2 488 résultats
1st Edition. Original Paper Wrappers. 8vo. 27 pages ; 21 cm. With photographs throughout. In Portuguese. Title translates into English as, Running From Hitler and The Holocaust : Refugees in Portugal Between 1933-1945 : Photographs And Documents. Printed as part of a 1994 exhibit on Holocaust refugees at the Goethe-Institut in Lisbon. SUBJECT (S) : Jewish refugees -- Portugal -- Exhibitions. OCLC lists 4 copies worldwide (US Hol. Memorial Museum, Universitatsbibliothek Chemnitz, Staats & Universitatsbibliothek Hamburg, Bibliothek Der Technischen Universitat) . Some edgewear. In very good condition. (HOLO2-130-2)
(FT) Paper Wrappers. 12mo. 19, [1] pages. 19 cm. In Yiddish. Numbered 0525 (of how many? ) , finely printed on letterpress in red and black ink; coptic (braided thread) binding with illustrated cover. Translates roughly as From One Mother to All the Mothers. Early Secular Yiddish tract on how to be a good mother. Subjects: Child rearing. Parenting. Child psychology. OCLC lists only two copies (Lib Congress, HUC) . Light soiling to covers, with outer edges lightly bumped and chipped. Internally clean and fresh. Very good condition. Scarce and interesting. (HOLO2-97-47)
Paper Wraps. 8vo. 31 pages. Holocaust-era imprint. Monthly periodical by the Labor Zionist Youth organization. Contents of this issue include, The Month: Still No Decision, Shalom Wurm; Seder Diary, Ben Simcha; Boundaries of Exile, Ben Halpern; Palestine Letter: Crisis in the Party, S. Aharoni; A Day in Yagur, Willliam Siegel; Labor in Search of Policy, Samuel M. Ehrenhalt. SUBJECT (S) : Jews -- United States -- Periodicals. Labor Zionism -- United States -- Periodicals. Jewish youth -- United States -- Periodicals. OCLC lists no copies. Cover has some stains, fraying at binding. Pages darkened and crease through corner of some pages, but all text is clear. Good condition. (HOLO2-41-17)
1st printing of the 1938 edition. October, 1938. Original illustrated wrappers, 12mo (small) , 191 pages, including many, many period ads. Published just one month prior to Kristallnacht, this is a Name and Address Directory of the worlds leading Fur business district, the Brühl, and its counterpart in Berlin, both very heavily Jewish. Divided into 2 sections, one for the Brühl in Leipzig, and the other for Furriers in Berlin. In the 19th and early 20th Century, the Brühl had become synonymous with the Leipzig fur and Tobacco trade. It was the name of the large street where the trade was concentrated (also including Nikolai- and Reichs-strasse) . The Brühl reached its highest density with 794 shops in 1928. Of these, about 58 percent were Jewish run and owned. In the period 1926-1930, the Brühl controlled about one third of the world market in furs. With the great depression, followed by the Nazi seizure of power in 1933, the fur trade went into decline. For political reasons the fascist leadership limited the import quotas for goods from the USSR, such as raw fur. And, of course, increasingly, Jewish merchants in the Brühl were discriminated against and expelled. Many fled to England or the United States, where they established new fur businesses. Following Kristallnacht, which came only 1 month after the publication of this guide in October 1938, it became impossible for Jewish furriers to function. Some of the most famous Jewish fur traders included: Julius (Judel) Ariowitsch (1855-1908) ; Chaim Eitingon (1857-1932) , known as "Fur King from Brühl", founder of the Ez Chaim Synagogue and the Jewish hospital; the Frankel family; the Harmerlin Family; John B. (John [Joel] Berend) Oppenheimer & Company; F. Weiss (1893-1982) ; and Theodor Wolf (1833) . OCLC lists only one holding worldwide (German National Library) . Light wear, occational pencil scribbles, overall Very Good Condition. Quite rare and important. (holo2-125-28)
