Did the Germans Do It All? The Italian Shoah in International Historiography (1946-1986)
This essay examines how the main historical writings in languages other than Italian (mostly English) published in the first forty years after the end of the war addressed the role played in the arrests and the deportations of the Jews in Italy by Mussolini’s Italian Social Republic (Repubblica Soci...
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Fondazione Centro di Documentazione Ebraica Contemporanea CDEC
2014-07-01
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Series: | Quest. Issues in Contemporary Jewish History |
Online Access: | http://www.quest-cdecjournal.it/focus.php?id=360 |
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doaj-1b464a2a62f048b9b2b61a4c7374caa62021-02-02T07:56:39ZengFondazione Centro di Documentazione Ebraica Contemporanea CDECQuest. Issues in Contemporary Jewish History2037-741X2014-07-017144155Did the Germans Do It All? The Italian Shoah in International Historiography (1946-1986)Michele Sarfatti0Fondazione CDEC - MilanoThis essay examines how the main historical writings in languages other than Italian (mostly English) published in the first forty years after the end of the war addressed the role played in the arrests and the deportations of the Jews in Italy by Mussolini’s Italian Social Republic (Repubblica Sociale Italiana) between the autumn of 1943 and the spring of 1945. It discusses what reconstruction of this single, salient aspect in the Italian chapter of the Shoah has been advanced or accepted by foreign historians. To this end, I have selected the (few) existing texts on Italy and the works offering a reconstruction of the Shoah in its entirety, adding the most significant essays published in periodicals or collective volumes and a few of the many books devoted to specific aspects of that event. As I see it, a complex contagion has taken place between the historical reconstruction of the “final solution,” the ethical judgement on it, the containment policies towards post-war Germany, the quest by the successor states of the non-German collaborationist countries to pursue their own “moral absolution.”http://www.quest-cdecjournal.it/focus.php?id=360 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Michele Sarfatti |
spellingShingle |
Michele Sarfatti Did the Germans Do It All? The Italian Shoah in International Historiography (1946-1986) Quest. Issues in Contemporary Jewish History |
author_facet |
Michele Sarfatti |
author_sort |
Michele Sarfatti |
title |
Did the Germans Do It All? The Italian Shoah in International Historiography (1946-1986) |
title_short |
Did the Germans Do It All? The Italian Shoah in International Historiography (1946-1986) |
title_full |
Did the Germans Do It All? The Italian Shoah in International Historiography (1946-1986) |
title_fullStr |
Did the Germans Do It All? The Italian Shoah in International Historiography (1946-1986) |
title_full_unstemmed |
Did the Germans Do It All? The Italian Shoah in International Historiography (1946-1986) |
title_sort |
did the germans do it all? the italian shoah in international historiography (1946-1986) |
publisher |
Fondazione Centro di Documentazione Ebraica Contemporanea CDEC |
series |
Quest. Issues in Contemporary Jewish History |
issn |
2037-741X |
publishDate |
2014-07-01 |
description |
This essay examines how the main historical writings in languages other than Italian (mostly English) published in the first forty years after the end of the war addressed the role played in the arrests and the deportations of the Jews in Italy by Mussolini’s Italian Social Republic (Repubblica Sociale Italiana) between the autumn of 1943 and the spring of 1945. It discusses what reconstruction of this single, salient aspect in the Italian chapter of the Shoah has been advanced or accepted by foreign historians.
To this end, I have selected the (few) existing texts on Italy and the works offering a reconstruction of the Shoah in its entirety, adding the most significant essays published in periodicals or collective volumes and a few of the many books devoted to specific aspects of that event.
As I see it, a complex contagion has taken place between the historical reconstruction of the “final solution,” the ethical judgement on it, the containment policies towards post-war Germany, the quest by the successor states of the non-German collaborationist countries to pursue their own “moral absolution.” |
url |
http://www.quest-cdecjournal.it/focus.php?id=360 |
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