Social Outsiders in Nazi Germany
Social Outsiders in Nazi Germany is a book edited by Robert Gellately and Nathan Stoltzfus. It is a collection of essays offering the history of those branded "social outsiders" in Nazi Germany.
It was published by Princeton University Press as a 320-page hardcover (ISBN 978-0-691-00748-9) and paperback (ISBN 978-0-691-08684-2) in 2001.
Contents
- Social Outsiders and the Construction of the Community of the People by Robert Gellately and Nathan Stoltzfus
- Social Outsiders in German History: From the Sixteenth century to 1933 by Richard J. Evans
- No "Volksgenossen": Jewish Entrepreneurs in the Third Reich by Frank Bajohr
- When the Ordinary Became Extraordinary: German Jews Reacting to Nazi Persecution, 1933-1939 by Marion A. Kaplan
- The Nazi Purge of German Artistic and Cultural Life by Alan E. Steinweis
- The Limits of Policy: Social Protection of Intermarried German Jews in Nazi Germany by Nathan Stoltzfus
- The Exclusion and Murder of the Disabled by Henry Friedlander
- From Indefinite Confinement to Extermination: "Habitual Criminals" in the Third Reich by Nikolaus Wachsmann
- The Ambivalent Outsider: Prostitution, Promiscuity, and VD Control in Nazi Berlin by Annette F. Timm
- "Gypsies" as Social Outsiders in Nazi Germany by Sybil H. Milton
- The Institutionalization of Homosexual Panic in the Third Reich by Geoffrey J. Giles
- Police Justice, Popular Justice, and Social Outsiders in Nazi Germany: The Example of Polish Foreign Workers by Robert Gellately
- Sex, Blood, and Vulnerability: Women Outsiders in German-Occupied Europe by Doris L. Bergen
- Social Outcasts in War and Genocide: A Comparative Perspective by Omer Bartov
- List of Contributors
- Index
External links
- Social Outsiders in Nazi Germany at the publisher's site.
- Genocide as a Category of Analysis: Social Outsiders in Nazi Germany reviewed by Rachel T. Greenwald (History, University of Wyoming) in German Politics & Society, Vol. 20, No. 4, Issue 65, Winter 2002 .
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