(FT) Cloth. 8vo. 219 pages, 25 pages of plates. Ill. Ports. Facsims. 23 cm. In Hebrew. Inscription from author on front endpaper. Title translates to English as, Embers of the Rotem Plant: In Memory of the Refugees of the Warsaw Ghetto. Subjects: Szwizgold, Shlomo. Jews -- Poland Warsaw -- Biography. World War, 1939-1945 -- Poland -- Warsaw -- Personal narratives, Jewish. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Poland -- Warsaw -- Biography. Warsaw (Poland) -- History -- Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, 1943. OCLC lists only 24 copies worldwide. Dust jacket has some wear at edges and on spine. Internal pages are nice and clean with tight binding. Private inscription inside. Very good condition. (HOLO2-83-75)
(FT) Original Publishers Cloth. Xxii, 458 pages. In Hebrew with English summaries. Series: Publications of the Diaspora Research Institute, Book 9 = Pirsume ha-Merkaz le-heker ha-tefutsot `a. Sh. Goldshtain-Goren. CONTENTS INCLUDES: The Jews and the Factors in the Development and Location of Industry in Warsaw Wilhelm Feldman and Alfred Nossig - Assimilation and Zionism in Lvov The Jewish Trade Union Movement in Congress Poland in the First World War (in Yiddish with Hebrew Summary) The Economic Struggle of Polish Jewry between two Wars The First Stages of Organizing the Jews in Poland at the End of World War II Cultural and Social Trends of the Jews in Poland as Reflected in Yiddish Literature 1914-1939. SUBJECT(S) : Jews -- Poland -- Periodicals. Joden. Geographic: Poland -- History -- Periodicals. Polen (land) . Previous owners signature on inside cover. Otherwise a nice, clean copy with tight binding. Very good condition. (HOLO2-60-30)
Paper wrappers. 12mo. 16 pages. 20 cm. Fourth Supplement. In Dutch. Gedenckclanck was originally the name of a volume published in the Netherlands in 1626 which contains the well known hymnal, we go out together now, a celebration of Dutch independence and liberation. In the occupied Netherlands consecutive four part anthologies of illegal poetry, letters, and writings, all in the service of the resistance, were printed at the same underground press in Alphen aan den Rijn, and each collection was given the same title Gedenckclanck. Gedenckclanck 1940-1944 was printed in three parts, in the years 1944, 1944, and 1945, of lengths of 112, 176, and 68 pages respectively, in editions of 2200, 400, 200 respectively. The first volume was printed hastily, without corrections being made to the print run. The latter two volumes were reserved for the Royal House (presumably the Dutch Royal Family was allowed to obtain any type of literature even during the occupation) , prisoners in the camps, prisoners overseas, and those fighting in Free Dutch units elsewhere. Part four, entitled Gedenckclanck 1940-1945 was printed in the early spring of 1945. Four supplements, prepared during the occupation and which appeared one month after the liberation, were produced in very limited print runs. The pamphlet we have to offer is the last of the four in the series. Approximate translation from the title page recto: This little book was commenced after a presentation entitled "The Message of the Dead". / We go out together now! Radiant, young, happy. But above all grateful. / Closing with the farewell letter from a condemned man. / To the memory of Jaap Sickenga, shot by the Germans on May 11, 1942. This supplement to pt. 4 of the clandestinely published series of the same title contains letters and poems by or about Dutch victims of Nazi terror. Gedenckclanck first appeared in the autumn of 1944. They included only illegal poems, referring to the sacrifice of the dead and suffering in prisons and camps. The second Gedenckclanck offered an anthology of illegal poetry, from bundles and loose sheets of papers that had made the rounds. In the third Gedenckclanck illegal prose poetry was also included. Volume four appeared in the early spring of 