Results 1 to 10 of about 74,244 (288)

Impact of incarceration in Nazi concentration camps on multimorbidity of former prisoners [PDF]

open access: greenNeuropsychiatric Disease and Treatment, 2015
Robert K Jablonski,1 Jerzy Leszek,2 Joanna Rosińczuk,3 Izabella Uchmanowicz,4 Bernard Panaszek11Department and Clinic of Internal Diseases, Geriatry and Allergology, 2Department of Psychiatry, 3Department of Nervous System Diseases, Department of ...
Jablonski RK   +4 more
doaj   +6 more sources

Managing Pregnancy in Nazi Concentration Camps: The Role of Two Jewish Doctors [PDF]

open access: yesRambam Maimonides Medical Journal, 2018
Despite daunting circumstances, history is full of stories of men and women incarcerated by the Nazis, who risked their lives to save others. In some cases, the moral dilemma faced by these people presented an unquestionable challenge—particularly for ...
Konrad Kwiet
doaj   +3 more sources

Without a compass: Salonikan Jews in Nazi Concentration Camps and later

open access: diamondEuropean Spatial Research and Policy, 2021
During the Holocaust, the largest Sephardi community in the world located in Saloniki was almost completely destroyed. Despite their limited number in comparison with that of Ashkenazi Jews, the Salonikan Jews, initially deported to Auschwitz Birkenau ...
Stefania Zezza
doaj   +4 more sources

“Jungle law reigned among the prisoners”: the meaning of cannibalism in the testimonies of Nazi concentration camps’ survivors [PDF]

open access: goldHeritage, Memory and Conflict, 2023
What do Holocaust survivors do when they refer to cannibalism in their testimonies? This piece argues that they do not merely describe what they have witnessed or heard of, but also ponder the boundaries of humanity.
Kobi Kabalek
openalex   +2 more sources

Camp literature. Introduction [PDF]

open access: yesActa Universitatis Lodziensis. Folia Litteraria Polonica, 2017
This article includes a terminological discussion regarding the notion of camp literature. Within Polish literary science, it is usually applied to literature raising the topic of German Nazi camps, particularly concentration camps and death camps, and ...
Arkadiusz Morawiec
doaj   +6 more sources

Study of deaths by suicide of homosexual prisoners in Nazi Sachsenhausen concentration camp. [PDF]

open access: goldPLoS ONE, 2017
Living conditions in Nazi concentration camps were harsh and inhumane, leading many prisoners to commit suicide. Sachsenhausen (Oranienburg, Germany) was a concentration camp that operated from 1936 to 1945.
Esther Cuerda-Galindo   +3 more
doaj   +3 more sources

Suicide in inmates in Nazis and Soviet concentration camps: historical overview and critique [PDF]

open access: goldFrontiers in Psychiatry, 2016
Living conditions in concentration camps were harsh and often inhumane, leading many prisoners to commit suicide. We have reviewed this topic in Nazi concentration camps (KL), Soviet special camps and gulags, providing some preliminary data of our ...
Francisco eLopez-Munoz   +2 more
doaj   +2 more sources

Polish literature and the Konzentrationslager. The beginning [PDF]

open access: yesActa Universitatis Lodziensis. Folia Litteraria Polonica, 2017
In the article the author discusses the beginnings of Polish camp literature, more precisely: literature referring to the Nazi German concentration camps. For decades it was assumed that the earliest Polish texts of that type were published in 1945.
Arkadiusz Morawiec
doaj   +4 more sources

The Number of Female Guards in Nazi Concentration Camps: A Reconstruction

open access: diamondИзвестия Уральского федерального университета. Серия 2: Гуманитарные науки, 2016
In the vast majority of Nazi concentration camps where female prisoners were kept not only men, members of the SS Death’s Head Units, but also women were present performing a duty of matrons (Aufseherin).
Egor Ivanovich Kudrin
doaj   +3 more sources

Concentration camps of Nazi Germany as a phenomenon. Opportunities and the problem of understanding

open access: diamondRUDN Journal of World History, 2020
This article deals with the Nazi concentration camps as a phenomenon of social life and social thought in Europe in the mid-second half of the twentieth century.
Boris Grigor'evich Yakemenko
doaj   +3 more sources

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