This is a book about economics and racism: During World War I, the liberal global economic system, based on principles of free trade and most-favored nation treatment and negotiated in gold parities, collapsed for good. The disintegration and collapse of commerce eventually led to racist cleansing, expulsion and mass murder. Against this background, this book offers new perspectives on the racist fault-lines that appeared and deepened in European economies after the end of what was regarded as the Great War.At what point did people start to ostracize their neighbors economically because they thought they were of a different ethnic group? Who decided who was to be excluded? Where did the fault-lines open? Where did the boundaries lie? How were they defined by law, or by common practice? How much extra time and money were people prepared to spend in order to do ostracize their neighbors? And what did that mean for the economy and society as such?
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Product Details
Dimensions: 148 x 212mm
Publication Date: 10 Sep 2015
Publisher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
Language: English
ISBN13: 9781443877862
About Christoph Kreutzmueller
Christoph Kreutzmueller studied History and English in Berlin and in the UK and obtained a PhD on German banks in the Netherlands (19191945) in 2004. From 2005 to 2010 he coordinated a research project on the destruction of Jewish commercial activity in Berlin between 1930 and 1945 at the Humboldt University in Berlin. This was followed by a research project on the history of Berlins National Socialism at the same university. Since 2013 he has been a Senior Researcher of the House of the Wannsee Conference Berlin. His main fields of interest are economic history of the Holocaust and photo-history. A translation of his study on Jewish-owned businesses in Berlin has been published as Final Sale in Berlin: The destruction of Jewish commercial activity 19301945.Michael Wildt studied History Cultural Studies and Theology at the University of Hamburg. He obtained his PhD 1991 with a thesis on the consumer society in Germany after World War II. He served as a Research Fellow at the Research Centre for Contemporary History in Hamburg the Hamburg Institute for Social Research and the International Institute for Holocaust Research Yad Vashem Jerusalem from 1993 until 2009. He has been Professor for Modern German History at the Humboldt University in Berlin since 2009. His main areas of research are National Socialism the Holocaust anti-Semitism and the history of violence in the 20th century.Moshe Zimmermann is Emeritus Professor of German History at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem having previously served as the Director of the Richard-Koebner-Center for German History at the same university between 1986 and 2012. He is the author of many publications in German English and Hebrew about nationalism anti-Semitism the history of sport film-history and German-Jewish history.
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