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What is it like being inside a Nazi death camp? Is there a sense of free will? How is death conceptualized in such context? How is time, space and others experienced on such a "different planet"? And above all, how is identity and self-perception construed under the extreme conditions and unique reality of death camps? This book presents a phenomenological research that aims to capture the insider's perspective of death camps survivors, and to offer some answers to the above questions and more. Data was collected through in-depth interviews with 20 former death camp inmates. Content analysis…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
What is it like being inside a Nazi death camp? Is there a sense of free will? How is death conceptualized in such context? How is time, space and others experienced on such a "different planet"? And above all, how is identity and self-perception construed under the extreme conditions and unique reality of death camps? This book presents a phenomenological research that aims to capture the insider's perspective of death camps survivors, and to offer some answers to the above questions and more. Data was collected through in-depth interviews with 20 former death camp inmates. Content analysis was then performed with the purpose of identifying units of meaning, followed by a cross case analysis to prune the number of units and identify key themes. Those key themes were then used in the final stage to constitute the domains of the grounded model that conceptualized the lived experience of Nazi death camp survivors.
Autorenporträt
Dr. Jonathan Davidov has obtained his PhD degree in Social Science in 2013. His research interests include the existential experience, decision making and human behavior in total institutions and under extreme situations. Target populations include Holocaust survivors; children and youth at risk; and professionals working in their assistance.