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After the Holocaust: Consciousness of Genocide in Australia

After the Holocaust: Consciousness of Genocide in Australia Footnotes 1 Raphael Lemkin, Axis Rule in Occupied Europe (Washington, 1944), 79. The 1946 UN Genocide Convention is reprinted as Appendix 1 in Leo Kuper, Genocide (New York, 1981), 210–14. 2 cf. R. H. W. Reece, ‘The Aborigines in Australian Historiography’ in John A. Moses (ed.), Historical Disciplines and Culture in Australasia: an Assessment (St Lucia, 1979), 261, 3 ‘Holocaust’ was a much less familiar term before the television series of that name. When a film on the same subject was released recently there was really only one title possible: ‘Genocide’. 4 See the foreword by Emil L. Fackenheim to Yehuda Bauer, The Jewish Emergence from Powerlessness (London, 1980). The thesis that the Holocaust was unique, going beyond anything normally understood as ‘the human condition’, is taken further by Rainer C. Baum, The Holocaust and the German Elite, Genocide and National Suicide in Germany 1871–1945 (Totowa and London, 1981). 5 Lemkin, Axis Rule , 81. The extent to which the Allies were informed about what was going on in the death camps is documented by Martin Gilbert, Auschwitz and the Allies (London, 1981). 6 The best outline of the development of the concentration camp system is by Martin http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Australian Journal of Politics and History Wiley

After the Holocaust: Consciousness of Genocide in Australia

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Publisher
Wiley
Copyright
Copyright © 1985 Wiley Subscription Services, Inc., A Wiley Company
ISSN
0004-9522
eISSN
1467-8497
DOI
10.1111/j.1467-8497.1985.tb01330.x
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

Footnotes 1 Raphael Lemkin, Axis Rule in Occupied Europe (Washington, 1944), 79. The 1946 UN Genocide Convention is reprinted as Appendix 1 in Leo Kuper, Genocide (New York, 1981), 210–14. 2 cf. R. H. W. Reece, ‘The Aborigines in Australian Historiography’ in John A. Moses (ed.), Historical Disciplines and Culture in Australasia: an Assessment (St Lucia, 1979), 261, 3 ‘Holocaust’ was a much less familiar term before the television series of that name. When a film on the same subject was released recently there was really only one title possible: ‘Genocide’. 4 See the foreword by Emil L. Fackenheim to Yehuda Bauer, The Jewish Emergence from Powerlessness (London, 1980). The thesis that the Holocaust was unique, going beyond anything normally understood as ‘the human condition’, is taken further by Rainer C. Baum, The Holocaust and the German Elite, Genocide and National Suicide in Germany 1871–1945 (Totowa and London, 1981). 5 Lemkin, Axis Rule , 81. The extent to which the Allies were informed about what was going on in the death camps is documented by Martin Gilbert, Auschwitz and the Allies (London, 1981). 6 The best outline of the development of the concentration camp system is by Martin

Journal

Australian Journal of Politics and HistoryWiley

Published: Apr 1, 1985

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