04118nam 2200805 450 991042772530332120210801125517.03-653-06881-93-631-70852-1(CKB)4100000007266215(MiAaPQ)EBC5620972(oapen)https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/29757(EXLCZ)99410000000726621520190115d2018 uy 0engurcnu||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierDesert island, burrow, grave wartime hiding places of Jews in occupied Poland /Marta Cobel-TokarskaBernPeter Lang International Academic Publishing Group2018Berlin :Peter Lang GmbH,[2018]©20181 online resource (306 pages)Warsaw studies in Jewish history and memory ;Volume 113-631-67438-4 Introduction -- Subject -- Definitions -- State of research and literature -- Research questions, structure -- Critique of sources -- Methodology -- 1. An attempted typology of the hiding places -- temporary and long-term hiding places -- Temporary hiding places -- Long-term hiding places -- Independent--assisted hiding places -- Hiding places "under the same roof" -- Hiding places "at a distance" -- City, countryside, no man's land -- Hiding places in cities -- Big cities -- Small and medium-sized cities -- Hiding places in the countryside -- No man's land -- Woodland hiding places -- Concentration camps, labor camps, death camps, places of execution and other "excluded areas" -- Solitary - collective hiding places --Wandering - looking for a hiding place -- Summary -- 2. Hiding place as a space. Perspective of social and individual experience -- Part I. Hiding place as a social space -- Part II. Individual perception of space -- Summary -- 3. Meanings in a space of a hiding place -- Space of a hiding place - in search of meanings -- Center and peripheries, oppositions of directions, the sacred and the profane -- Availability and boundaries -- Symbolical spaces of hiding places, archetypes and meanings encapsulated in tests -- Summary -- 4. Hiding place and a home -- Home -- Summary -- 5. Conclusion -- Bibliography -- Index.This book is an anthropological essay which aims to capture the elusive phenomenon of hideouts employed by Jews persecuted during the Second World War. Oscillating between life and death, the Jewish hideouts were a space of the most diverse and extremely complex human relations – a specific realm of everyday life, with its own inherent logic. Based on different literary sources, especially wartime and post-war testimonies of Jewish escapees, the author seeks to examine the realm of hideouts to develop a novel, interdisciplinary perspective on this often neglected aspect of the 20th-century history.Warsaw studies in Jewish history and memory ;Volume 11.JewsHistoryPolandHistoryOccupation, 1939-1945Anthropology of spaceBezludnaBurrowCobelDesertGravegróbHideoutHidingHolocaustInstituteIslandJewskryjówkiNationalnoraOccupiedokupowanejPlacesPolandPolsceRemambranceSociology of spaceTokarskaWarWartimeWojennewyspaŻydówJewsHistory.909.04924Cobel-Tokarska Marta992518MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910427725303321Desert island, burrow, grave2272666UNINA