1945. In the first months after liberation there appeared four 'supplements' also titled: Gedenckclanck. The compiler lectured in various places on 'The Message of the Dead ", after which a few small anthologies of illegal literature were offered. The mimeographed supplements, respectively: 26, 18, 31 and 16 page count. The first was dedicated to the sacrifice of the dead and suffering in prisons and camps. Nos. 2 and 4 contain only testimonies of martyrs. The third supplement is subtitled: Prayers. (This information, and the preceding specifications, with gratitude taken from Dirk de Jong (red. ) , HET VRIJE BOEK IN ONVRIJE TIJD. BIBLIOGRAFIE VAN ILLEGALE EN CLANDESTIENE BELLETTRIE. Interbook International, Schiedam 1978 (THE FREE BOOK OF UNFREE TIME. BIBLIOGRAPHY OF ILLEGAL AND CLANDESTINE BELLES LETTRES. Interbook International, Schiedam 1978) . Subjects: Dutch poetry -- 20th century. Netherlands -- History -- German occupation, 1940-1945 -- Poetry. OCLC lists only 2 copies worldwide (Univ Amsterdam, British Library) , none in the US. Paper wrappers worn, with a slight tear to cover at edge, and marked water stains on the back cover. Light pencil marks on title page. Pages browned, but very clean. Very good + Condition. (HOLO2-80-6)
Original Publishers Cloth. Large 8vo. 432 pages. Illus. 25 cm. In Dutch. Second, Expanded and Improved Edition. Title translates to English as, Commemorative Book of the Orange Hotel. Weber was a Reserve-retired Major of Infantry Commander of the camp in the "Orange Hotel" in May 1945. The Orange Hotel was the nickname given to a Nazi prison in Scheveningen in South Holand which served as a penitentiaryfor members of the resistance during the German occupation. The name Orange refers to the Dutch royal colors. OCLC lists 8 copies worldwide. Lightly sunned spine, but otherwise a nice, clean copy. Internal pages are darkened, but not fragile. Very Good condition. (HOLO2-79-2)
45894ABAachen, Rimbaud 2019. Gr.-8°. 356 S., [2] Bll. Original-Flügelkarton. Zeitungsartikel zum Buch am hinteren Innendeckel montiert.
Original Wrappers. 8vo. 24 pages. 21 cm. Illustrated. First Edition. Subjects: Anti-Nazi movement. Berlin (Germany) . Gefängnis Plötzensee. Germany -- Biography. OCLC lists 10 copies worldwide. (California State Univ. , Thousand Oaks Public Libr. , Indiana Univ. Of PA, Koninklijke Libr. , German Natl. Libr. , Topography of Terror Museum, Libr. For Research of History in Berlin, State Libr. Of Worms, Nanterre, Univ. Marburg. ) Light soiling to back cover top edge. Light shelf wear. Very good condition. (HOLO-114-14)
Paperback. 8vo. 831 pages. Ill. , maps (some color) . 21 cm. In German. Series: Schriftenreihe der Bundeszentrale für Politische Bildung, Bd. 245. Arbeitshilfen für die politische Bildung. Contents: Bd. 1. [Baden-Württemberg, Bayern, Bremen, Hamburg, Hessen, Niedersachsen, Nordrhein-Westfalen, Rheinland-Pfalz, Saarland, Schleswig-Holstein]. ISBN: 3923423675. English Title: Memorial for the Victims of National Socialism: A Documentation. SUBJECT(S) : War memorials -- Germany -- Dictionaries. Memorials -- Germany -- Dictionaries. National socialism -- Dictionaries. World War, 1939-1945 -- Atrocities -- Dictionaries. Holocaust memorials -- Germany -- Dictionaries. Gedenkplaatsen. Gedenktekens. Nationaal-socialisme. Slachtoffers. Monuments aux morts -- Allemagne -- Dictionnaires llemands. Monuments commémoratifs -- Allemagne -- Dictionnaires allemands. Nazisme -- Dictionnaires allemands. Guerre mondiale, 1939-1945 -- Atrocités -- Dictionnaires allemands. Monuments de l'Holocauste -- Allemagne -- Dictionnaires allemands. Geographic: Germany -- History, Local -- Dictionaries. Allemagne -- Histoire locale -- Dictionnaires allemands. One folded map in back cover pocket. Includes bibliographical references and indexes. Light wear to cover with some wrinkling on spine. Ex-Bund Archives with their stamp on several pages. Internal binding and pages in very good condition. (HOLO2-29-10)
