About the Author:
Tim Cole, a respected historian on the Holocaust, is Lecturer of European Social History at the University of Bristol. Cole has written widely on the topic and his previous book, Selling the Holocaust: From Auschwitz to Schindler, How History is Bought, Packaged, and Sold (Routledge, 1999), received wide media attention and critical praise.
Review:
"A bold contribution to our understanding of the Shoah. Cole patiently unravels the layered complex of ideological motivations, economic ambitions, social realities and military contingencies that informed the decisions of politicians and officials who set out to separate Jews from gentiles in war-time Budapest. "Holocaust City is an important book that, like Christopher Browning's "Ordinary Men, will inspire a new genre of analysis of the Shoah as the greatest catastrophe western civilization both endured and permitted.."
-Robert Jan van Pelt, co-author of "Holocaust: A History
"Tim Cole's new cultural history takes the study of space, cityscape, and the very role of the ghetto in the mass murder of Europe's Jews to revealing new levels. It will provoke and challenge readers to re-think and re-see the ghetto for what it was--an actual place and way station to death, and something that also had to be imagined conceptually and then graphically designed by the Nazis for their persecution of the Jews. This is a provocative and important book.."
-James E. Young, author of "The Texture of Memory: Holocaust Memorials and Meaning
"Cole's analysis of the subtle dynamics between state and local policy and the use of space goes a long way towards clarifying how ghettoization became an act of urban planning in Nazi-dominated Europe.."
-Paul B. Jaskot, author of "The Architecture of Oppression: The SS, Forced Labor and the Nazi Monumental Building Economy
..."Tim Cole reconstructs the formation of the Jewish ghetto during the Holocaust, focusing primarily on the ghetto in Budapest, Hungary. Cole maps the city, illustrating how spaces...became divided in two. He discusses howthe creation of the Jewish ghetto tells us much about the nature of Nazism.."
-Shofar
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.