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ケンブリッジ版 ホロコーストの歴史(全4巻)

人類史の悲劇を繰り返さないために必携の最新研究101章!

関連ワード:CUP ユダヤ研究 国際関係論 政治学 歴史 洋書 現代ドイツ 現代ヨーロッパ 社会学  更新日:2025.06.01

ケンブリッジ版 ホロコーストの歴史(全4巻)
The Cambridge History of the Holocaust

General Editors: Mark Roseman, Indiana University
Volume Editors:
(Vol. 1) Mark Roseman, Indiana University & Dan Stone, Royal Holloway, University of London
(Vol. 2) Marion Kaplan, New York University & Mary Fulbrook, University College London
(Vol. 3) Jürgen Matthäus, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum & Natalia Aleksiun, University of Florida
(Vol. 4) Laura Jockusch, Brandeis University, Massachusetts & Devin O. Pendas, Boston College

2025:06 4 vols. 2,352 p. ISBN 978-1-108-88436-5 (Cambridge U. P.) -GB-
GBP 450
Web販売価格 ¥100,162 (税込) / 標準価格 ¥131,670 (税込)
*セット価格は、下記の各巻分売価格合計の約6% offの特価となっております。

第1巻:文脈:起源・比較・縺れ
Volume 1 : Contexts: Origins, Comparisons, Entanglements
2025:06 568 p. ISBN 9781108842976 GBP 120
Web販売価格 ¥28,116 (税込) / 標準価格 ¥35,112 (税込)

第2巻:ホロコーストの実行:政策・参与者・場所
Volume 2 : Perpetrating The Holocaust: Policies, Participants, Places
2025:06 608 p. ISBN 9781108839389 GBP 120
Web販売価格 ¥28,116 (税込) / 標準価格 ¥35,112 (税込)

第3巻:犠牲者たちとその世界1939-1945年
Volume 3 : Civil Society
2025:06 560 p. ISBN 9781108830225 GBP 120
Web販売価格 ¥28,116 (税込) / 標準価格 ¥35,112 (税込)

第4巻:余波・結果・反響
Volume 4: Aftermath, Outcomes, Repercussions
2025:06 616 p. ISBN 9781108839396 GBP 120
Web販売価格 ¥28,116 (税込) / 標準価格 ¥35,112 (税込)

*2025年5月21日時点の価格です。実際の価格は、為替レートや出版社の都合により変動いたしますので、最新の価格は以下オンラインストアリンクをご参照ください。
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概要

第二次世界大戦終結から80年。戦争を知る世代はますます少なくなっています。近年、世界的に、ポピュリズムとともに陰謀論や歴史修正主義が猛威を振るう中で、ナチス・ドイツによるユダヤ人絶滅政策と大量虐殺を指す「ホロコースト」の教訓と記憶をいかに未来に伝えていくかは、重い課題です。

本書は、全4巻・101章にわたって、『終わらぬ歴史ホロコースト』で知られるダン・ストーンなど、当代一流の歴史家たちを結集して、ホロコーストの前史から、実行、犠牲者、現代にいたる反響まで、その全てについて最新研究に基づき論じます。近年は、ドイツとその占領地のみならず協力国あるいは敵対国でのホロコーストへの対応、同性愛者や障害者などユダヤ人以外を含む犠牲者も注目されました。ホロコーストの多数の(不可能な)表象を通じても、歴史を記憶する文化への深い問いが生まれました。