Original Cloth. 8vo. 669 pages. 20 cm. First edition. In Polish. 'The Gehenna of the Jews'. History of the holocaust in Poland, written by Eugene Fafara (1917-1999) , organizer of Polish peasant resistance and member of the Polish Peasant Party. Subjects: Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) - Poland. Judenverfolgung. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) Occupation of Poland (1939-1945) History. Poland - History - Occupation, 1939-1945. From the library of Morris Wyszogrod. Clean and fresh in good jacket. Very good + condition. (HOLO2-117-25)
Hardcover, 76 pages, 8vo, 23 cm. Series: Schriftenreihe des zionistischen Landeskomitees fur Osterreich, nr. 3; From the year of Hitler's ascendency, a Zionist analysis of the decimation of Judaism, via Antisemitism and Assimilation, which can only be solved by the creation of a Jewish state. SUBJECT (S) : Heller, Otto, 1897- Untergang des Judentums. "Vorwort" signed Wilhelm Stein. Imprint on cover: "Verlagsbuchhandlung Dr. H. Glanz, Wien. " OCLC lists 12 copies worldwide. Hinge repair. Slight browning of pages. Wear and browning to front cover. Small tear to bottom of title page, no text loss. Light wear. Otherwise, very good condition. (Holo2-20-4)
(FT) Original Paper Wrappers, 8vo, 118 pages. Includes illustrations 22 cm. In Yiddish. Mayse-bikhlekh -- Bay a raykhn korev -- In geroysh fun mashinen -- 1905 -- Zump. SUBJECT(S) : Yiddish fiction. Some edgewear to covers, paper browning as generally found but no tears. Good+ Condition. (HOLO2-87-7)
Paper wrappers. 11 pages. 23 cm. First edition. In German. Community Emergency - Emergency Association! was a sermon delivered by Rabbi Hermann Klein, concerning the catastrophic community emergency that plagues the Jewish community today, namely, the need for solidarity amongst all Jews in Berlin. Rabbi Hermann Klein, Hungarian born, was a Rabbi in Berlin, and perished in Riga in 1942. His cousin and friend Eugenio Villas of Buenos Aires is given a dedication on the title page; most likely Villas reprinted this sermon as a pamphlet after Klein sent it to him. With institutional blind stamp on last page. Subjects: Jewish sermons - German. OCLC lists 6 copies worldwide. Slightly browned and soiled covers, bumped topmost edge. Very Good Condition. (LATAM1-26)
Mario e Macciò Genova e "ha Shoah" Salvati dalla Chiesa. , Il cittadino 2006, Libro usato in buone condizioni. Pagine finemente illustrate. Tagli regolari leggermente impolverati, Copertina flessibile cartonata con alette informative Buono (Good) . <br> <br> <br> 223<br>
Original Wraps. 16mo. [3], 61, [1] (ie. 65) pages. 17 cm. First edition. In Italian. 'George L. Mosse, [1985]'. Issue 3 of Quaderni del Premio Prezzolini. Contains lectures delivered at a conference in honor of George L Mosse, with introductory essay on the biography and work of Mosse, and various essays by noted Italian and Italian-Jewish journalists, historians, and literary critics Enrico Nistri, Antonio De Benedetti, Massimo L. Salvadori, Rosellina Balbi, Luciano Tas, Marcello Staglieno, and Ze'ev Mankovetz on Mosse; most essays specifically devoted to the history of Racism and Fascism. Includes three essays by Mosse, an acceptance speech (Discorso di ringraziamento) , 'views on racism' (Come vedo il razzismo) , and 'the historian must destroy the myths' (Lo storico deve distruggere I miti) . Volume not listed on the Bibliography of the works of George L. Mosse on the Madison-Wisconsin George L. Mosse program in history website. OCLC lists one copy (Sistema Bibliotecario Ticinese) . Subjects: Festschrift George L. Mosse. Historiography Italian Fascism. History of Racism. Near fine. Great condition. (MOSS-1-14) Xxxx
200512550Berlin, be.bra, 2005. Pappband, Schutzumschlag, 8°, 191 S., einige s/w Abbildungen; -sehr gutes Exemplar.
