Joshua D. Zimmerman (ed.)
Jews in Italy Under Fascist and Nazi Rule, 1922-1945
Herausgeber: Zimmerman, Joshua D
Joshua D. Zimmerman (ed.)
Jews in Italy Under Fascist and Nazi Rule, 1922-1945
Herausgeber: Zimmerman, Joshua D
- Gebundenes Buch
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
This book brings to light the Italian-Jewish experience from the start of Mussolini's prime ministership through the end of the Second World War.
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
- Alexander J de GrandFascist Italy and Nazi Germany202,99 €
- Ben EarleLuigi Dallapiccola and Musical Modernism in Fascist Italy59,99 €
- John PollardThe Fascist Experience in Italy59,99 €
- Aaron GilletteRacial Theories in Fascist Italy202,99 €
- Thomas GeveThe Boy Who Drew Auschwitz25,99 €
- Christopher DugganFascist Voices80,99 €
- Monica FioravanzoFascist Europe158,99 €
-
-
-
This book brings to light the Italian-Jewish experience from the start of Mussolini's prime ministership through the end of the Second World War.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 396
- Erscheinungstermin: 27. Juni 2005
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 243mm x 162mm x 29mm
- Gewicht: 721g
- ISBN-13: 9780521841016
- ISBN-10: 0521841011
- Artikelnr.: 22206658
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 396
- Erscheinungstermin: 27. Juni 2005
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 243mm x 162mm x 29mm
- Gewicht: 721g
- ISBN-13: 9780521841016
- ISBN-10: 0521841011
- Artikelnr.: 22206658
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
Joshua D. Zimmerman is assistant professor of history and Holocaust Studies at Yeshiva University; Eli and Diana Zborowski Professorial Chair in Interdisciplinary Holocaust Studies. He is the author of Poles, Jews and the Politics of Nationality: the Bund and the Polish Socialist Party in Late Tsarist Russia, 1892-1914 (2004), and editor of Contested Memories: Poles and Jews during the Holocaust and its Aftermath (2003).
Introduction Joshua Zimmerman; Part I. Italy Jewry from Liberalism to
Fascism: 1. The double-bind of Italian Jews: acceptance and assimilation
Alexander Stille; 2. Italian Jewish identity from the Risorgimento to the
racial laws Mario Toscano; 3. Mussolini and the Jews on the eve of the
march on Rome Giorgio Fabre; Part II. Rise of Racial Persecution: 4.
Characteristics and objectives of the anti-Jewish racial laws in Fascist
Italy, 1938-1943 Michele Sarfati; 5. The beginnings of racial persecution:
the exclusion of Jews from Italian academies Annalisa Capristo; 6. The
damage to Italian culture: Jewish university professors in Fascist Italy
and after, 1938-1946 Roberto Finzi; 7. Building a racial state: images of
the Jew in the illustrated Fascist magazine, La Difesa della Razza,
1938-1943 Sandro Servi; 8. The impact of anti-Jewish legislation on the
everyday life and the response of Italian Jews (1938-1943) Iael
Nidam-Orvieto; 9. The children of Villa Emma at Nonantola, 1942-1943 Klaus
Voigt; 10. Anti-Jewish persecution and Italian society Fabio Levi; Part IV.
Catastrophe - The German Occupation, 1943-1945: 11. The Shoah in Italy:
some aspects of its history and characteristics Liliana Picciotto; 12. The
Mollhausen telegram, the Kapler decodes, and the roundup and deportation of
Roman Jewry: the new documents, 2000-2001 Robert Katz; 13. The persecution
of Jews in two regions of occupied Northern Italy, 1943-1945:
Operationszone Alpenvorland and Operationszone Adriatisches Kustenland
Cinzia Villani; Part V. The Vatican and the Holocaust in Italy: 14. The
papal response to Nazi and Fascist antisemitism: From Pius VI to Pius XII
Frank Coppa; 15. Pius XII and the rescue of Jews in Italy: evidence of a
papal directive Susan Zuccotti; Part VI. Aftermath: Contemporary Italy and
Holocaust Memory: 16. The rescued and the rescuers in private and public
memories Anna Bravo; 17. The return of the repressed: contemporary
filmmakers confront Italian Holocaust history Millicent Marcus; 18. The
secret histories of Roberto Benigni's Life is Beautiful Ruth Ben-Ghiat.
Fascism: 1. The double-bind of Italian Jews: acceptance and assimilation
Alexander Stille; 2. Italian Jewish identity from the Risorgimento to the
racial laws Mario Toscano; 3. Mussolini and the Jews on the eve of the
march on Rome Giorgio Fabre; Part II. Rise of Racial Persecution: 4.
Characteristics and objectives of the anti-Jewish racial laws in Fascist
Italy, 1938-1943 Michele Sarfati; 5. The beginnings of racial persecution:
the exclusion of Jews from Italian academies Annalisa Capristo; 6. The
damage to Italian culture: Jewish university professors in Fascist Italy
and after, 1938-1946 Roberto Finzi; 7. Building a racial state: images of
the Jew in the illustrated Fascist magazine, La Difesa della Razza,
1938-1943 Sandro Servi; 8. The impact of anti-Jewish legislation on the
everyday life and the response of Italian Jews (1938-1943) Iael
Nidam-Orvieto; 9. The children of Villa Emma at Nonantola, 1942-1943 Klaus
Voigt; 10. Anti-Jewish persecution and Italian society Fabio Levi; Part IV.
