Historiography of World War II (English Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Historiography of World War II" in English language version.

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academia.edu

  • Monika Żychlińska and Erica Fontana, "Museal Games and Emotional Truths: Creating Polish National Identity at the Warsaw Rising Museum." East European Politics and Societies 30.2 (2016): 235-269. online[dead link]

amazon.com

  • Phillips Payson O'Brien, How the War Was Won: Air-Sea Power and Allied Victory in World War II (2015). Excerpt. See the detailed review by Mark Harrison, "World War II: Won by American Planes and Ships, or by the Poor Bloody Russian Infantry?." Journal of Strategic Studies 39.4 (2016): 592–598. Online.

books.google.com

  • Martin S. Alexander (2012). "The Fall of France, 1940 in". In John Gooch (ed.). Decisive Campaigns of the Second World War. Routledge. p. 10. ISBN 9781136288883.
  • Rosenfeld, Alvin H. (2015). Deciphering the new antisemitism. Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana University Press. pp. 250, 350. ISBN 9780253018694. In the 1970s, Holocaust denial took up more sophisticated pseudoscientijfic methods and began to portray itself as a movement of historal revisionists...
  • Stephen E. Atkins (2009). Holocaust Denial as an International Movement. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-0-313-34538-8. Holocaust denial has played an important role in the revitalization of the Neo-Nazi movement. There was a smaller but nonetheless vocal number of supporters in other Western European countries and the United States. These neo-Nazis realized that a Hitlerite regime was impossible, but a reasonable facsimile was possible in the future. These neo-Nazis and their allies realized that any rehabilitation of Nazism could be accomplished only by discrediting the Holocaust.
  • Beorn, Waitman Wade (6 January 2014). Marching into Darkness. Harvard University Press. pp. 14–16. ISBN 978-0-674-72660-4.

doi.org

  • Paula Schwartz, "Partisianes and Gender Politics in Vichy France". French Historical Studies (1989). 16#1: 126–151. doi:10.2307/286436. JSTOR 286436.

eui.eu

cadmus.eui.eu

  • Clemens Maier, "Making Memories The Politics of Remembrance in Postwar Norway and Denmark." (Doctoral Dissertation European University Institute, 2007) online Bibliography pp 413-34.

foreignaffairs.com

jstor.org

  • R.J.B. Bosworth, "Nations Examine Their Past: A Comparative Analysis of the Historiography of the" Long" Second World War." History Teacher 29.4 (1996): 499-523. in JSTOR
  • Paula Schwartz, "Partisianes and Gender Politics in Vichy France". French Historical Studies (1989). 16#1: 126–151. doi:10.2307/286436. JSTOR 286436.
  • Gunnar S. Paulsson, "The 'Bridge over the Øresund: The Historiography on the Expulsion of the Jews from Nazi-Occupied Denmark." Journal of Contemporary History 30.3 (1995): 431-464. in JSTOR
  • Hans Kirchhoff, "Denmark: A Light in the Darkness of the Holocaust? A Reply to Gunnar S. Paulsson," Journal of Contemporary History 30#3 (1995), pp. 465-479 in JSTOR

nytimes.com

query.nytimes.com

umn.edu

ageconsearch.umn.edu

  • Phillips Payson O'Brien, How the War Was Won: Air-Sea Power and Allied Victory in World War II (2015). Excerpt. See the detailed review by Mark Harrison, "World War II: Won by American Planes and Ships, or by the Poor Bloody Russian Infantry?." Journal of Strategic Studies 39.4 (2016): 592–598. Online.

utas.edu.au

eprints.utas.edu.au

  • Rodney Allan Radford, "The Ordinariness of goodness: Myrtle Wright and the Norwegian non-violent resistance to the German occupation, 1940-1945" (Diss. University of Tasmania, 2015).online

wiktionary.org

en.wiktionary.org

  • The German word Streit translates variously as "quarrel", "dispute", or "conflict". The most common translation of Historikerstreit in English-language academic discourse is "historians' dispute", although the German term is often used.