Paper Wraps. 8vo. 96 pages. 23 cm. In German. Weimar-era philosemitic call for justice and calling on Germans and Jews to work together (though, of course, they are seen as distinct) . SUBJECT(S) : Jewish Question. Backstrip has tears at top and bottom, title page is torn and reattached with tape. Internal pages are nice and clean. Good condition. (HOLO2-45-1) .
Original Wraps. 12mo. 16 pages. 18 cm. First edition. Critical pamphlet contemporary to the Nuremberg Trials on their historic significance, with a summary of their content and purpose, and a critique; argues that the atrocities committed in Poland against the Polish population (7 million murdered) has been slighted in their exposure in favor of atrocities committed on the soil of the USSR and its satellites. The author gives numerous examples of specific atrocities committed in Poland which should have been included in the trial proceedings, lambasts the trial for not mentioning the liquidation of the Warsaw Ghetto; ends with the argument that 'totalitarianism' was not utilized as a category in the trial proceedings as this would immediately point to the continuing existence of other totalitarian states, namely, the USSR. Subjects: World war, 1939-1945 - Trials - Germany. World war, 1939-1945 - Atrocities - Poland. OCLC lists 3 copies worldwide (U of Toronto, Bayerische Staatsbib. , Ntl Lib Poland) , none in the US. Light soiling and foxing to wraps, otherwise clean and fresh. Good + condition. Scarce. (HOLO2-121-39) xx
Publishers cloth. 8vo. 114 pages. 24 cm. First edition. German Faces is a collection of 48 photographs and dozens of interviews with Germans living in all occupation zones and attempting the reconstruction of post-war Germany. Included are interviews with former soldiers, former political prisoners and camp inmates, many liberals, leftists, housewives, and certain nazis. The author, Ann Stringer was born Elizabeth Ann Harrell in Eastland, Texas in 1918. Her Family moved to Tyler shortly after her birth, where she attended Tyler High School. She went on to study journalism at Tyler Jr. College, Southern Methodist University and the University of Texas. In 1941, she moved to Columbus, Ohio with her first husband, William Stringer, where they both worked for the United Press. As a team, the Stringers traveled on assignments to New York, South America, and Europe. After William was killed in France in 1944, Ann went to Europe alone and became a United Press war correspondent. In 1949, she married Henry Ries whom she met in Germany. Together they wrote a book titled German Faces. (Ann Stringer collection, Ohio State University) . Subjects: Germany - History - 1945-1955. Light wear to edges, no dustjacket, otherwise clean and fresh. Very good condition. (HOLO2-102-21)
Publishers cloth. 8vo. XII, 217 pages. 24 cm. First edition. This volume assesses the composition and role of the German minorities throughout eastern central Europe before world war two; as the minorities, so called Volksdeutschen were used to legitimate nazi imperialist policy, the reception of these minorities to racist and imperialist aims is given critical, sociological, and scholarly treatment in the volume. One of the co-authors, Anthony Komjathy (1921-1998) was a leader in the 1956 Hungarian Revolution and escaped Soviet forces, immigrating to the U. S. With his wife and daughter. He worked as a janitor in an apartment building while earning his master's and doctorate degrees at Loyola University of Chicago. He was born in Hungary and earned degrees at Ludovica Military Academy and the National War College of Hungary. Mr. Komjathy was decorated for his service in the Hungarian army during World War II. After the war, he served on the general staff of the Hungarian army until the early 1950s, when he was interned by the Communist regime. In the U. S. , he began teaching in 1967 at Barat College in