本書は人類史の悲劇を正しく記憶し未来の教訓とするために必携のレファレンスといえましょう。

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収録内容明細

Volume 1 Contexts: Origins, Comparisons, Entanglements 

Introduction to volume I Mark Roseman and Dan Stone 

  1. Historiography of the holocaust: early developments Boaz Cohen
  2. The historiography of the holocaust: the years of diversification and integration Dan Stone
  3. From ‘final solution’ to ‘holocaust’. Autobiographical reflections Jane Caplan
  4. The holocaust, genocide, and the origins of the commensurability problem A. Dirk Moses
  5. Fascism and holocaust Aristotle Kallis
  6. The holocaust and modernity Mark Roseman
  7. Integrated approaches and boundaries in holocaust scholarship Dan Stone
  8. Mapping the holocaust Tim Cole
  9. Archiving the holocaust Jan Lambertz
  10. Antisemitism in interwar Europe Ulrich Wyrwa
  11. Race-thinking, Völkisch-nationalism, and eugenics Eric Kurlander
  12. Inter-ethnic violence in Europe before the holocaust Robert Gerwarth
  13. Communism and anti-Communism Andreas Wirsching
  14. Weimar Germany’s vanishing point: politics, violence and the rise of the nazis, 1918–1933 Annemarie Sammartino
  15. Hitler and the Nazi party Thomas Weber
  16. Hitler, state and party Helmut Walser Smith
  17. Anti-semitic policy in the early years of the third Reich Hans Christian Jasch
  18. Popular participation in anti-Jewish policy up to 1938 Michael Wildt
  19. Nazi biopolitics: eugenics, racial policy, and the persecution of ‘Asoziale,’ 1933–1939 Richard F. Wetzell
  20. ‘Judenforschung’ –Nazi Jewish studies Dirk Rupnow
  21. Belonging and belongings: the dispossession of German Jews Christoph Kreutzmüller and Jonathan Zatlin
  22. Kristallnacht Alan E. Steinweis
  23. Lebensraum, autarky and a new imperial order Richard Overy
  24. International responses to nazi race and Jewish policy, 1933–1939 Jonathan Wiesen

Volume 2:  Perpetrating The Holocaust: Policies, Participants, Places  

Introduction to Volume II Mary Fulbrook and Jürgen Matthäus 

Part I. Structures, Players, and Processes: 

  1. Hitler, the Nazi leadership and the evolution of the final solution Christopher Browning
  2. The Nazi apparatus of terror: SS, SA, police Jochen Böhler
  3. Bystanders, collaboration and complicity Christina Morina
  4. German agencies at the center and at the periphery Elizabeth Harvey
  5. The German economy and the exploitation and extermination of the Jews Susanne Heim
  6. The Wehrmacht, its allies, and ‘partisan threats’ Ben Shepherd
  7. Gender and perpetration Elissa Mailänder
  8. Perpetrator depictions of violence and the obliteration of evidence Valerie Hébert
  9. Discourses, knowledge, and disbelief in the Reich and beyond Frank Bajohr and Felix Berge
  10. ‘Euthanasia’, ‘Germanization’, and the beginnings of the Holocaust, 1939–1941 Isabel Heinemann
  11. The personnel and functioning of the extermination camps Sara Berger and Donald Bloxham

Part II. Times and Places: 

  1. Ghettos and other confined spaces of Jewish life in Nazi-dominated Europe Dan Michmann
  2. German and local violence in the Balkans Emil Kerenji
  3. Forced migration, flight and refuge in the West Miriam Rürup
  4. ‘War of annihilation’ in the occupied Soviet Union, 1941–1942 Edward Westermann
  5. Neighbors and killing in the East Tomasz Frydel
  6. ‘Aktion Reinhardt’ and the murder of the polish Jews Stephan Lehnstaedt
  7. Collaboration in German-dominated western Europe Peter Romijn
  8. Deportations from central and western Europe Birthe Kundrus and Jan Kreutz
  9. Remaining Jewish spaces and their liquidation, 1942–1944 Tatjana Tönsmeyer
  10. ‘Operation Höss:’ Auschwitz and the murder of the Hungarian Jews Gábor Kádár and Zoltán Vági
  11. Death marches of camp inmates and German atrocities at the war’s end Daniel Blatman
  12. German agency and the Holocaust as a European project Jürgen Matthäus and Mary Fulbrook

