Lexington Books
Pages: 140
Trim: 6 x 8¾
978-1-4985-8392-3 • Hardback • February 2019 • $105.00 • (£81.00)
978-1-4985-8394-7 • Paperback • March 2019 • $43.99 • (£35.00)
978-1-4985-8393-0 • eBook • February 2019 • $41.50 • (£35.00)
Phyllis Lassner is professor emerita in the Crown Family Center for Jewish and Israel Studies at Northwestern University. Her most recent book is Espionage and Exile: Fascism and Anti-Fascism in British Spy Fiction and Film.
Danny M. Cohen is associate professor of instruction at Northwestern University’s School of Education and Social Policy and the Crown Family Center for Jewish and Israel Studies.
Introduction by Phyllis Lassner and Danny M. Cohen
Foreword
Dr. Kapezius
“I Want to Go with Them…”
Arrival at Auschwitz
Auschwitz—an A Day within its Borders
Dinner at Auschwitz
The “Beauty Parlor”
Auschwitz Treasure-Trove: Julika Farkas
Charlotte Junger
The Value of a Piece of String…
Irma Greze
“Concert” in Auschwitz
Margarine
Block VII: The Latrine
Childbirth in Camp C
The Hospital Staff
The Story of the Fatal Handkerchief
One Woman’s Death
The Bag of Diamonds
The Life-Saving Embryo
The Story of Jeanette
Liquidation of Camp C
Farewell to Auschwitz
Trip to Hamburg
Hamburg—Dege Werke
Belsen Bergen
General Gleen Hughes
Abbé Brand
Afterword by Eva Hoffman
About the Editors
Lassner and Cohen deserve praise and gratitude for pursuing and bringing to fruition the republication of I Was a Doctor in Auschwitz. One of the first published by an Auschwitz survivor, Perl’s memoir not only recounts the horrors of existence in Auschwitz, which included grave moral challenges and efforts to resist, but also engages many of the questions that have shaped the field of Holocaust Studies. Lassner and Cohen serve the reader well with their outstanding introduction that contextualizes Perl’s memoir in the history and the historiography of the Holocaust, particularly as related to understandings of women’s experiences. They also chose wisely to end the new edition with a poignant essay by Eva Hoffman. Students and scholars alike will benefit from this new edition for years to come.
— Sarah M. Cushman, director of Holocaust Educational Foundation of Northwestern University