Lake Forest. He joined the Dominican University faculty in 1978. At Dominican, he founded the Rosary Journal of History and Social Sciences, a publication made up of student contributions. Among the books he wrote were The Crises of France's East Central European Diplomacy, 1933-1938, The German Minorities and the Third Reich, One Thousand Years of Hungarian Art of War and Give Peace One More Chance! Revision of the 1946 Peace Treaty of Paris. (Obituary, Chicago Tribune, April 3rd, 1998) Subjects: Germans - Europe, Eastern - History. Germans - Europe, Central - History. National socialism. Geschichte 1918-1939. Geschichte 1918-1945. Europe, Eastern - Politics and government. Europe, Central - Politics and government. Light shelf wear to cloth, no dustjacket. Very good condition. (HOLO2-100-16)
8vo. 256 pages. Illustrated. First edition. SUBJECT (S) : Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) - reparations; World War, 1939-1945 - Jews - Europe; Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany; Germany (West) - foreign relations - Israel; Israel - foreign relations - Germany (West) . CONTENTS: The background of the negotiations; Leading up to negotiations with Germany; The deliberations at Wassenaar; The agreements and the struggle for their approval. ISBN: 031232622X. Has lightly worn dust jacket. Very good condition. (Holo2-12-6)
198714674CBBoulder/London, Westview Press (= A Westview special study), 1987. 8°, XI, 198 S. (Text: Englisch), original Kartonage (Paperback), Erstausgabe untere Ecke des Rückdeckels mit Knickspur, die Hälfte der Seiten papierbedingt minimal wellspurig, sonst schönes, sauberes Exemplar (hilireg3ho)
Publishers Boards. 8vo. 118pages. 24cm. First edition. Using modern social theory, David Brenner examines how German-Jewish identity was influenced by the production and consumption of popular culture. Part of the Routledge Jewish Studies Series. David A. Brenner examines how Jews in Central Europe developed one of the first ethnic or minority cultures in modernity. Not exclusively German or Jewish, the experiences of German-speaking Jewry in the decades prior to the Third Reich and the Holocaust were also negotiated in encounters with popular culture, particularly the novel, the drama and mass media. Despite recent scholarship, the misconception persists that Jewish Germans were bent on assimilation. Although subject to compulsion, they did not become solely German, much less European. Yet their behavior and values were by no means exclusively Jewish, as the Nazis or other anti-Semites would have it. Rather, the German Jews achieved a peculiar synthesis between 1890 and 1933, developing a culture that was not only middle-class but also ethnic. In particular, they reinvented Judaic traditions by way of a hybridized culture. Based on research in German, Israeli and American archives, German-Jewish Popular Culture before the Holocaust addresses many of the genres in which a specifically German-Jewish identity was performed, from the Yiddish theatre and Zionist humour all the way to sensationalist memoirs and Kafkas own kitsch. This middle-class ethnic identity encompassed and went beyond religious confession and identity politics. In focusing principally on German-Jewish popular culture, this groundbreaking book introduces the beginnings of ethnicity as we know it and live it today. (Publishers description. ) Subjects: Jews in popular culture -- Germany -- History -- 20th century. Jews -- Germany -- Intellectual life -- 20th century. Popular culture -- Germany. Jews in popular culture -- Germany -- History -- 20th century. Jews -- Germany -- Intellectual life -- 20th century. Popular culture -- Germany. Massenkultur. Jews in popular culture -- Germany -- History -- 20th century. Jews -- Germany -- Intellectual life -- 20th century. Popular culture -- Germany. . Like new condition. (HOLO2-107-5) Xxxx