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Humanity at the Limit : The Impact of the Holocaust Experience on Jews and Christians

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In this compelling volume, Jewish and Christian thinkers from Israel, Germany, and Eastern Europe, as well as the United States and Canada - among them scholars from the fields of history, theology, ethics, genetics, the arts, and literature - confront the legacy of the Holocaust and its continuing impact from the perspectives of their disciplines.

The essays in this important interfaith, international, and interdisciplinary volume will leave readers pondering the unavoidable question: what, in view of the crimes of the Holocaust, is the nature of human nature?

Five decades after the end of World War II, issues relating to the history and meaning of the Holocaust, far from fading from social consciousness, have, if anything intensified.

New generations probe the past and its implications for understanding human behaviour.As fresh information about the particularities of the Holocaust comes to light, we know more and more about how these events happened, but the deeper question of why remains unanswered. In this compelling volume, Jewish and Christian thinkers from Israel, Germany, and Eastern Europe, as well as the United States and Canada, among them scholars from the fields of history, theology, ethics, genetics, the arts, and literature, confront the legacy of the Holocaust and its continuing impact from the perspectives of their disciplines.

The issue of religion is central, as the Vatican's 1998 statement We Remember.

Reflections on the Shoah prompts Jewish and Christian contributors to address issues of responsibility, evil, and justice within their concrete historical and social settings.

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Product Details
Indiana University Press
0253337399 / 9780253337399
Hardback
22/11/2000
United States
480 pages, 1 index
156 x 235 mm, 831 grams
Professional & Vocational Learn More