Description
Reveals the harrowing story of life in Warsaw under Nazi occupation and explores resistance to the regime by the Warsaw intelligentsia.
About the Author
Jadwiga Biskupska is Assistant Professor of History at Sam Houston State University in Hunstville, Texas. She is co-director of Second World War Research Group, North America (SWWRGNA) and a former fellow of the Mandel Center at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.
Reviews
'In this chilling portrait of the Nazi occupation of Warsaw, Biskupska uncovers how the Polish intelligentsia struggled to preserve the nation through their networks in prisons and concentration camps, clandestine schools, churches, dissident movements, and armed opposition. With compassion and clarity, she reveals the complex moral choices Poles faced as Nazi efforts to subjugate Poles evolved into a campaign of annihilation.' Emily Greble, Vanderbilt University
'Jadwiga Biskupska's Survivors is a lively and well-informed history of German-occupied Warsaw seen from the perspective of the Polish intelligentsia. Particularly notable is the sensitive way Biskupska excavates the diverse and distinctive voices of intelligentsia members as they experienced Nazi genocidal attacks, the vicissitudes of underground resistance, and the tragic uprisings of the Warsaw ghetto in April 1943 and of the city as a whole in August 1944.' Norman M. Naimark, Stanford University
'Following the violent fate of the Polish elites in German-occupied Warsaw, Jadwiga Biskupska offers a broad picture of Poland during the Second World War. A master of summarization, she aptly explains intricacies of the Polish past. Erudite, readable, and engaging, the book is a great gift for all history lovers, and for specialists in twentieth-century Poland.' Piotr J. Wrobel, University of Toronto
'Jadwiga Biskupska's meticulously researched and fluidly written book has much to offer readers, both within and outside of the field of Polish history ... Scholars of the Second World War in particular will find much to enlighten them here about how the Nazis ruled those who were deemed racially unsuitable for incorporation into their New Order as anything but slaves, as well as the sort of resistance such rule provoked. In addition, historians of Poland will find that Biskupska usefully pushes the scholarship of the period beyond the rather rigid categories within which it has been confined for decades.' Jesse Kauffman, H-Net: Humanities and Social Science Reviews Online
'... engaging and informative ...' Kara Irvin, Journal of Military History
'Given the importance of the Holocaust to Western self-understanding, the somewhat less familiar but neighbouring story of the mass murder and survival of elites is a welcome contribution to English-language scholarship.' Walter Schultz, Journal of Contemporary History
'... the book offers more than its title promises. It is a very valuable compendium which introduces the reader to the goals and stages of the German occupation of not only Warsaw, but of the whole subjugated country, and especially to the strategies of survival and resistance adopted by the Polish political and cultural elites.' Pawel Machcewicz, International Journal of Military History and Historiography
'The book is valuable for its discussion of the many issues raised by the occupation, not through monolithic categories ... but through a great diversity of viewpoints.' Tomasz Frydel, Journal of Contemporary History
Book Information
ISBN 9781009012508
Author Jadwiga Biskupska
Format Paperback
Page Count 343
Imprint Cambridge University Press
Publisher Cambridge University Press