Book contents
- The Cambridge World History of Genocide
- The Cambridge World History of Genocide
- The Cambridge World History of Genocide
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Maps
- Contributors to Volume III
- Introduction to Volume III
- Part I Racism, Total War, Imperial Collapse and Revolution
- Part II World War Two
- 9 From Persecution to Genocide
- 10 Systematic and Ad Hoc Persecution and Mass Murder in the Holocaust
- 11 Jewish Life and Death under Nazi Rule across Europe and around the Globe
- 12 The Nazi Camps and Killing Centres
- 13 State Violence during World War Two
- 14 The Genocide of the Romani People in Europe
- 15 The Nazis and the Slavs
- 16 The Nanjing Massacre
- Part III The Nation-State System during the Cold War
- Part IV Globalisation and Genocide since the Cold War
- Index
12 - The Nazi Camps and Killing Centres
from Part II - World War Two
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 June 2023
- The Cambridge World History of Genocide
- The Cambridge World History of Genocide
- The Cambridge World History of Genocide
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Maps
- Contributors to Volume III
- Introduction to Volume III
- Part I Racism, Total War, Imperial Collapse and Revolution
- Part II World War Two
- 9 From Persecution to Genocide
- 10 Systematic and Ad Hoc Persecution and Mass Murder in the Holocaust
- 11 Jewish Life and Death under Nazi Rule across Europe and around the Globe
- 12 The Nazi Camps and Killing Centres
- 13 State Violence during World War Two
- 14 The Genocide of the Romani People in Europe
- 15 The Nazis and the Slavs
- 16 The Nanjing Massacre
- Part III The Nation-State System during the Cold War
- Part IV Globalisation and Genocide since the Cold War
- Index
Summary
Nazi camps were among the most important sites of mass murder and genocide between 1939 and 1945. National Socialism, however, did not invent ‘concentration camps’. They were an institution already known during the second half of the nineteenth century that governments built before, during and after World War Two. Camps as a space of confinement for civilians who were not sentenced by the judiciary or interned as enemy aliens were both an addition to the existing prison system and a completely separate phenomenon. And camps installed under Nazi German hegemony could look quite different, from the use of empty industrial buildings to small areas of a single barracks or the standardised look of concentration camps, to large spaces confined by barbed wire and watchtowers with barracks and specific functional parts, like guards’ facilities or forced labour workshops. The latter shaped the general representation of camps both during the war and in post-war memory. And camps were different from another specific Nazi German institution, the ghetto for Jews, a space of isolation, starvation and confinement, and death before transporting the remaining population to killing centres.
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- The Cambridge World History of Genocide , pp. 281 - 307Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023