| Michael S. Bryant - History - 2005 - 296 pages
"Drawing on primary sources and extensive research, this investigation of the Nazi campaign against the mentally ill and the postwar quest for justice will interest general ... | |
| Henry Friedlander - History - 1997 - 452 pages
Henry Friedlander explores in chilling detail how the Nazi program of secretly exterminating the handicapped and disabled evolved into the systematic destruction of Jews and ... | |
| Melvyn Conroy - History - 2017 - 490 pages
Conceived as the answer to all of mankind's seemingly insoluble health and social problems, and promoted as a substitute for orthodox religious beliefs, the pseudoscience of ... | |
| Michael Burleigh - History - 1994 - 404 pages
The first full-scale study in English of the Nazis' so-called 'euthanasia' programme in which over 200,000 people perished. | |
| Omer Bartov - History - 2000 - 324 pages
Presenting a critical study of the Holocaust with a summary of the state of the field, this book contains major reinterpretations by Holocaust authors along with key texts on ... | |
| Richard Breitman - Genocide - 1991 - 360 pages
Among the Nazi leaders, Heinrich Himmler was, as Richard Breitman observes in this ground- breaking study, an easy man to underestimate--short, pudgy, near-sighted, chinless ... | |
| Gerald Fleming - History - 1987 - 300 pages
Pp. vii-xxxiii contain Friedländer's introduction, which did not appear in the original German edition. | |
| Witold Chrostowski - History - 2004 - 144 pages
Although Auschwitz is a major icon in Holocaust history the Nazis killed most of the innocent Jews of Europe in Treblinka, Belzec and Sobibor. This study by a Polish 'new ... | |
| Peter Longerich - Biography & Autobiography - 2001 - 166 pages
The Holocaust differs from other genocides in recent history for one main reason: there is no other example in which a minority was annihilated systematically and as completely ... | |
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