Showing 81 - 100 results of 204 for search '"concentration camps"', query time: 0.09s Refine Results
  1. 81
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  3. 83

    The spanish religious of Dachau: Ignacio Cruchaga by Juan Pedro Rodríguez Hernández

    Published 2021-07-01
    “…The article aims to analyze the situation of religious prisoners in the Nazism concentration camps and specifically in Dachau. Also to make known the figure of Ignacio Cruchaga, in all probability the only Spanish religious prisoner in the concentration camps of Nazi Germany. …”
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  4. 84

    POST-WAR COMMUNIST CRIMES AND GRAVEYARDS IN EAST HERZEGOVINA by Blanka Matković

    Published 2012-01-01
    “…After May 1945 prisoners from Croatian concentration camps and prisons, especially from Požega and Slavonski Brod, were transported to Bosnia and Herzegovina. …”
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  5. 85

    Les novel·les dels camps de concentració by Vicent Simbor Roig

    Published 2014-11-01
    “…This study analyzes the testimonial novels on concentration camps «K. L. Reich», by J. Amat-Piniella, «Crist de 200,000 braços», by A. …”
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  6. 86

    La experiencia del Mal Radical en la obra de Jorge Semprún = The experience of Radical Evil in the works of Jorge Semprún by Rita Rodríguez Varela

    Published 2017-12-01
    “…This article analyses the writer Jorge Semprun’s novels which the main topic is the concentration camps. Based on the dichotomy of writing or living as a psychological status of the writer after his release, this article will debate the ability of the literature as a way to transmit the essence of the concentration camps experience. …”
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  7. 87

    Abraham Kajzer i jego tekst z obozów koncentracyjnych – studium przypadku by Barbara Elmanowska

    Published 2015-01-01
    “…The author analyses one of the intimate diaries from concentration camps written by Abraham Kajzer, who was a prisoner of KL Auschwitz-Birkenau and AL Riese (which was a part of KL GrossRosen on Lower Silesia). …”
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  8. 88

    Wire on Covers by Gordana Čupković

    Published 2020-12-01
    “…Wire has over time shown itself as a more resilient and efficient material than walls and ramparts due to its mobility (it is easy to install and remove) and, which is especially important, does not leave any traces after its removal, and this constitutes a particularly significant element of redesigning history and collective memory: “concentration camps are not built to last” (Razac 57) or “it was all music.” …”
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  9. 89

    Memoria y soledad: de la Shoá a la violencia colombiana by Martha L. Canfield

    Published 2021-01-01
    “…The essay focuses on a novel by the Colombian writer Azriel Bibliowicz, Migas de pan, published in 2014, that narrates the kidnapping of an elderly Jew who survived the Siberian concentration camps and emigrated in Colombia with his wife, an Auschwitz survivor. …”
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  10. 90

    Primo Leviego „przemoc zbędna”: rozwinięcie pojęcia by Marcin Jaranowski

    Published 2022-01-01
    “…The author's approach to the phenomenon of useless violence is extended to include additional accounts by witnesses and the findings of researchers who deal with the functioning of concentration camps and the phenomenon of Nazi terror. In this way, the description of a certain form of violence developed by the author who is also a victim of it obtains support and broad commentary.…”
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  11. 91

    Fortunetelling as a Fraudulent Profession? by Verena Meier

    Published 2023-09-01
    “… With the beginning of the Second World War the highest policy authority in the Nazi regime ordered that all fortunetelling female Sinti and Roma were to be incarcerated in concentration camps. This article traces the genesis of gendered antigypsyist motifs from the first written documentation on Sinti and Roma in Europe in the late Medieval period through the Enlightenment and the specialized discourse of criminology and penology in the nineteenth century. …”
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  12. 92

    Telling Holocaust Jokes on German Public Television by Armin Langer

    Published 2021-12-01
    “…His jokes about concentration camps and their contemporary perceptions proved to be especially effective. …”
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  13. 93

    Fortunetelling as a Fraudulent Profession? by Verena Meier

    Published 2023-09-01
    “… With the beginning of the Second World War the highest policy authority in the Nazi regime ordered that all fortunetelling female Sinti and Roma were to be incarcerated in concentration camps. This article traces the genesis of gendered antigypsyist motifs from the first written documentation on Sinti and Roma in Europe in the late Medieval period through the Enlightenment and the specialized discourse of criminology and penology in the nineteenth century. …”
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    Article
  14. 94

    The border crossed. Fantabiology of the Everyday in Primo Levi’s “Storie naturali” by Sara Gemma

    Published 2023-03-01
    “…This paper aims at investigating a peculiar stimmung of Primo Levi's artistic production, which from a literature based on the experiences in concentration camps slips into these dystopian tales and is declined by sketches of the daily machine-traps. …”
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  15. 95

    L’immortel Bartfuss, un récit lazaréen ? by Marie-Christine Pavis

    Published 2014-05-01
    “…In the 1950s, Jean Cayrol, a survivor of the Mauthausen camp, creates the concept of “Lazarus literature” designating stories like his own, dealing with the return of the convicts and the life of the survivors of concentration camps. The main interest of these stories resides in their witness value due to a double distance: temporal and fictional. …”
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  16. 96

    Fortunetelling as a Fraudulent Profession? by Verena Meier

    Published 2023-09-01
    “… With the beginning of the Second World War the highest policy authority in the Nazi regime ordered that all fortunetelling female Sinti and Roma were to be incarcerated in concentration camps. This article traces the genesis of gendered antigypsyist motifs from the first written documentation on Sinti and Roma in Europe in the late Medieval period through the Enlightenment and the specialized discourse of criminology and penology in the nineteenth century. …”
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    Article
  17. 97

    G. Agamben and the Biopolitical Understanding of the Shoah by Luc Anckaert

    Published 2022-12-01
    “…This happened concretely in the Shoah. In the concentration camps, the Muselmann is produced. During the Shoah by Bullet, as happened in Lithuania, the generalised sovereign biopolitics turns into radical thanatopolitics. …”
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  18. 98

    Genre et engagement dans la Résistance : l’exemple d’Anne-Marie Walters by Guillaume Pollack

    “…Many of them were arrested and killed in the concentration camps. This episode fascinated English people and many books that told their stories were written in England. …”
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  19. 99

    “From spoiling natives to no work, no food”: Food scarcity and the controversy of food rations during the South African War by Mpho Manaka

    Published 2022-11-01
    “…The study on which this article is based, examined three main causes of food shortages during the South African War: the unequal distribution of food rations during the siege of Mafikeng, particularly in the concentration camps; complaints by white communities about the “spoiling of natives”; and the introduction of the “no work, no food” policy. …”
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  20. 100

    Comment vivre après Auschwitz ? Romain Gary et l’écriture de l’après (1946-1956) by Kerwin Spire

    Published 2013-08-01
    “…Since the immediate post-war period, the literary figure of the Shoah survivor has been haunting Romain Gary’s fictional work: it is Tulipe, in the eponymous story (1946), who, coming out of Buchenwald, settled in Harlem’s “new world”; it is Vanderputte, in Le Grand Vestiaire (The Company of Men, 1948), who denounced a Resistance network; it is the “Companion of the Liberation” Jacques Rainier in Les couleurs du jour (Colors of the Day, 1952), who saw the ideal of a Free France crumble and volunteered to fight in Korea; it is Morel, in Les racines du ciel (The Roots of Heaven, 1956) who survived the experience of the concentration camps by imagining herds of elephant sprinting across the savannah.Between 1946 and 1956, Romain Gary examined and experimented different post-Shoah attitudes through these four characters. …”
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