Stealing Home: Looting, Restitution, and Reconstructing Jewish Lives in France, 1942-1947

Stealing Home: Looting, Restitution, and Reconstructing Jewish Lives in France, 1942-1947

by Shannon L. Fogg
Stealing Home: Looting, Restitution, and Reconstructing Jewish Lives in France, 1942-1947

Stealing Home: Looting, Restitution, and Reconstructing Jewish Lives in France, 1942-1947

by Shannon L. Fogg

eBook

$68.49  $90.99 Save 25% Current price is $68.49, Original price is $90.99. You Save 25%.

Available on Compatible NOOK devices, the free NOOK App and in My Digital Library.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers

LEND ME® See Details

Overview

Between 1942 and 1944 the Germans sealed and completely emptied at least 38,000 Parisian apartments. The majority of the furnishings and other household items came from 'abandoned' Jewish apartments and were shipped to Germany. After the war, Holocaust survivors returned to Paris to discover their homes completely stripped of all personal possessions or occupied by new inhabitants. In 1945, the French provisional government established a Restitution Service to facilitate the return of goods to wartime looting victims. Though time-consuming, difficult, and often futile, thousands of people took part in these early restitution efforts. Stealing Home demonstrates that attempts to reclaim one's furnishings and personal possessions were key in efforts to rebuild Jewish political and social inclusion in the war's wake. Far from remaining silent, Jewish survivors sought recognition of their losses, played an active role in politics, and turned to both the government and each other for aid. Drawing on memoirs, oral histories, restitution claims, social workers' reports, newspapers, and government documents, Stealing Home provides a social history of the period that focuses on Jewish survivors' everyday lives during the lengthy process of restoring citizenship and property rights. It examines social rebirth through the prism of restitution and argues that the home was critical in shaping the postwar relationship between Jews and the state, and in the successes and failures associated with rebuilding Jewish lives in France after the Holocaust.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780191090844
Publisher: OUP Oxford
Publication date: 12/01/2016
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 224
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Shannon L. Fogg is professor of history at Missouri University of Science and Technology and the author of The Politics of Everyday Life in Vichy France: Foreigners, Undesirables, and Strangers.

Table of Contents

Preface
Introduction: Restitution: Rebuilding Jewish Lives in Twentieth-Century France
PART I
1. Reconstructing Homes: Jewish Private Lives in Postwar Paris
PART II
2. Displaced Persons, Displaced Possessions: The Furniture Operation in France
3. Competing Claims: Housing, the Restoration of Republicanism, and the Myth of Unity
4. The Restitution Service: The Creation of a Republican Bureaucracy
PART III
5. Rebuilding Families: The Gendering and Meaning of Home
6. Reclaiming Rights: Jewish Communal Responses to Material Loss
7. Social Rebirth: The Role of Public and Private Aid in Rebuilding the Jewish Community
Conclusion: Coming to Terms with the Past
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews