi-occupied areas of the Soviet Union
400
30
YITZHAK ARAD
44 The banality of evil reconsidered: SS mid-level managers of extermination through work
430
43
MICHAEL THAD ALLEN
PART 5 Allies and collaborators In genocide
473
 
45 The Holocaust in Romania: the Iasi Pogrom of June 1941
475
35
RADU IOANID
46 The German Gendarmerie, the Ukrainian Schutzmannschaft and the Second Wave' of Jewish killings in the occupied Ukraine: German policing at the local level in the Zhitomir region, 1941-1944
510
27
MARTIN C. DEAN
47 The Amsterdam police and the persecution of the Jews
537
20
GUUS MEERSHOEK
48 "The exception of Salonika": bystanders and collaborators in Northern Greece
557
 
ANDREW APOSTOLOU
VOLUME IV JEWISH CONFRONTATIONS WITH PERSECUTION AND MASS MURDER
Acknowledgements
vii
 
Introduction to Volume IV
1
10
PART 1 Jewish reactions to Nazi terror: flight, accommodation, defiance
11
194
49 Jewish leadership and Jewish resistance
13
19
ARNOLD PAUCKER AND KONRAD KWIET
50 The death of Adam Czerniakow and Janusz Korczak's last journey
32
29
JERZY LEWINSKI
51 How the Jewish police in the Kovno ghetto saw itself
61
38
DOV LEVIN
52 The demography of Jews in hiding in Warsaw, 1943-1945
99
27
GUNNAR S. PAULSSON
53 Escape and evacuation of Soviet Jews at the time of the Nazi invasion: policies and realities
126
25
MORDECHAI ALTSHULER
54 From underground to armed struggle: the resistance movement in the Bialystok ghetto
151
20
SARAH BENDER
55 Life in the ghettos of Transnistria
171
34
DALIA OFER
PART 2 Jewish women, children, and the family in the face of genocide
205
68
56 Cohesion and rupture: the Jewish family in East European ghettos during the Holocaust
207
28
DALIA OFER
57 The status and plight of women in the Lodz ghetto
235
17
MICHAL UNGER
58 Women in the forced-labour camps
252
21
FELICJA KARAY
PART 3 The response of Jews in the 'free world'
273
 
59 Was there communal failure among American Jews?
275
18
HENRY FEINGOLD
60 On a mission against all odds: Samuel Zygelbojm in London (April 1942-May 1943)
293
28
DANIEL BLATMAN
61 Enmity, indifference or cooperation: the Allies and Yishuv's rescue activists
321
 
DALIA OFER
VOLUME V RESPONSES TO THE PERSECUTION AND MASS MURDER OF THE JEWS
Acknowledgements
vii
 
Introduction to Volume V
1
8
PART 1 Responses inside Nazi-dominated Europe
9
132
62 The Vatican on racism and antisemitism, 1938-39: a new look at a might-mave-been
11
18
MICHAEL R. MARRUS
63 Beyond condemnation, apologetics and apologies: on the complexity of Polish behavior toward the Jews during the Second World War
29
44
ANTONY POLONSKY
64 The Soviet partisan movement and the Holocaust
73
26
KENNETH SLEPYAN
65 The 'bridge over the Øresund': the historiography on the expulsion of the Jews from Nazi-occupied Denmark
99
29
GUNNAR S. PAULSSON
66 Denmark: a light in the darkness of the Holocaust? A reply to Gunnar S. Paulsson
128
13
HANS KIRCHHOFF
PART 2 The responses of the Allied powers
141
184
67 The Allies and the Holocaust
143
14
GERHARD L. WEINBERG
68 Early news of the Holocaust from Poland
157
28
DARIUSZ STOLA
69 Auschwitz partially decoded
185
10
RICHARD BREITMAN
70 The Royal Air Force and the bombing of Auschwitz: First deliberations, January 1941
195
17
EDWARD B. WESTERMANN
71 Could the Allies have bombed Auschwitz-Birkenau?
212
43
STUART G. ERDHEIM
72 Different worlds. British perceptions of the Final Solution during the Second World War
255
22
TONY KUSHNER
73 Constructing Allied humanitarian policy
277
21
MEREDITH HINDLEY
74 Broadcasting the massacres: an analysis of the BBC's contemporary coverage of the Holocaust
298
27
JEREMY D. HARRIS
PART 3 The responses of neutral and non-belligerent countries
325
 
75 Swiss refugee policy, 1933-45
327
28
GEORG KREIS
76 Portugal, the consuls and the Jewish refugees, 1938-1941
355
25
AVRAHAM MILGRAM
77 'The war is over - now you can go home!' Jewish refugees and the Swedish labour market in the shadow of the Holocaust
380
22
SVEN NORDLUND
78 Bureaucracy, resistance, and the Holocaust. Understanding the success of Swedish diplomacy in Budapest, 1944-1945
402
 
PAUL A. LEVINE
VOLUME VI THE END OF THE 'FINAL SOLUTION' AND ITS AFTERMATHS
Acknowledgements
ix
 
Introduction to Volume VI
1
8
PART 1 The final frenzy, liquidation of the camps, and the death marches
9
84
79 Ghettoization and the Holocaust: Budapest 1944
11
21
TIM COLE AND GRAHAM SMITH
80 The end of the "Final Solution"? Nazi plans to ransom Jews in 1944
32
26
RICHARD BREITMAN AND SHLOMO ARONSON
81 The death marches, January-May 1945: who was responsible for what?
58
35
DANIEL BLATMAN
PART 2 Retribution
93
92
82 British policy towards German crimes against German Jews, 1939-1945
95
34
PRICILLA DALE JONES
83 Britain and the establishment of the United Nations War Crimes Commission
129
29
ARIEH KOCHAVI
84 The Holocaust at Nuremberg
158
27
MICHAEL R. MARRUS
PART 3 The treatment of the survivors
185
82
85 A cold reception: Holocaust survivors in the Netherlands and their return
187
21
DIENKE HONDIUS
86 Victims of genocide and national memory: Belgium, France and the Netherlands, 1945-1965
208
37
PIETER LAGROV
87 Soviet reactions to the Holocaust, 1945-1991
245
22
ZVI GITELMAN
PART 4 Interpretation, historiography, controversy
267
138
88 The extermination of the European Jews in historiography: fifty years later
269
12
SAUL FRIEDLANDER
89 Gender and family studies of the Holocaust: a historiographical overview
281
13
JUDITH TYDOR BAUMEL
90 Surviving memory: truth and inaccuracy in Holocaust testimony
294
17
MARK ROSEMAN
91 Understanding the Jewish dimension of the Holocaust
311
29
DAN MICHMAN
92 The controversy that isn't: the debate over Daniel J. Goldhagen's Hitler's Willing Executioners in comparative perspective
340
29
GAVRIEL D. ROSENFELD
93 The politics of uniqueness: reflections on the recent polemical turn in Holocaust and genocide scholarship
369
36
GAVRIEL D. ROSENFELD
Index
405