Preface: War and Genocide: Race and Space
Chapter 1: Preconditions: Antisemitism, Racism, and Common
Prejudices in Early-Twentieth-Century Europe
Chapter 2: Leadership and Will: Adolf Hitler, the National
Socialist German Workers' Party, and Nazi Ideology
Chapter 3: From Revolution to Routine: Nazi Germany, 1933–1939
Chapter 4: Open Aggression: In Search of War, 1938–1939
Chapter 5: Experiments in Brutality, 1939–1940: War against Poland
and the So-Called Euthanasia Program
Chapter 6: Expansion and Systematization: Exporting War and Terror,
1940–1941
Chapter 7: The Peak Years of Killing: 1942 and 1943
Chapter 8: Death Throes and Killing Frenzies, 1944–1945
Conclusion: The Legacies of Atrocity
Sources and Suggestions for Further Reading
Doris L. Bergen is Chancellor Rose and Ray Wolfe Professor of Holocaust Studies at the University of Toronto.
Doris L. Bergen, professor of Holocaust Studies at the University
of Toronto, has written perhaps the best concise history of the
Holocaust published to date. She provides an accessible and
comprehensive introduction to this complex subject. Writing with
clarity and sensitivity, and based on the latest research, she
places the Holocaust in its historical, cultural, social, and
military contexts. The narrative is powerful and engaging, and the
analysis is balanced and compelling. In this compact volume, fully
illustrated with photographs and maps, Bergen covers all the major
issues surrounding the Holocaust. She discusses not only the
persecution of the Jews, but other groups victimized by the Nazis:
Gypsies, the disabled, Poles, Soviet POWs, homosexuals, and
political opponents of the regime. She also provides firsthand
accounts from perpetrators, victims, and eyewitnesses thus adding
the human dimension of the tragedy that is so often left out of
other textbook treatments of the subject. The book is very
readable, compelling and informative and highly recommended to
expert and novice alike.
*Jewish Book World*
A striking introduction to the complexity of Holocaust
history—precisely because despite being a very short book it does
not in any way attempt to evade the complexity and context for Nazi
violence against Jews. . . . It is an impressive introduction to
the Holocaust which will certainly serve its readers well.
*Shofar: An Interdisciplinary Journal Of Jewish Studies*
A meticulous, sensitive account of the Nazi race wars that combines
a powerful narrative and explanatory drive at the same time as it
illuminates individual lives and fates with searing precision.
While giving full weight to the antisemitic core of Nazi racism,
Bergen also shows why it claimed so many other groups of victims,
and pursues it to its appalling climax in the wars of imperialist
conquest and exploitation launched in 1939. This is a distinctive
and remarkable achievement, as assured as it is readable.
*Jane Caplan, University of Oxford*
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