The Holocaust has undeniably become a fixture in American culture. What has come to be called the Americanization of the Holocaust is the subject of several recent books, a lively discussion within the American Jewish community, and even a course in American history at the University of Heidelberg. Among the many attempts to document and explain how the Holocaust has been Americanized, perhaps the most ambitious and provocative is Peter Novick\u27s The Holocaust in American Life. The book is ambitious both on account of its chronological breadth, covering the entire period from the Second World War to the present day, as well as on account of the wide range of published and unpublished sources consulted by the author. It is provocative pr...
Gavriel D. Rosenfeld is a contributing author, Deconstructivism and the Holocaust: On the Origins a...
Projecting the Holocaust is a valuable addition to extant scholarship on Holocaust cinema and offers...
A review of: Rethinking the Holocaust by Yehuda Bauer. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2001. 335pp
The Holocaust has undeniably become a fixture in American culture. What has come to be called the A...
This book is a major addition to the small, but growing, body of scholarship about Jewish life in po...
As Hilene Flanzbaum indicates in her important collection of papers, the term 'the Americanization o...
In this elegantly written and nicely designed book, Michael Berkowitz offers the reader a fascinatin...
This article explores how the Americanization of the Holocaust is in part responsible for the paradi...
Drawing on 25 years of research, The Holocaust: A New History offers a new major treatment of the Ho...
The contributions to this volume consider topics such as the immigrant experience in coming to Ameri...
People of the Book is an important contribution to ethnic studies and identity politics. It is a den...
Review of: Boraks-Nemetz, Lillian. The Old Brown Suitcase: A Teenager’s Story of War and Peace. 1994...
America and the Holocaust, Revisited: Notes on the Writing of ... -- The Road to Jewish Nationalism ...
How is it that the Holocaust, which ended more than seven decades ago, still remains such a powerful...
Beyond Auschwitz: Post-Holocaust Jewish Thought in America (Michael L. Morgan) Poetry after Auschwit...
Gavriel D. Rosenfeld is a contributing author, Deconstructivism and the Holocaust: On the Origins a...
Projecting the Holocaust is a valuable addition to extant scholarship on Holocaust cinema and offers...
A review of: Rethinking the Holocaust by Yehuda Bauer. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2001. 335pp
The Holocaust has undeniably become a fixture in American culture. What has come to be called the A...
This book is a major addition to the small, but growing, body of scholarship about Jewish life in po...
As Hilene Flanzbaum indicates in her important collection of papers, the term 'the Americanization o...
In this elegantly written and nicely designed book, Michael Berkowitz offers the reader a fascinatin...
This article explores how the Americanization of the Holocaust is in part responsible for the paradi...
Drawing on 25 years of research, The Holocaust: A New History offers a new major treatment of the Ho...
The contributions to this volume consider topics such as the immigrant experience in coming to Ameri...
People of the Book is an important contribution to ethnic studies and identity politics. It is a den...
Review of: Boraks-Nemetz, Lillian. The Old Brown Suitcase: A Teenager’s Story of War and Peace. 1994...
America and the Holocaust, Revisited: Notes on the Writing of ... -- The Road to Jewish Nationalism ...
How is it that the Holocaust, which ended more than seven decades ago, still remains such a powerful...
Beyond Auschwitz: Post-Holocaust Jewish Thought in America (Michael L. Morgan) Poetry after Auschwit...
Gavriel D. Rosenfeld is a contributing author, Deconstructivism and the Holocaust: On the Origins a...
Projecting the Holocaust is a valuable addition to extant scholarship on Holocaust cinema and offers...
A review of: Rethinking the Holocaust by Yehuda Bauer. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2001. 335pp