Pulvermacher, A. (2022). Early Deportations of Jews in Occupied Poland (October 1939–June 1940): The German and the Soviet Cases. Holocaust and Genocide Studies, 36(2), 125-153. «A separate project was called the “Nisko Plan.” In October 1939, Gestapo chief Heinrich Müller commissioned Adolf Eichmann to deport 80,000 Jews from East Upper Silesia in order to gain experience “evacuating large masses.” When the first transports (see Table 1) were not successfully implemented, however, the deportation experiment was abandoned by order of Himmler himself»
Friedlander, Henry (1994). «Step by Step: The Expansion of Murder, 1939–1941». German Studies Review. 3. 17: 495–507. ISSN0149-7952. doi:10.2307/1431896. Besøkt 4. februar 2023. «In addition, the loyal SS could hardly attempt CYA [cover your ass] by asking their Fiihrer for an authorization. Still, Reinhard Heydrich needed some form of written commission to compel the cooperation of other government agencies. As we know, it was provided by Hermann Göring. Like Hitler with euthanasia, Göring did not initiate but only signed this authorization»
Gerlach, Christian (1998). «The Wannsee Conference, the Fate of German Jews, and Hitler's Decision in Principle to Exterminate All European Jews». The Journal of Modern History. 4. 70: 759–812. ISSN0022-2801. doi:10.1086/235167. Besøkt 18. november 2019. «“The most remarkable thing about the meeting at Wannsee (which was not called the ‘Wannsee Conference’ until after the war) is that we do not know why it took place.” So wrote the celebrated German historian Eberhard Jackel in 1992. … Since we still know too little about the central planning for the extermination of the Jews, the relative significance of the Wannsee meeting is difficult to gauge.»
Zukier, Henri (1. desember 2013). «Diversity and Design: The “Twisted Road” and the Regional Turn in Holocaust History». Holocaust and Genocide Studies. 3 (på engelsk). 27: 387–410. ISSN8756-6583. doi:10.1093/hgs/dct057. Besøkt 18. november 2019. ««The metaphor of the “twisted road” plausibly refuted the then-dominant first-generation intentionalist accounts of a “straight-and-narrow” trajectory of the Holocaust. Lucy S. Dawidowicz, for instance, had written of the “line of antisemitic descent from Martin Luther to Adolf Hitler,” and Gerald Fleming had emphasized that “the line that leads” from Hitler's early antisemitism to the Final Solution was “direct,” with a “striking” and “unbroken” continuity.28 The “twisted road” metaphor, by contrast, suggested that diversity was a process and a major cause of anti-Jewish policies. Most significantly, however, the new trope framed a paradigm of diversity that has tacitly and spuriously informed all sides of the debates on Holocaust intentionality. The metaphor set up a dichotomy between a “twisted” and a “straight-and-narrow” road to the Final Solution.»
Shostak, Arthur (17. februar 2019). «Theresienstadt 1941–1945: The Face of a Coerced Community». The European Legacy. 2. 24: 246–248. ISSN1084-8770. doi:10.1080/10848770.2018.1558846. Besøkt 12. februar 2020. «Adolf Eichmann, an early supporter of Theresienstadt’s propagandistic potential as a “miniature Jewish State,” a “paradise ghetto,” assured Berlin power-holders it could help the Third Reich “save face towards the outside world”»
Writte, Peter; Tyas, Stephen (1. desember 2001). «A New Document on the Deportation and Murder of Jews during “Einsatz Reinhardt” 1942». Holocaust and Genocide Studies. 3. 15: 468–486. ISSN8756-6583. doi:10.1093/hgs/15.3.468. Besøkt 13. februar 2022. «First of all, it has to be stated that Einsatz or Aktion Reinhardt was indeed named after the chief of the RSHA and Göring's "Commissioner for the Total Solution of die Jewish Question in die German Sphere of Influence in Europe," Reinhard Heydrich.»
Friedlander, Henry (1994). «Step by Step: The Expansion of Murder, 1939–1941». German Studies Review. 3. 17: 495–507. ISSN0149-7952. doi:10.2307/1431896. Besøkt 4. februar 2023. «In addition, the loyal SS could hardly attempt CYA [cover your ass] by asking their Fiihrer for an authorization. Still, Reinhard Heydrich needed some form of written commission to compel the cooperation of other government agencies. As we know, it was provided by Hermann Göring. Like Hitler with euthanasia, Göring did not initiate but only signed this authorization»
Gerlach, Christian (1998). «The Wannsee Conference, the Fate of German Jews, and Hitler's Decision in Principle to Exterminate All European Jews». The Journal of Modern History. 4. 70: 759–812. ISSN0022-2801. doi:10.1086/235167. Besøkt 18. november 2019. «“The most remarkable thing about the meeting at Wannsee (which was not called the ‘Wannsee Conference’ until after the war) is that we do not know why it took place.” So wrote the celebrated German historian Eberhard Jackel in 1992. … Since we still know too little about the central planning for the extermination of the Jews, the relative significance of the Wannsee meeting is difficult to gauge.»
