Foreword, by Theodore Zev Weiss
Foreword, by Theodore Zev Weiss (forthcoming)
Introduction, by Lauren Faulkner Rossi and Wendy Lower
Jan T. Gross, Opportunistic Killings and Plunder of Jews by their Neighbors -- a Norm or an Exception in German Occupied Europe?
Dagmar Herzog, The Obscenity of Objectivity: Post-Holocaust Antisemitism and the Invention of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder
I. New Cultural Approaches to the Holocaust
Amos Goldberg, Rumors in the Ghettos: a Case Study of Cultural History
Doris L. Bergen, I Am (Not) to Blame: Intent and Agency in Personal Accounts of the Holocaust
Steven Carr, "To Encompass the Unseeable": Foreign Film, Taste Culture, and the American Encounter with the Postwar Holocaust Film
Alon Confino, A World Without Jews: Culture and the Holocaust
II. Contemporary Controversies and Their Historical Origins
John Paul Himka, Former Ukrainian Policemen in the Ukrainian National Insurgency: Continuing the Holocaust Outside German Service
Ludivine Broch, The SNCF Affair: Cheminots in the Divided Memories of Vichy France
Mark Webber, Keep Your Distance: "Ethical Duplicity" and the Holocaust
III. Recovery and Loss
Perla Sneh, Khurbn Yiddish, an absent absence
Elizabeth Anthony, The First Returnees: Holocaust Survivors in Vienna in the Immediate Postwar Period
Karel Berkhoff, The Dispersal and Oblivion of the Ashes and Bones of Babi Yar
IV. The Holocaust and Social History: Gender and the Family
Martina Cucchiara, Jewish Girls in Catholic Schools in Nazi Germany, 1933-1938
Natalia Aleksiun, Daily Survival: Social History of Jews in Family Bunkers in Eastern Galicia
Rachel Century, Secretaries, Secrets and Genocide: Evidence from the Post-War Investigations of the Female Secretaries of the RSHA
V. Reconsidering Perpetrators
Ed Westermann, Hitler's Ostkrieg and the Indian Wars: Comparing Military Strategies of Conquest and Annihilation
Idit Gil, Intrigues and Conflicts of Interest as to the Exploitation of Jewish Labor in Radom (1942-1943)
Lukas Meissel, Not 'How Was it Possible', But 'Who Made It Possible': The Topic of Perpetrators in Holocaust Education in Austria