AltaMira Press / US Holocaust Memorial Museum
Pages: 508
Trim: 6½ x 9½
978-0-7591-1908-6 • Hardback • January 2010 • $76.00 • (£58.00)
978-0-7591-1910-9 • eBook • November 2009 • $72.00 • (£55.00)
Jürgen Matthäus is research director at the Jack, Joseph and Morton Mandel Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.Mark Roseman is professor in the Department of History and Pat M. Glazier Chair of the Jewish Studies Program at Indiana University Bloomington.
Volume Introduction: Jews and Other Germans before and after 1933
Part I: The Battles of 1933
Chapter 1: Confronting the Nazi Revolution
Chapter 2: Exclusion and Introspection
Chapter 3: Strategies for Survival
Part II: Feeling One's Way: January 1934 to August 1935
Chapter 4: Stretching the Limits of Influence
Chapter 5: Everyday Life in an Era of Uncertainty
Chapter 6: Segregation and Exclusion: Spring and Summer 1935
Part III: Subjects Under Siege: September 1935 to December 1937
Chapter 7: The Nuremberg Laws and Their Impact
Chapter 8: Bonds and Breaks with Germany
Chapter 9: Jewish Questions after Nuremberg
Part IV: Dispossession and Disappearance: 1938
Chapter 10: "Model Austria" and Its Ramifications
Chapter 11: Évian and the Emigration Impasse
Chapter 12: "Kristallnacht" and Its Consequences
List of Documents
Bibliography
Glossary
Chronology
This is an exceptionally well researched volume. . . . Any reader seeking a glimpse of the mindset of German Jewry in the years leading up to the Final Solution will find the rich array of documents and correspondence in this volume to be of great interest. The authors, both distinguished Holocaust scholars, have made a major contribution to the field with the release of this painstakingly researched work. The documents and correspondence are assembled in a well-organized manner beginning with the rise of Nazism and ending with Kristallnacht and its consequences. The authors provide valuable context and explanation before and after the document entries. Each reader will bring their own specific interest to this reference work and use a given document or series of documents in support of a particular perspective on the evolution of the Shoah. . . . Jewish Responses to Persecution provides powerful examples of denial and rationalization as defenses in the face of overt hatred, acts of violence and recurrent threats of genocide in the years 1933 to 1938. . . . This book is laudable as a scholarly addition to the documentary history of the Holocaust as well as an unintended and tragic reminder of the mortal dangers that stem from a disbelieving, defenseless, and unarmed Jewish population facing genocidal anti-Semitism.
— Jewish Book World
In this first volume of a series documenting the Jewish responses to Nazism and the Holocaust, Matthäus and Roseman follow the major trends in Holocaust historiography in their chapter organization, covering everything from the rise of Nazism to survival strategies, immigration, and everyday life through the aftermath of Kristallnacht. Each chapter starts with background information; then each document is framed, in Talmudic style, by the editor's contextual information and commentary. Since many previous documentary collections focus on material generated by the Nazis, the Jews have often appeared as passive figures who went to their doom without apparent resistance. Recent research, however, has revealed that Nazi ideology was often implemented in a haphazard and contradictory manner, and this volume demonstrates how this affected the Jewish response. Verdict: These documents restore human agency to German Jews and reveal the multifaceted reactions to Nazism. The focus on contemporaneous sources avoids the trap common in much of the memoir literature that assumes Jews knew the end result of Nazi terror.
— Library Journal
In this first volume in a series, Matthäus and Roseman collect 200 documents that illustrate Jewish life in Germany under Nazi persecution prior to WWII. Following an introductory essay on Jews in Germany before 1933, the volume is organized into four chronological sections (e.g., 'Subjects under Siege: September 1935 to December 1937'), each of which has three chapters (e.g., 'Jewish Questions after Nuremberg'). Each section begins with a historical overview, and each chapter features a contextual overview. The documents (all translated into English) come from both published and unpublished sources and include excerpts from diaries, letters, government reports and contemporary newspaper articles and some photographs. Context and/or explanation is provided for each document, many of which pertain to ordinary people. A touching example comes from a 1935 Bar Mitzvah note from Max Rosenthal to his grandson Hans, in which Rosenthal wrote, 'Memories are the only paradise from which we cannot be expelled.' Other features include a list of abbreviations, bibliography, glossary, and chronology (1933–early 1939). Recommended.
— Choice Reviews
This is a highly accessible collection of primary-source materials, unique in that the documents emanate from the German-Jewish victims themselves and are presented within the historical context of the development of Nazi Jewish policy after 1933. Given the nature and quantity of the individual and institutional documents that the authors have assembled, this volume will provide scholars with invaluable materials for research projects on the Jewish victims of Nazi persecution. But its main value, and that of the four volumes that will follow, will be as a teaching resource especially for undergraduate and graduate seminars in Jewish history and the history of the Holocaust. . . . The authors are to be congratulated for their document, and for their expert contextualization and annotation of the documents.
— Holocaust and Genocide Studies
This impressive series provides a sense of the depth and diversity of contemporary Jewish documents while embedding them in explanatory narratives. . . .[T]he first volume in the series provides an excellent grasp of the crucial dilemmas and some of the intriguing nuances of contemporary Jewish perspectives in Hitler’s Germany.
— Yad Vashem Studies
I have read Jewish Responses to Persecution Volume 1 from cover to cover, and I think it is a magnificent achievement. The selection of documents is astonishing in terms of the breadth and particular insight they offer. But the authors have also managed to select several times from the same sources, giving the reader a growing sense of familiarity—and empathy—with the authors. Combined with the wonderfully clear introductory pieces and linking commentary, this gives the volume the feel of an integrated history and even the quality of a novel. The reader begins to care about the witnesses and wonder what will happen to them next. It is truly a masterpiece.
— David Cesarani, Royal Holloway College, University of London; author of Becoming Eichmann
One of the great challenges facing historians of any event or epoch is to recover the perceptions and uncertainties of people for whom what we know as the past was still an unknown and open-ended future. The singular achievement of this volume edited by Jürgen Matthäus and Mark Roseman is to place in the hands of historians, students, and general readers an extraordinary collection of documents that opens up the world of the 1930s as German Jews experienced it in all its urgency, confusion, disorientation, hope, and despair, not as we now make sense of it with the advantage of hindsight.
— Christopher R. Browning, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; author of Origins of the Final Solution
For many years, the bulk of the research that has been done on the Holocaust focused on the actions of the perpetrators: what did they do and how did they do it? In recent years scholars have begun to redress this imbalance. Now their efforts will have a critically important resource on which to draw: the five volume series Jewish Responses to Persecution, 1933–1946. Drawing on diaries, letters, organizational archives, and a host of other sources it gives the victims a voice that, in too many other works, has been denied to them. While this first volume stands on its own as a book well worth reading, it also promises to become an invaluable aid to scholars, teachers, students, and all others who want to know more about 'the six million.' It is long overdue.
— Deborah E. Lipstadt, Emory University; author of Denying the Holocaust
Co-published with the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum's Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies, the book consists of archival material collected and preserved by the museum in addition to other unique documentation
The authors provide expert commentary putting the archival material into historical context
Reproductions of original documents with translations and annotation
Complete with chronology, glossary, bibliography, and index