Tsjekkias nasjonale autoritetsdatabase, NKC-identifikator jn20000700709, besøkt 23. november 2019[Hentet fra Wikidata]
oup.com
academic.oup.com
Zukier, Henri (1. desember 2013). «Diversity and Design: The “Twisted Road” and the Regional Turn in Holocaust History». Holocaust and Genocide Studies. 3 (på engelsk). 27: 387–410. ISSN8756-6583. doi:10.1093/hgs/dct057. Besøkt 18. november 2019. ««The metaphor of the “twisted road” plausibly refuted the then-dominant first-generation intentionalist accounts of a “straight-and-narrow” trajectory of the Holocaust. Lucy S. Dawidowicz, for instance, had written of the “line of antisemitic descent from Martin Luther to Adolf Hitler,” and Gerald Fleming had emphasized that “the line that leads” from Hitler's early antisemitism to the Final Solution was “direct,” with a “striking” and “unbroken” continuity.28 The “twisted road” metaphor, by contrast, suggested that diversity was a process and a major cause of anti-Jewish policies. Most significantly, however, the new trope framed a paradigm of diversity that has tacitly and spuriously informed all sides of the debates on Holocaust intentionality. The metaphor set up a dichotomy between a “twisted” and a “straight-and-narrow” road to the Final Solution.»
Friedlander, Henry (1994). «Step by Step: The Expansion of Murder, 1939–1941». German Studies Review. 3. 17: 495–507. ISSN0149-7952. doi:10.2307/1431896. Besøkt 4. februar 2023. «In addition, the loyal SS could hardly attempt CYA [cover your ass] by asking their Fiihrer for an authorization. Still, Reinhard Heydrich needed some form of written commission to compel the cooperation of other government agencies. As we know, it was provided by Hermann Göring. Like Hitler with euthanasia, Göring did not initiate but only signed this authorization»
Gerlach, Christian (1998). «The Wannsee Conference, the Fate of German Jews, and Hitler's Decision in Principle to Exterminate All European Jews». The Journal of Modern History. 4. 70: 759–812. ISSN0022-2801. doi:10.1086/235167. Besøkt 18. november 2019. «“The most remarkable thing about the meeting at Wannsee (which was not called the ‘Wannsee Conference’ until after the war) is that we do not know why it took place.” So wrote the celebrated German historian Eberhard Jackel in 1992. … Since we still know too little about the central planning for the extermination of the Jews, the relative significance of the Wannsee meeting is difficult to gauge.»
Zukier, Henri (1. desember 2013). «Diversity and Design: The “Twisted Road” and the Regional Turn in Holocaust History». Holocaust and Genocide Studies. 3 (på engelsk). 27: 387–410. ISSN8756-6583. doi:10.1093/hgs/dct057. Besøkt 18. november 2019. ««The metaphor of the “twisted road” plausibly refuted the then-dominant first-generation intentionalist accounts of a “straight-and-narrow” trajectory of the Holocaust. Lucy S. Dawidowicz, for instance, had written of the “line of antisemitic descent from Martin Luther to Adolf Hitler,” and Gerald Fleming had emphasized that “the line that leads” from Hitler's early antisemitism to the Final Solution was “direct,” with a “striking” and “unbroken” continuity.28 The “twisted road” metaphor, by contrast, suggested that diversity was a process and a major cause of anti-Jewish policies. Most significantly, however, the new trope framed a paradigm of diversity that has tacitly and spuriously informed all sides of the debates on Holocaust intentionality. The metaphor set up a dichotomy between a “twisted” and a “straight-and-narrow” road to the Final Solution.»
Shostak, Arthur (17. februar 2019). «Theresienstadt 1941–1945: The Face of a Coerced Community». The European Legacy. 2. 24: 246–248. ISSN1084-8770. doi:10.1080/10848770.2018.1558846. Besøkt 12. februar 2020. «Adolf Eichmann, an early supporter of Theresienstadt’s propagandistic potential as a “miniature Jewish State,” a “paradise ghetto,” assured Berlin power-holders it could help the Third Reich “save face towards the outside world”»
Writte, Peter; Tyas, Stephen (1. desember 2001). «A New Document on the Deportation and Murder of Jews during “Einsatz Reinhardt” 1942». Holocaust and Genocide Studies. 3. 15: 468–486. ISSN8756-6583. doi:10.1093/hgs/15.3.468. Besøkt 13. februar 2022. «First of all, it has to be stated that Einsatz or Aktion Reinhardt was indeed named after the chief of the RSHA and Göring's "Commissioner for the Total Solution of die Jewish Question in die German Sphere of Influence in Europe," Reinhard Heydrich.»