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A l'ete 1942 dans l'Amsterdam occupe, le jeune Juif Jacob Wijnkoper plonge dans la clandestinite. Pendant de longues annees il devra survivre dans l'angoisse permanente d'etre capture par les Allemands. Rien ne lui sera epargne. Il devra se cacher longtemps dans une epave d'autobus en compagnie d'un marginal alcoolique, dans des jardins ouvriers avec des deserteurs allemands de la Wehrmacht, et reussira finalement a se faire interner comme lepreux avec l'aide d'une prostituee et d'un medecin d'un hopital d'Amsterdam. Avec sa femme et son ami d'enfance Simon ils partent tous trois en Palestine. Jacob s'y retrouve implique dans le nettoyage ethnique de villes et villages palestiniens. Sous les yeux de Julia et Simon le modeste garcon d'Amsterdam se metamorphosera en un assassin cruel. Lorsque le pere de Jacob reapparait en Palestine le cours du destin ne pourra plus etre evite."
Examines the change in memory regime in postwar France, from one centered on the concentration camps to one centered on the Holocaust.
Doctors at War tells the stories of physicians in France working to impede the German war effort and undermine French collaborators during the Occupation from 1940 to 1945. Determined to defeat the Third Reich’s incursion, one group of prominent Paris doctors founded a medical network to treat injured Resistance fighters who they then secretly transported to Allied countries to avoid forced labor in Germany. Another team of medics organized a cabal focused on intelligence gathering and sabotage that became one of the largest in wartime France, even after the Gestapo arrested and imprisoned its leaders. Deported to concentration camps, these physicians continued to frustrate Nazi efforts by rendering aid and keeping their fellow prisoners alive. Others joined rural guerrilla camps to care for the young conscripts fighting to block German reinforcements from reaching Normandy after the D-Day landing. These stories, assembled here for the first time, add a crucial dimension to the history of Occupied France. Written for both historians and general readers of World War II history, Doctors at War stands as a dramatic, character-driven account of physicians’ courage and resilience in the face of evil. It serves as a window into life under a fascist regime and the travails of doctors who negotiated the terrifying moral labyrinth that was the German military’s occupation of France.
Warfare in the modern era has often been described in terms of national armies fighting national wars. This volume challenges the view by examining transnational aspects of military mobilization from the eighteenth century to the present. Truly global in scope, it offers an alternative way of reading the military history of the last 250 years.
Postcolonial theory is one of the key issues of scholarly debates worldwide; debates, so the author argues, which are rather sterile and characterized by a repetitive reworking of old hackneyed issues, focussing on cultural questions of language and identity in particular. She explores the divergent responses to the debates on globalization.