Theodore Zev Weiss
Foreword
Jonathan Petropoulos, Lynn Rapaport, and John K. Roth
Introduction
I. Memory
John K. Roth
Only in the Dark: Seeing through the Gloom
Christian Goeschel
Suicides of German Jews During the Holocaust
Simone Gigliotti
Deportation Transit and Captive Bodies: Rethinking Holocaust Witnessing
Michael Allen
The Atomization of Auschwitz: Is History Really That Contingent?
II. History
Martin Dean
Typology of Ghettos: Five Types of Ghettos Under German Administration
David Silberklang
Defining the Ghettos: Jewish and German Perspectives in the Lublin District
Alexander V. Prusin
Jewish Ghettos in the Generalbezirk Kiew, 1941-1943
Rachel Iskov
Jewish Refugees from the Surrounding Communities in the Warsaw and Łódź Ghettos
Tim Cole
Contesting and Compromising Ghettoization, Hungary 1944
III. Responsibility
Jonathan Petropoulos
Prince zu Waldeck und Pyrmont: A Career in the SS and Its Murderous Consequences
Susanna Schrafstetter
When Perpetrators Compensate Victims: Karl Hettlage and the Politics of Indemnification in West Germany
Suzanne Brown-Fleming
The Vatican and the Nazi Movement, 1922-1939: New Sources and Unexpected Findings on the Vatican's Response to Reichskristallnacht
Lissa Skitolsky
Suspending Judgment for the Sake of Knowledge: Agamben's Approach to Auschwitz
IV. Post-Holocaust Issues
Michael Meng
Did Poles Oppose or Collaborate with the Nazis? Problems with Narrating the Holocaust in Poland
Paul B. Miller
Just Like the Jews: Contending Victimization in the Former Yugoslavia
V. Epilogue
Compiled and introduced by John K. Roth
John K. Roth
Ethics During and After the Holocaust
Christopher R. Browning
Encountering Ethical Dilemmas in Writing the History of the Holocaust
Peter Hayes
Ethics and Corporate History in Nazi Germany
Claudia Koonz
Taking Jean Améry's "Grudge" Seriously
Rebecca Wittmann
Torture and the Ethical Implications of the Holocaust
Berel Lang
Two Ethical Issues
John K. Roth
Postscript
List of Abbreviations and Acronyms
Notes on Contributors