Contents Preface Foreword -- Peter Kleinmann One - Munkacs - Jewish Communal Life - Antisemitism on the Rise - Hungarian Occupation - Munkacs Guetto - Jews Alone - Deportation - Fear and Humiliation - Auschwitz - The Evil of Man - Gross-Rosen - Slavery and Scavenging - Death March - Succumbing - Flossenburg - The Interminable Void - Muselmann - The Last Selection - Liberation? - Imprisoned in Memory - Aftermath - Another Unknown World - Visualizing Memory - A Last Detail Millions - Jewish Life - Prewar Europe - Nazi Ideology and Antisemitism - Germany - Ghettos - Identification and Isolation - Institutionalized Discrimination - Einsatzgruppen - First Organized Mass Murders - The Final Solution - Deportations and Camps - The Shoah in Carpatho-Ruthenia/Hungary - The End of Reprieve - Death Marches - Final Organized Mass Murders - Liberation - Memory with Consequence Glossary Bibliography and Suggestions for Further Reading Index
The Fallacy of Race and the Shoah achieves the almost impossible task of weaving together with judicious balance a highly personal story, a comprehensive historical analysis, and a coherent explanation of the Shoah. Written in a clear and precise style, the text is generously illustrated with archival documentation. Exquisitely presented, this book sets a new standard for Shoah testimonies. It reaches to the very core of this most inhuman but deeply personal experience. -- Alain Goldschlager Just when it seemed nothing new could be said about the Holocaust, Naomi Kramer has written a remarkable book full of compelling insights. Through the creative use of archival documents, survivors' accounts and historical studies, she has made a profound contribution to our understanding of the Shoah. This is a book at times moving, at times academic, but always riveting... This is a textual, wonderfully nuanced study that deserves a wide audience. -- Irving Abella
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