Volume 3: The Victims and Their Worlds: 1939–1945 

Introduction to Volume III Marion Kaplan and Natalia Aleksiun 

  1. The Jewish world under Nazi impact, 1930–1939 David Engel
  2. The Churches and the holocaust Jonathan Huener
  3. Lost in-between: refugee migration during the holocaust Michal Frankl
  4. Jewish forced labor: from coerced segregated deployment to slave labor, 1938–1945 Wolf Gruner
  5. ‘To prevent something worse’: strategies, constraints, and choices made by the Jewish councils in Western Europe Beate Meyer
  6. Jewish councils and Jewish ghetto police in Eastern Europe Katarzyna Person
  7. Diaries and chronicles Alexandra Garbarini
  8. Jewish experience of segregation and ghettoization Andrea Löw
  9. Religious practice during the holocaust Hava Dreifus
  10. Cultural activity in the holocaust Samuel Kassow
  11. Facing the unfathomable: victims’ reactions to the deportations to death camps Dariusz Libionka
  12. Jews in concentration camps, 1933–1945 Kim Wünschmann
  13. Gray zones and sonderkommandos: power and morality in Auschwitz–Birkenau and other national socialist concentration camps Imke Hansen
  14. Hiding and passing as non-Jews in Poland, 1942–1945 Jan Grabowski
  15. Surviving in the Soviet Union Eliyana R. Adler
  16. Uprisings and mass escapes in ghettos and camps David Silberklang
  17. Jews in armed resistance movements and partisan units Daniel Lee and Natalia Aleksiun
  18. Gender and Jewish experience during the holocaust Helene Sinnreich
  19. Sexual exploitation and violence during the holocaust Regina Mühlhäuser
  20. The Jewish family during the holocaust Dalia Ofer
  21. Jewish children’s experiences during the holocaust Joanna Beata Michlic
  22. Mixed race, mixed marriage and Jewish Christians Susanna Schrafstetter
  23. Mentally and physically disabled persons as victims of Nazism Paul Weindling
  24. Homosexuals Geoffrey J. Giles
  25. Roma Anton Weiss-Wendt
  26. Slavs and Soviet POWs Waitman Wade Beorn
  27. Help and rescue in Eastern Europe: the case of Poland Anna Bikont
  28. Jewish self-help and rescue in Germany and Nazi-occupied Western Europe, 1941–1945 Beate Kosmala
  29. International responses to the Jewish refugee crisis, 1939–1945 Avinoam Patt
  30. The allies and the holocaust Richard Breitman

Volume 4: Aftermath, Outcomes, Repercussions 

Introduction to volume IV Laura Jockusch and Devin O. Pendas 

Part I. History: 

  1. Liberation, displacement and homecoming in the aftermath of the holocaust Kata Bohus and Atina Grossmann
  2. In each and every generation: survivors and their descendants David Slucki
  3. ‘Forgotten victims’ and the federal republic of Germany Henning Tümmers
  4. Testimony as a response to mass atrocity: 1940s to the present Zoë Waxman
  5. Perpetrators on trial: the transnational history of holocaust trials Devin O. Pendas
  6. The plunder and the restoration of art and cultural property Jonathan Petropolous
  7. Restitution and reparations Regula Ludi
  8. Holocaust Denial and Antisemitism Jeffrey Herf

Part II. Geography: 

  1. Germany and the holocaust Herold Marcuse
  2. Israel and the holocaust: History, Memory and Identity Laura Jockusch and Avinoam J. Patt
  3. The holocaust in eastern european memory and politics after the cold war Joanna B. Michlic and Per A. Rudling
  4. The Americanization of the holocaust Hasia R. Diner

Part III. Culture and ideas: 

  1. The holocaust and social thought Enzo Traverso
  2. The holocaust and the challenges of representation Michael Rothberg
  3. In search of global justice: holocaust, genocide, law James Loeffler
  4. Theological responses to the holocaust Michael L. Morgan
  5. Holocaust and digital humanities todd Samuel Presner

Part IV. Culture and Fields: 

  1. Holocaust commemoration and memorials Natasha Goldman
  2. Holocaust museums stefanie Shosh Rotem
  3. The holocaust and the medical professions Ulf Schmidt
  4. Holocaust literature David G. Roskies
  5. The holocaust and the visual arts: perplexity, meanings Glenn Sujo
  6. The holocaust and film Jennifer Cazanave
  7. The future of the holocaust-timely reflections Dan Diner

Index 

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