Annette Becker is a professor of contemporary history at Paris-Nanterre La Defense and a senior member of the Institut Universitaire de France. Kaethe Roth has been a literary translator with a specialty in historical nonfiction for more than thirty years.
Request Academic Copy
Please copy the ISBN for submitting review copy form
Description
Contents List of Illustrations Introduction: The Unnamable Is Unnamable 1. Karski the Soldier, Lemkin the Lawyer: 1939-40 2. Karski Discovers the Annihilation of Lemkin's World: 1941-42 3. Flashback: From Violence to Myth; From One War, Another, 1942, 1914 4. Naming a Nameless Crime: Lemkin and Karski in the United States, 1943-45 5. The War Is Over: Weep for the Dead, Find the Living, Judge the Criminals 6. Becoming Karski, Becoming Lemkin: 1978-2018 Conclusion: Armenians, Jews, Tutsis Acknowledgments Notes Index
"A seminal work of scholarship, well-translated from the French, and an important contribution for both genocide scholars and general readers. . . . Highly recommended."-- "CHOICE Reviews" "Becker shows the impossibility of understanding that the extermination of the Jews was rooted in the moment of the invasion of Belgium by the German army in August 1914. . . . Even today, people remain incapable of seeing what they see."-- "Le Monde" "Exciting. . . . Well documented and well argued."-- "L'Histoire" "Intellectually satisfying and richly detailed. . . . It is the cry for prevention and for those who have perished that rings out. If what Karski and Lemkin did was not enough to shake the world into awareness, what is?"-- "American Historical Review" "Masterful and insightful. . . . Becker has demonstrated the ability of individuals to make a difference for the betterment of all, and furthered our understanding of the inspiration legacies of Jan Karski and Raphael Lemkin."-- "Antisemitism Studies" "Very rich. . . . Enables us to better understand the most tragic part of the history of the twentieth century."-- "Le vif l'express" "An excellent book. . . . Challenges the deafness of the West."--Charlie Hebdo