Catastrophe - The German Occupation, 1943-1945: 11. The Shoah in Italy:
some aspects of its history and characteristics Liliana Picciotto; 12. The
Mollhausen telegram, the Kapler decodes, and the roundup and deportation of
Roman Jewry: the new documents, 2000-2001 Robert Katz; 13. The persecution
of Jews in two regions of occupied Northern Italy, 1943-1945:
Operationszone Alpenvorland and Operationszone Adriatisches Kustenland
Cinzia Villani; Part V. The Vatican and the Holocaust in Italy: 14. The
papal response to Nazi and Fascist antisemitism: From Pius VI to Pius XII
Frank Coppa; 15. Pius XII and the rescue of Jews in Italy: evidence of a
papal directive Susan Zuccotti; Part VI. Aftermath: Contemporary Italy and
Holocaust Memory: 16. The rescued and the rescuers in private and public
memories Anna Bravo; 17. The return of the repressed: contemporary
filmmakers confront Italian Holocaust history Millicent Marcus; 18. The
secret histories of Roberto Benigni's Life is Beautiful Ruth Ben-Ghiat.
Introduction Joshua Zimmerman; Part I. Italy Jewry from Liberalism to
Fascism: 1. The double-bind of Italian Jews: acceptance and assimilation
Alexander Stille; 2. Italian Jewish identity from the Risorgimento to the
racial laws Mario Toscano; 3. Mussolini and the Jews on the eve of the
march on Rome Giorgio Fabre; Part II. Rise of Racial Persecution: 4.
Characteristics and objectives of the anti-Jewish racial laws in Fascist
Italy, 1938-1943 Michele Sarfati; 5. The beginnings of racial persecution:
the exclusion of Jews from Italian academies Annalisa Capristo; 6. The
damage to Italian culture: Jewish university professors in Fascist Italy
and after, 1938-1946 Roberto Finzi; 7. Building a racial state: images of
the Jew in the illustrated Fascist magazine, La Difesa della Razza,
1938-1943 Sandro Servi; 8. The impact of anti-Jewish legislation on the
everyday life and the response of Italian Jews (1938-1943) Iael
Nidam-Orvieto; 9. The children of Villa Emma at Nonantola, 1942-1943 Klaus
Voigt; 10. Anti-Jewish persecution and Italian society Fabio Levi; Part IV.
Catastrophe - The German Occupation, 1943-1945: 11. The Shoah in Italy:
some aspects of its history and characteristics Liliana Picciotto; 12. The
Mollhausen telegram, the Kapler decodes, and the roundup and deportation of
Roman Jewry: the new documents, 2000-2001 Robert Katz; 13. The persecution
of Jews in two regions of occupied Northern Italy, 1943-1945:
Operationszone Alpenvorland and Operationszone Adriatisches Kustenland
Cinzia Villani; Part V. The Vatican and the Holocaust in Italy: 14. The
papal response to Nazi and Fascist antisemitism: From Pius VI to Pius XII
Frank Coppa; 15. Pius XII and the rescue of Jews in Italy: evidence of a
papal directive Susan Zuccotti; Part VI. Aftermath: Contemporary Italy and
Holocaust Memory: 16. The rescued and the rescuers in private and public
memories Anna Bravo; 17. The return of the repressed: contemporary
filmmakers confront Italian Holocaust history Millicent Marcus; 18. The
secret histories of Roberto Benigni's Life is Beautiful Ruth Ben-Ghiat.
Fascism: 1. The double-bind of Italian Jews: acceptance and assimilation
Alexander Stille; 2. Italian Jewish identity from the Risorgimento to the
racial laws Mario Toscano; 3. Mussolini and the Jews on the eve of the
march on Rome Giorgio Fabre; Part II. Rise of Racial Persecution: 4.
Characteristics and objectives of the anti-Jewish racial laws in Fascist
Italy, 1938-1943 Michele Sarfati; 5. The beginnings of racial persecution:
the exclusion of Jews from Italian academies Annalisa Capristo; 6. The
damage to Italian culture: Jewish university professors in Fascist Italy
and after, 1938-1946 Roberto Finzi; 7. Building a racial state: images of
the Jew in the illustrated Fascist magazine, La Difesa della Razza,
1938-1943 Sandro Servi; 8. The impact of anti-Jewish legislation on the
everyday life and the response of Italian Jews (1938-1943) Iael
Nidam-Orvieto; 9. The children of Villa Emma at Nonantola, 1942-1943 Klaus
Voigt; 10. Anti-Jewish persecution and Italian society Fabio Levi; Part IV.
Catastrophe - The German Occupation, 1943-1945: 11. The Shoah in Italy:
some aspects of its history and characteristics Liliana Picciotto; 12. The
Mollhausen telegram, the Kapler decodes, and the roundup and deportation of
Roman Jewry: the new documents, 2000-2001 Robert Katz; 13. The persecution
of Jews in two regions of occupied Northern Italy, 1943-1945:
Operationszone Alpenvorland and Operationszone Adriatisches Kustenland
Cinzia Villani; Part V. The Vatican and the Holocaust in Italy: 14. The
papal response to Nazi and Fascist antisemitism: From Pius VI to Pius XII
Frank Coppa; 15. Pius XII and the rescue of Jews in Italy: evidence of a
papal directive Susan Zuccotti; Part VI. Aftermath: Contemporary Italy and
Holocaust Memory: 16. The rescued and the rescuers in private and public
memories Anna Bravo; 17. The return of the repressed: contemporary
filmmakers confront Italian Holocaust history Millicent Marcus; 18. The
secret histories of Roberto Benigni's Life is Beautiful Ruth Ben-Ghiat.