Holocaust: Religious and Philosophical Implications / Edition 1

Holocaust: Religious and Philosophical Implications / Edition 1

ISBN-10:
1557782121
ISBN-13:
9781557782120
Pub. Date:
04/03/1998
Publisher:
Paragon House Publishers
ISBN-10:
1557782121
ISBN-13:
9781557782120
Pub. Date:
04/03/1998
Publisher:
Paragon House Publishers
Holocaust: Religious and Philosophical Implications / Edition 1

Holocaust: Religious and Philosophical Implications / Edition 1

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Overview

Holocaust: Religious and Philosophical Implications is an anthology specifically designed for use as a textbook for courses on the Holocaust in universities and adult study groups. It is a compilation of what are now "classic" pieces in the voluminous literature on the Holocaust - pieces by Raul Hilberg, Hannah Arendt, Primo Levi, George Steiner, Richard Rubenstein and Irving Greenberg - all organized around what the editors have found to be the most often asked questions by their students: (1) Is the Holocaust unique? (2) What really happened in the ghettos and death camps? (3) Who knew what was going on? (4) How could people do the things they did? (5) What about God?

Governed by the thesis that the Holocaust left fundamental questions, Holocaust: Religious and Philosophical Implications, in addition to being organized around the five themes identified above, addresses the multiple implications of complexities such as resistance during the Holocaust, and Jewish and Christian identity after Auschwitz.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781557782120
Publisher: Paragon House Publishers
Publication date: 04/03/1998
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 390
Product dimensions: 9.00(w) x 6.00(h) x (d)

About the Author

John K. Roth is the Pitzer Professor of Philosophy at Claremont McKenna College, where he has taught since 1966. In 1988, he was named National Professor of the Year by the Council for Advancement and Support of Education and the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching. Roth is a member of the United States Holocaust Memorial Council in Washington.

MICHAEL BERENBAUM was the Director of the United States Holocaust Research Institute of the US Holocaust Memorial Museum and the Goldman Adjunct Professor of Theology at GeorgetownUniversity. From 1988-1993, he served as Project Director of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, where he was responsible for the conceptualization and development of the Museum's permanent exhibition. Berenbaum is the President and CEO of The Survivors of the Shoah, A Visual History Foundation, located in Los Angeles, CA.

Table of Contents

Table of Contents

Preface

PROLOGUE

Michael Berenbaum and John K. Roth, Who, What, Where, When, How?
Chronology

PART ONE: “What If the Holocaust Is Unique?”
André Neher, The Silence of Auschwitz
Yehuda Bauer, The Place of the Holocaust in Contemporary History
Gerd Korman, The Holocaust in American Historical Writing
Lucy S. Dawidowicz, Thinking about the Six Million: Facts, Figures, Perspectives
David W. Weiss and Michael Berenbaum, The Holocaust and the Covenant
Michael Berenbaum, The Uniqueness and Universality of the Holocaust

PART TWO: “Is It True What One Hears of Selections, of Gas, of Crematoriums?”
Primo Levi, The Drowned and the Saved
Raul Hilberg, The Ghetto as a Form of Government
Yehuda Bauer, Forms of Jewish Resistance During the Holocaust
Tadeusz Borowski, The People Who Walked On
Jean Améry, Torture
Robert Jay Lifton, “This World Is Not This World”
Terrence Des Pres, Excremental Assault
Lawrence L. Langer, The Dilemma of Choice in the Deathcamps
David Roussel, The Dead Stars Pursue Their Courses
John K. Roth, On Losing Trust in the World

PART THREE: “Where Is God Now?”
Elie Wiesel, Selections from Night
Richard L. Rubenstein, The Dean and the Chosen People
Emil L. Fackenheim, The 614th Commandment
Eliezer Berkovits, In the Beginning Was the Cry
Irving Greenberg, Cloud of Smoke, Pillar of Fire
Richard L. Rubenstein and Elie Wiesel: An Exchange

EPILOGUE
Michael Berenbaum and John K. Roth, Why?
Index

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