商品簡介
Were Americans the heroic liberators of Nazi concentration camp victims in 1945, or were they knowing and apathetic bystanders to unspeakable brutality and annihilation for a dozen years? Historians have long debated what the United States knew about Hitler’s gruesome Final Solution, when they knew it, and whether they should have intervened sooner. Wrapping historical narrative around 60 primary sources — including news clippings, speeches, letters, magazine articles, and government reports — Abzug chronicles the unfolding events in Nazi Germany while tracing the resurgence of anti-Semitism and tightening immigration policies in the United States. He relies on the American journalistic sources through which U.S. citizens read about events in Europe to provide students a real context to understand Americans’ horror when they realized that the reports of the Holocaust were not exaggerations or fabrications. An epilogue examines the complexity of historical interpretations and moral judgments that have evolved since 1945. Useful apparatus includes photographs, a chronology, questions for consideration, a bibliography, and an index.
作者簡介
Robert H. Abzug is professor of history and American studies and director of the liberal arts honors programs at the University of Texas at Austin, where he has received several teaching awards. He has also taught at the University of California, Los Angeles, and held the Eric Voegelin Visiting Professorship at the University of Munich. He has published widely in a number of fields, including the Holocaust, antebellum America, and the history of religion in America. Among his major publications are Passionate Liberator: Theodore Dwight Weld and the Dilemma of Reform (1980), Inside the Vicious Heart: America and the Liberation of Nazi Concentration Camps (1985), and Cosmos Crumbling: American Reform and the Religious Imagination (1994). He is currently writing a biography of American psychologist Rollo May.