Genocide, the Holocaust and Israel-Palestine

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1948
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atrocity
Author_Omer Bartov
Bildungsroman
Buczacz
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Category=NHTZ
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courtroom
displacement
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eq_history
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expulsion
first-hand history
forgetting
Gaza Strip
genocide
H.G. Adler
historical documents
historiography
Holocaust
Israel
Jewisj history
local history
mass murder
memory
memory laws
Nakba
Palestine
persecution
personal account
Second World War
Shoah
Shtetl
witness testimony
World War Two

Product details

  • ISBN 9781350332317
  • Weight: 400g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 232mm
  • Publication Date: 10 Aug 2023
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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A 2024 Choice Outstanding Academic Title

This book discusses some of the most urgent current debates over the study, commemoration, and politicization of the Holocaust through key critical perspectives. Omer Bartov adeptly assesses the tensions between Holocaust and genocide studies, which have repeatedly both enriched and clashed with each other, whilst convincingly arguing for the importance of local history and individual testimony in grasping the nature of mass murder. He goes on to critically examine how legal discourse has served to both uncover and deny individual and national complicity. Genocide, the Holocaust and Israel-Palestine outlines how first-person histories provide a better understanding of events otherwise perceived as inexplicable and, lastly, draws on the author’s own personal trajectory to consider links between the fate of Jews in World War II and the plight of Palestinians during and in the aftermath of the establishment of the state of Israel.

Bartov demonstrates that these five perspectives, rarely if ever previously discussed in a single book, are inextricably linked, and shed much light on each other. Thus the Holocaust and other genocides must be seen as related catastrophes in the modern era; understanding such vast human tragedies necessitates scrutinizing them on the local and personal scale; this in turn calls for historical empathy, accomplished via personal-biographical introspection; and true, open-minded, and rigorous introspection, without which historical understanding tends toward obfuscation, brings to light uncomfortable yet clarifying connections, such as that between the Holocaust and the Nakba, the mass flight and expulsion of the Palestinians in 1948.

Omer Bartov is John P. Birkelund Distinguished Professor of European History at Brown University, USA. He has written and edited numerous books, including Erased: Vanishing Traces of Jewish Galicia in Present-Day Ukraine (2007), Israel-Palestine: Lands and Peoples (2011) and Anatomy of a Genocide: The Life and Death of a Town Called Buczacz (2018), which won several prizes and has been translated into several languages.

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