World War 2
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SOURCE: New York Times
7/4/2023
Untangling Fact and Fiction in the Story of a Nazi-Era Brothel
Kitty Schmidt's Berlin brothel has been the subject of lurid speculation that its owner was forced by the Nazis to spy on her clients for evidence of subversion and disloyalty. A new book tries to untangle the more complicated history of commercial sex in the Weimar and Nazi eras, but struggles against the pervasiveness of myth.
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6/25/2023
The Army Warned Troops in 1945 of the Danger of Fascism. That Warning Rings True Today
by Alan J. Singer
As the military prepared for the occupation of conquered Axis nations, it realized that without awareness of the content and goals of fascism, it could emerge at home as "Americanism."
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6/18/2023
Jared McBride Sheds Light on the Darker Parts of Ukraine's History
by James Thornton Harris
The issue of Ukrainian collaboration with Nazi genocide has been a propaganda point in the war with Russia. Historian Jared McBride talks about the complexities of ethnic violence and the complications of archival research in Russia and eastern Europe.
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SOURCE: The Conversation
6/13/2023
The Forgotten History of Japanese Internment in Hawaii
by Olivia Tasevski
Although Hawaii is associated with the United States being victimized by foreign attack, the history of internment of Japanese Americans on the islands should also remind us of the U.S. government's human rights abuses.
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SOURCE: The Atlantic
6/10/2023
Cash Reparations to Japanese Internees Helped Rebuild Autonomy and Dignity
by Morgan Ome
Many recent proposals for African American reparations prescribe particular uses for compensation, such as securing housing. But the lesson of the $20,000 payments made to Japanese-American internees and their descendants is that restoring dignity and autonomy means letting recipients decide how to spend any payment for themselves.
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SOURCE: The Atlantic
5/22/2023
Was "Passive Resistance" to the Nazis Enough?
Burkhard Bilger's memoir "Fatherland" examines how his family dealt with the reality that his grandfather had been a Nazi party chief in his Alsace hometown—but not, apparently, a very effective one.
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SOURCE: NBC Boston
5/23/2023
Paul Watanabe, Historian and Manzanar Survivor, Makes Sure History Isn't Forgotten
The UMass-Boston professor brings students each spring to the California desert to visit the site where his own family was interned for more than four years.
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SOURCE: New York Times
4/28/2023
In Germany, Soviet Memorials Raise Painful Memories, But are Protected
Germany stands alone among European nations in protecting many Soviet-era monuments in the former East Germany. Honoring victims of Nazis has long been a reason, but this has been complicated by German support for Ukraine after its invasion by Russia.
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4/30/2023
Travel Was a Driver of Eleanor Roosevelt's Leadership
by Shannon McKenna Schmidt
Eleanor Roosevelt's leadership on behalf of the New Deal and the national war effort were always enhanced by her enthusiasm for travel, which culminated in a 25,000 mile journey to the Pacific theater in August, 1943.
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4/2/2023
A Small Village's History During the Third Reich Raises Big Questions about Complicity
by Julia Boyd
A new history of the personal experiences of the residents of a small Bavarian village show that, while Nazism was driven by ideologues, it was able to maintain power because the personal risks of nonsupport convinced many to put their moral objections aside.
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3/19/2023
When World War II Pacifists "Conquered the Future"
by Eric Laursen
Daniel Akst profiles the pacifists who opposed American involvement in the Second World War and their influence on the civil rights and peace movements that followed.
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SOURCE: New York Times
3/7/2023
Review: Fluorescent Foxes and Other Outrageous Projects of WWII Espionage
Stanley Lovell, believed to the the inspiration for "Q" in the James Bond stories, was the mastermind of the most outrageous efforts at psychological warfare and deception for the precursor agency to the CIA – including painting foxes with radium to resemble kitsune, shinto harbingers of doom.
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SOURCE: New York Times
3/5/2023
Can Japan-Korea Relations Resolve Historical Disputes?
The government of South Korea has dropped its demand for Japanese companies to pay victims of forced labor during World War II. Many Koreans have called the concession a national humiliation, and some surviving victims say they won't accept compensation from Korean sources.
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SOURCE: London Review of Books
3/1/2023
Review: The Unfinished Business of "Double V"
by Eric Foner
Eric Foner considers recent books on racism in the military in World War II and in Vietnam.
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2/22/2023
America Fought Its Own Battle Over Books Before it Fought the Nazis
by Brianna Labuskes
The Armed Services Editions paperback books were wildly popular among World War II servicemembers. But they became symbols of American freedom to read in the war against fascism only after a bitter domestic battle about the works and topics that would be permitted.
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SOURCE: NBC News
2/17/2023
Creating the First Complete List of Names of Interned Japanese Americans
Duncan Ryuken Williams of the University of Southern California led a research team for three years assembling a documentary record that could restore the individuality of 125,000 victims of internment.
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SOURCE: New York Times
1/29/2023
Dutch Villagers Find Hunt for Nazi Treasure Less and Less Charming With Passage of Time
The recent declassification of a map drawn by a German soldier in 1945 has brought treasure hunters to Ommeren. The 751 residents have mixed feelings.
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SOURCE: LitHub
Zachary Shore: the Struggle Between Vengeance and Virtue in WWII
Zachary Shore discusses the contrasting decisions to drop atomic bombs on Japan and rebuild Germany.
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SOURCE: NPR
1/23/2023
The Real Story of "Casablanca" Was the Refugees
At its 80th anniversary, it's appropriate to honor the classic film by focusing on the waves of Europeans fleeing Nazi persecution and working to fight back.
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1/22/2023
The Pope at War: Pius XII and the Vatican's Secret Archives
by James Thornton Harris
David Kertzer's book argues that defenders of Pope Pius XII's actions during the Holocaust mistake his defense of the prerogatives of the Catholic Church for a defense of the victims of Nazi persecution and genocide.