To what extent has Arno Mayer (historian) understood the 'Holocaust'?
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Words: 2836
Pages: 10
(approximately 235 words/page)
Pages: 10
(approximately 235 words/page)
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To what extent has Arno Mayer understood the 'Holocaust'?
As the sun prepares to set on yet another century of humanity, it is a time to reflect on the hallmarks that have changed our society, either through good or bad. Unfortunately, the event, that produced the greatest change, was also the darkest in our brief history. This event was the 'Holocaust.' Historians, today, continue to puzzle at its origins and have formulated several theories
showed first 75 words of 2836 total
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showed first 75 words of 2836 total
showed last 75 words of 2836 total
and the Jews, Vol. 1, New York, Harper Collins Pub, 1997 Goldhagen.D.J, Hitler's Willing Executioners: ordinary Germans and the Holocaust, New York, Random House, 1994. Kershaw.I, The nazi dictatorship; problems and perspectives of interpretation, 3rd ed., London, Edward Arnold, 1993 Mayer.A.J, Why did the heavens not darken: the 'final solution' in history, New York, Pantheon Books, 1988 Mayer.A.J, 'Memory and history: on the poverty of remembering and forgetting the Judeocide', Radical Historical Review, 56, 1993
and the Jews, Vol. 1, New York, Harper Collins Pub, 1997 Goldhagen.D.J, Hitler's Willing Executioners: ordinary Germans and the Holocaust, New York, Random House, 1994. Kershaw.I, The nazi dictatorship; problems and perspectives of interpretation, 3rd ed., London, Edward Arnold, 1993 Mayer.A.J, Why did the heavens not darken: the 'final solution' in history, New York, Pantheon Books, 1988 Mayer.A.J, 'Memory and history: on the poverty of remembering and forgetting the Judeocide', Radical Historical Review, 56, 1993