Results 211 to 220 of about 163,087 (265)
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The Concentration Camp Syndrome
Australian & New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry, 1994A psychiatric syndrome following overwhelming stress after an interval of more than thirty years is described in holocaust survivors who had claimed compensation for persecution between 1939 and 1945. Five nuclear symptom complexes emerge: depressive reactions; anxiety states; somatic complaints; subjective intellectual impairment ...
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Abstract This book explains why concentration camps were created, and how they changed radically in the course of the twentieth century to become instruments of mass terror and genocide. In popular perception, concentration camps are synonymous with genocide—racial extermination. Yet the great majority of them were not sites of genocide.
Rolf J Kleber, Danny Brom
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Rolf J Kleber, Danny Brom
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The Personality of Inmates of Concentration Camps
American Journal of Sociology, 1947The effect of life in a concentration camp upon the behavior and personality of former inmates is explored through case studies. The principal findings are based upon a limited control group of 547 Jewish women. The formation of the structural characteristics normally found in institutions of detention was prevented by unique self-attitudes, isolation,
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Suicides in the Nazi Concentration Camps
Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior, 1986ABSTRACT: On the basis of psychiatric interviews with 69 former prisoners of the Auschwitz‐Birkenau concentration camp, this paper describes the circumstances, motives, and ways of committing suicide in the camp. The interviews made it clear that thousands of prisoners perished by suicide.
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2021
Concentration camps were a central part of East Germany’s commemorative politics. National antifascist memorials opened at three former concentration camps between 1958 and 1961. The narrative visitors encountered at these memorial sites valorized the camps political prisoners and devoted little—if any—attention to other victims of the Holocaust ...
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Concentration camps were a central part of East Germany’s commemorative politics. National antifascist memorials opened at three former concentration camps between 1958 and 1961. The narrative visitors encountered at these memorial sites valorized the camps political prisoners and devoted little—if any—attention to other victims of the Holocaust ...
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Survival in the Concentration Camp
Human Organization, 1958That factors are significant for the physical and psychological survival of the individual in extreme situations?
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Ophthalmology in a Concentration Camp
American Journal of Ophthalmology, 1957Robert Salus, Stefan Van Wien
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