Pétain's Jewish Children: French Jewish Youth and the Vichy Regime, 1940-1942: Oxford Historical Monographs
Autor Daniel Leeen Limba Engleză Hardback – 5 iun 2014
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780198707158
ISBN-10: 0198707150
Pagini: 290
Ilustrații: 22 black and white halftones and 3 maps
Dimensiuni: 148 x 222 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.48 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Seria Oxford Historical Monographs
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 0198707150
Pagini: 290
Ilustrații: 22 black and white halftones and 3 maps
Dimensiuni: 148 x 222 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.48 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Seria Oxford Historical Monographs
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Recenzii
Pétain's Jewish Children is such a gripping and valuable study, exposing the fact that, even in such an increasingly hostile landscape, certain French Jews still felt that they could survive and even thrive. What Daniel Lee's book reveals is that, under Vichy, neither Frenchness nor Jewishness was ever a fixed identity, and that for a short while, even in a climate that sought to tear them apart, more than a few still saw the possibility for a productive symbiosis.
Daniel Lee's extremely well-documented work is an important addition to this recent trend and deserves serious consideration... [A]n impressive scholarly work, written elegantly and with conviction on the basis of extensive original research and fully grounded in the historical studies on Vichy.
Pétain's Jewish Children convincingly demands a revision of the way we understand the Vichy state
an accessible and fascinating piece of research that offers a meticulous record of its primary sources and a treasure trove of oral testimonies and private correspondence which will be invaluable to historians of this period.
Daniel Lee's book encourages us to step beyond -- but not forget -- some of the paradigms which have for many years shaped our understanding of the Vichy era ... an excellent book.
Undoubtedly, the book by Daniel Lee opens up a new and essential perspective for the historiography of the relationship between Vichy and the Jews ... By renewing and reinterpreting the historiography on such a sensitive subject, the book by Daniel Lee is a precious scientific work, which needs to be strongly recommended.
Pétain's Jewish Children provides an important intervention in the history of Jews in France during World War II, and contributes to our understanding of the National Revolution and the complexity of antisemitism as it was practiced under Vichy.
excellent ... Lee is especially successful in using personal archives and memoirs to bring a more human perspective to his study.
Extensive and fascinating detail ... Lee's valuable case-study offers a significant stimulus for further research.
Lee's thought-provoking work recovers a part of history, enriches our understanding of the total range of Jewish wartime experiences, and demonstrates that, for some Vichy traditionalists and Jewish leaders alike, the category of youth took a high enough priority to cut across deep divisions.
Lee's monograph makes a valuable contribution to our understanding of the Occupation, Jewish life between the Defeat and the Holocaust, and youth movements under Vichy.
Petain's Jewish Children constitutes a formidable corrective to a historiography dominated by studies on rescue, resistance, or persecution. Lees work should inspire future scholars to test whether his conclusions about French Jewish youth hold for larger portions of French Jewish society. In the meantime, this carefully researched and intriguing study can act as a starting point and encourage historians to reconsider their assumptions about the nature of Vichy antisemitism and Jewish life during the first two years of the Holocaust in France.
[a] finely researched monograph
richly textured and thoroughly researched ... this book asks new questions, complicates a number of narratives that have become entrenched both in the historiography and in popular understandings of the Vichy regime and the occupation period, and nuances our interpretations of Vichy antisemitism and of Jewish responses to the National Revolution. This process of rethinking, alongside Lee's meticulous research, makes Pétain's Jewish Children a valuable contribution to scholarship on wartime France.
Marceau's activities in the Resistance included using mime to teach the Jewish children he was smuggling out of France how to communicate silently.
Daniel Lee's extremely well-documented work is an important addition to this recent trend and deserves serious consideration... [A]n impressive scholarly work, written elegantly and with conviction on the basis of extensive original research and fully grounded in the historical studies on Vichy.
Pétain's Jewish Children convincingly demands a revision of the way we understand the Vichy state
an accessible and fascinating piece of research that offers a meticulous record of its primary sources and a treasure trove of oral testimonies and private correspondence which will be invaluable to historians of this period.
Daniel Lee's book encourages us to step beyond -- but not forget -- some of the paradigms which have for many years shaped our understanding of the Vichy era ... an excellent book.
Undoubtedly, the book by Daniel Lee opens up a new and essential perspective for the historiography of the relationship between Vichy and the Jews ... By renewing and reinterpreting the historiography on such a sensitive subject, the book by Daniel Lee is a precious scientific work, which needs to be strongly recommended.
Pétain's Jewish Children provides an important intervention in the history of Jews in France during World War II, and contributes to our understanding of the National Revolution and the complexity of antisemitism as it was practiced under Vichy.
excellent ... Lee is especially successful in using personal archives and memoirs to bring a more human perspective to his study.
Extensive and fascinating detail ... Lee's valuable case-study offers a significant stimulus for further research.
Lee's thought-provoking work recovers a part of history, enriches our understanding of the total range of Jewish wartime experiences, and demonstrates that, for some Vichy traditionalists and Jewish leaders alike, the category of youth took a high enough priority to cut across deep divisions.
Lee's monograph makes a valuable contribution to our understanding of the Occupation, Jewish life between the Defeat and the Holocaust, and youth movements under Vichy.
Petain's Jewish Children constitutes a formidable corrective to a historiography dominated by studies on rescue, resistance, or persecution. Lees work should inspire future scholars to test whether his conclusions about French Jewish youth hold for larger portions of French Jewish society. In the meantime, this carefully researched and intriguing study can act as a starting point and encourage historians to reconsider their assumptions about the nature of Vichy antisemitism and Jewish life during the first two years of the Holocaust in France.
[a] finely researched monograph
richly textured and thoroughly researched ... this book asks new questions, complicates a number of narratives that have become entrenched both in the historiography and in popular understandings of the Vichy regime and the occupation period, and nuances our interpretations of Vichy antisemitism and of Jewish responses to the National Revolution. This process of rethinking, alongside Lee's meticulous research, makes Pétain's Jewish Children a valuable contribution to scholarship on wartime France.
Marceau's activities in the Resistance included using mime to teach the Jewish children he was smuggling out of France how to communicate silently.
Notă biografică
Daniel Lee completed his graduate studies at St Hugh's College, University of Oxford. He has held research fellowships at the Institute of Historical Research (London) and at Yad Vashem Institute for Historical Research (Jerusalem). He completed the manuscript for this book in Florence where he was a Max Weber Postdoctoral Fellow at the European University Institute. In his current position, Lee is investigating the experiences of Tunisian Jewish women during the Second World War.