front cover of Dutch Jewry in a Cultural Maelstrom
Dutch Jewry in a Cultural Maelstrom
1880-1940
Edited by Judith Frishman and Hetty Berg
Amsterdam University Press, 2008
Not only the Jews but Dutch society at large was caught up in a cultural maelstrom between 1880 and 1940. In failing to form a separate pillar in a period when various population groups were doing just that, the Jews were certainly unlike contemporary Catholics or Protestants. In fact, the Jews were not trying to gain entrance in a pre-existing culture but were involved with non-Jews in constructing a new culture. The complexity of Dutch Jewish history once again becomes evident if not new.
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front cover of Maritime Labour
Maritime Labour
Contributions to the History of Work at Sea, 1500-2000
Edited by Richard Gorski
Amsterdam University Press, 2007
This is a collection of soundings into various aspects of the history of maritime labor from the close of the Middle Ages to the present. The spatial emphasis of the essays is north European and Atlantic since they deal with the countries around the North Sea and Baltic with some coverage of North America. The phrase work at sea naturally makes one think of merchant seafaring and its ancillary trades but, again, several authors in this book deal with navies and naval personnel as important constituents of the seagoing workforce. Indeed, from time to time the authors leave the sea behind in order to examine broader issues such as labor markets, the regulation and institutions of seafaring, and industrial relations on the waterfront. But at all points there is a common theme of sea-related labor, and a common objective of better understanding what have often been perceived as difficult and elusive groups of people. Marcus Rediker was surely correct in a recent essay to stress the challenge of producing more inclusive maritime historical research: We need to get back to basics, to careful empirical reconstructions of the lifeways of peoples long rendered silent in the writing of history.
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front cover of Site of Deportation, Site of Memory
Site of Deportation, Site of Memory
The Amsterdam Hollandsche Schouwburg and the Holocaust
Edited by Frank van Vree, Hetty Berg, and David Duindam
Amsterdam University Press, 2017
The Hollandsche Schouwburg is a former theatre in Amsterdam where, during the Nazi occupation of the Netherlands, tens of thousands of Jews were assembled before being deported to transit and concentration camps. Before the war, the theatre had been an example of Jewish integration in the Netherlands, and after the war it became a memorial for the Jewish victims of Nazi persecution. This book is the first international publication to address all the historical aspects of the site, putting it in a broader European and historical context.
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front cover of Trying Out
Trying Out
An Anatomy of Dutch Whaling and Sealing in the Nineteenth Century, 1815-1885
Joost C. A. Schokkenbroek
Amsterdam University Press, 2008
This study describes and analyses a wide array of initiatives leading to the hunt, by Dutch whalemen, of whales and seals in Arctic waters, the temperate zones of the South Pacific and the waters of the Dutch East Indies during the major part of the nineteenth century (1815-1885) an era neglected so far.
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