Holocaust Education

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Anne Frank House
anti-Semitism
antisemitism studies
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Diary Of Anne Frank
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Ga Ni Za Tio
genocide education
Holocaust
Holocaust denial
Holocaust Education
Holocaust Memorial Day
Holocaust Memorialization
Holocaust Study
IHRA
Intercultural Education
intercultural pedagogy
Islam
marginalized groups
Memorial De La Shoah
minority rights
minority rights Europe
National Holocaust Memorial Day
North Transylvania
post-communist memory politics
Present Day anti-Semitism
right wing movements
Roma
Roma Genocide
Roma Sinti history
Romani Minority
Sinti
Slovak Communists
Slovak Jews
Slovak National Uprising
Slovak State
teaching Holocaust in Eastern Europe
TTE
Van Driel
West Germany
World War Ii Narrative
WW II
Yom HaShoah

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138305366
  • Weight: 370g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 12 Jan 2018
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Holocaust Education: Promise, Practice, Power and Potential provides timely studies of some of the most pressing issues in teaching and learning about the Holocaust around the world. Europe is experiencing both anti-Semitic attacks, many by radicals claiming the banner of Islam, and the resurgence of right wing movements that are openly hostile to minority rights, particularly for marginalized and vulnerable groups like the Roma/Sinti, and Muslim refugees. Can Holocaust education, an encounter with the most extreme racial ideology to afflict the continent, reduce violence and prejudice against Jewish and other minority groups? The important studies in this volume address these and other pressing issues for the field, including the progress of Central and Eastern European countries that experienced both Soviet hegemony and Nazi terror in grappling with the history of the Holocaust. This book was originally published as a special issue of Intercultural Education.

E. Doyle Stevick is Associate Professor of Educational Leadership and Policies at the University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC, USA. A Fulbright Fellow in Estonia in 2003 and 2014, he works in Holocaust education, education policy, and international and comparative education. His earlier books include Reimagining Civic Education (2007) and Advancing Democracy through Education? (2008), both co-edited with Bradley Levinson. His research articles have appeared in the Journal of Curriculum Studies, European Education, Intercultural Education, Prospects, and the Peabody Journal of Education, among others. Deborah L. Michaels is an Associate Professor of Education at Grinnell College, Iowa, USA, where she teaches History of Education, International and Comparative Education, and Social Studies Methods. Having resided in Central Eastern Europe for over a decade, she conducts research in the region on national identity politics and the exclusion of minorities in schooling. Her scholarship has appeared in the Journal of Curriculum Studies, European Education, and Intercultural Education. She has received numerous grants that have supported her research over the years, including a National Academy of Education postdoctoral fellowship (2013-2014), a Spencer Foundation Dissertation Fellowship (2006-2007), a US State Department Speaker Grant to Hungary on the history of school integration (2006), and a Fulbright Fellowship (2004-2005).