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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Patrick HenryPublisher: The Catholic University of America Press Imprint: The Catholic University of America Press Dimensions: Width: 15.40cm , Height: 3.50cm , Length: 23.70cm Weight: 0.930kg ISBN: 9780813225890ISBN 10: 0813225892 Pages: 640 Publication Date: 30 June 2014 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsReviews"""The definitive treatment of this subject.""--R.S. Levy, CHOICE ""Recommended""--Murray Polner, History News Network - George Mason University ""This long-awaited, stirring, and detailed collection of essays sets out to remedy all prior misconceptions. The book explores the myths of passivity, the old questions, such as, 'Why didn't they resist more?' and the omissions and distortions of facts of Jewish Resistance... In assembling this most impressive collection of essays, editor Patrick Henry has produced the most complete of Jewish resistance anywhere. Whether for student, scholar, or general reader, this tome is imperative in any Holocaust library.""--Rachelle Goldstein - Editor, The Hidden Child ""The contributors writing and scholarship are uniformly cogent and excellent, a tribute to the editorial skills of Patrick Henry an indispensable resource for Holocaust scholars as well as the general public.""--Michael N. Dobkowski, Jewish Book Council ""Patrick Henry's edited volume on Jewish resisitance against the Nazis is a rich and powerful contribution to Holocaust scholarship this impressive collection of essays by promnient researchers provides detailed examinations of a wide array of Jewish resistance activities... The volume is admirable in its breadth... To repeat Patrick Henry's words, the perpetuaiton of the idea that Jews did not resist against the Nazis is 'simply unconscionable.' In that sense, it is unfortunate that this volume needed to be written. Nonetheless, I am glad that it was, and I recommend it highly. It is a reference to which I will turn again and again.""--Rachel Einwohner, Holocaust and Genocide Studies ""Even before the end of the Second World War the pernicious notion that Jewish victims had gone like 'sheep to the sluaghter' was widespread. To the shame of us all, it persists today as a shadowy aspect of the public's misunderstanding of the response of European Jewry to the Nazi onslaught. Accordingly, this edited collection of twenty-three original essays is a major corrective, one that belongs on every relevant public and private bookshelf. No one who considers himself or herself knowledageble about the Holocaust can afford to miss reading this myth-shattering material, and it merits a place of honor in every school curriculum and memorialization project dedicated to telling the truth about the attitudes, behavior, culture, and values of European Jewry from 1933 through 1945... Strong in scope, depth, and compassion, this outstanding volume can help society move beyond 'blaming the victim' stereotypes, and add to its memory of the Holocaust the overdue appreciation for the stealth altruism of Jewish victims whose non-violent resistance took the form of secretly trying to help and care for one another.""--Arthur B. Shostak, Drexel University, The European Legacy" The definitive treatment of this subject. --R.S. Levy, CHOICE Recommended --Murray Polner, History News Network - George Mason University This long-awaited, stirring, and detailed collection of essays sets out to remedy all prior misconceptions. The book explores the myths of passivity, the old questions, such as, 'Why didn't they resist more?' and the omissions and distortions of facts of Jewish Resistance... In assembling this most impressive collection of essays, editor Patrick Henry has produced the most complete of Jewish resistance anywhere. Whether for student, scholar, or general reader, this tome is imperative in any Holocaust library. --Rachelle Goldstein - Editor, The Hidden Child The contributors writing and scholarship are uniformly cogent and excellent, a tribute to the editorial skills of Patrick Henry an indispensable resource for Holocaust scholars as well as the general public. --Michael N. Dobkowski, Jewish Book Council Patrick Henry's edited volume on Jewish resisitance against the Nazis is a rich and powerful contribution to Holocaust scholarship this impressive collection of essays by promnient researchers provides detailed examinations of a wide array of Jewish resistance activities... The volume is admirable in its breadth... To repeat Patrick Henry's words, the perpetuaiton of the idea that Jews did not resist against the Nazis is 'simply unconscionable.' In that sense, it is unfortunate that this volume needed to be written. Nonetheless, I am glad that it was, and I recommend it highly. It is a reference to which I will turn again and again. --Rachel Einwohner, Holocaust and Genocide Studies Even before the end of the Second World War the pernicious notion that Jewish victims had gone like 'sheep to the sluaghter' was widespread. To the shame of us all, it persists today as a shadowy aspect of the public's misunderstanding of the response of European Jewry to the Nazi onslaught. Accordingly, this edited collection of twenty-three original essays is a major corrective, one that belongs on every relevant public and private bookshelf. No one who considers himself or herself knowledageble about the Holocaust can afford to miss reading this myth-shattering material, and it merits a place of honor in every school curriculum and memorialization project dedicated to telling the truth about the attitudes, behavior, culture, and values of European Jewry from 1933 through 1945... Strong in scope, depth, and compassion, this outstanding volume can help society move beyond 'blaming the victim' stereotypes, and add to its memory of the Holocaust the overdue appreciation for the stealth altruism of Jewish victims whose non-violent resistance took the form of secretly trying to help and care for one another. --Arthur B. Shostak, Drexel University, The European Legacy Author InformationPatrick Henry is the Cushing Eells Professor Emeritus of Philosophy, Literature and Foreign Languages at Whitman College. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |