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Title Deaf people in Hitler's Europe / Donna F. Ryan and John S. Schuchman, editors
Published Washington, D.C. : Gallaudet University Press, 2002

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Description 1 online resource (xi, 233 pages) : illustrations, portraits
Contents Holocaust studies and the deaf community / Henry Friedlander -- Eugenics in Hitler's Germany / Robert N. Proctor -- Targeting the "unfit" and radical public health strategies in Nazi Germany / Patricia Heberer -- Deaf people as eyewitnesses of National Socialism / Jochen Muhs -- Misjudged people: the German deaf community in 1932 / John S. Schuchman -- The place of the school for the deaf in the new Reich / Kurt Lietz -- Teachers-collaborators / Horst Biesold -- Hungarian deaf Jews and the Holocaust / John S. Schuchman -- Deaf survivors' testimony: an edited transcript / John S. Schuchman and Donna F. Ryan -- A call for more research / Peter Black
Summary Annotation Inspired by the conference "Deaf People in Hitler's Europe, 1933-1945," hosted jointly by Gallaudet University and the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in 1998, this extraordinary collection, organized into three parts, integrates key presentations and important postconference research. Henry Friedlander begins "Part I: Racial Hygiene"; by analyzing the assault on deaf people and people with disabilities as an integral element in the Nazi attempt to implement their theories of racial hygiene. Robert Proctor documents the role of medical professionals in deciding who should be sterilized or forbidden to marry, and whom the Nazi authorities would murder. In an essay written especially for this volume, Patricia Heberer details how Nazi manipulation of eugenics theory and practice facilitated the justification for the murder of those considered socially undesirable. "Part II: The German Experience" commences with Jochen Muhs's interviews of deaf Berliners who lived under Nazi rule, both those who suffered abuse and those who, as members of the Nazi Party, persecuted others, especially deaf Jews. John S. Schuchman describes the remarkable 1932 film Misjudged People, which so successfully portrayed the German deaf community as a vibrant contributor to society that the Nazis banned its showing when they came to power. Horst Biesold's contribution confirms the complicity of teachers who denounced their own students, labeling them hereditarily deaf and thus exposing them to compulsory sterilization. The section also includes the reprint of a chilling 1934 article entitled "The Place of the School for the Deaf in the New Reich," in which author Kurt Lietz rued the expense of educating deaf students, who could not become soldiers or bear "healthy children." In "Part III: The Jewish Deaf Experience," John S. Schuchman discusses the plight of deaf Jews in Hungary. His historical analysis is complemented by a chapter containing excerpts from the testimony of six deaf Jewish survivors who describe their personal ordeals. Peter Black's reflections on the need for more research conclude this vital study of a little-known chapter of the Holocaust
Notes Inspired by an international conference held June 21-24, 1998 in Washington, DC under the auspices of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum and the History and Government Dept. at Gallaudet University
"Published in association with the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum."
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Master and use copy. Digital master created according to Benchmark for Faithful Digital Reproductions of Monographs and Serials, Version 1. Digital Library Federation, December 2002. http://purl.oclc.org/DLF/benchrepro0212 MiAaHDL
In English
Print version record
digitized 2010 HathiTrust Digital Library committed to preserve pda MiAaHDL
Subject Deaf -- Germany -- History -- 20th century
Deaf -- Government policy -- Germany
Deaf -- Europe -- History -- 20th century
People with disabilities -- Government policy -- Germany
Eugenics -- Germany -- History -- 20th century
Comparative government.
Hearing disorders.
Social control.
Humanities.
Sociology.
Ear -- Diseases.
Sensory disorders.
Medical care.
Otolaryngology.
Neurologic manifestations of general diseases.
Nervous system -- Diseases.
Diseases.
Social sciences.
History.
Eugenics.
Persons With Hearing Impairments -- history
Political Systems
Social Control Policies
Hearing Loss
History, Modern 1601-
Hearing Disorders
Social Control, Formal
Humanities
Health Care Economics and Organizations
Sociology
Ear Diseases
Anthropology, Education, Sociology and Social Phenomena
Sensation Disorders
Delivery of Health Care
Otorhinolaryngologic Diseases
Neurologic Manifestations
Signs and Symptoms
Nervous System Diseases
Disease
Pathological Conditions, Signs and Symptoms
Social Sciences
History
Deafness
National Socialism
Policy
Eugenics
Deafness -- history
Eugenics -- history
National Socialism -- history
Public Policy
History, 20th Century
History, Early Modern 1451-1600
Patient Care
humanities.
sociology.
disease.
illness.
social sciences.
history (discipline)
SOCIAL SCIENCE / General
HISTORY -- Holocaust.
People with disabilities -- Government policy
Eugenics
Deaf
Deaf -- Government policy
Gehörloser Mensch
Sterilisation
Judenvernichtung
Nationalsozialismus
Eugenik
Deaf -- Europe -- History.
Deaf -- Germany -- Government policy.
DEAF -- Germany -- History.
Eugenics -- Germany -- History.
Handicapped -- Germany -- Government policy.
SUBJECT Europe. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85045631
Europe
Germany
Subject Germany
Europe
Ungarn
Deutschland
Washington <1998>
Genre/Form essays.
Essays
History
Konferenzschrift
Essays.
Essais.
Form Electronic book
Author Ryan, Donna F
Schuchman, John S., 1938-
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
LC no. 2002073884
ISBN 156368201X
9781563682018