Item No. 17:
Carlo Mattogno: Special Treatment in Auschwitz. Origin
and Meaning of a Term
When appearing in German wartime documents in the context of the
"Holocaust," terms like "special treatment," "special action,"
and others have usually been interpreted as code words that
signify the killing of inmates. While certainly the term "special
treatment" in many such documents meant execution, the term need
not always have had that meaning in German records. In Special
Treatment in Auschwitz, Carlo Mattogno has provided the most
thorough study of this textual problem to date. Publishing and
interpreting numerous such documents about Auschwitz -- many of
them hitherto unknown -- Mattogno is able to show that, while "special"
had many different meanings in these documents, not a single one
meant "execution." This important study demonstrates that the
habitual practice of deciphering an alleged "code language" by
assigning homicidal meaning to completely harmless documents --
a key component of the exterminationist historical method -- is
no longer tenable.
|
|
151 pp ., 6"×9" pb., b/w ill., bibl., index (2004) , ISBN:
1591480027 , ISSN: 1529-7748
Price with shipping
for delivery to: |
USA |
Canada (Air) |
Overseas (surface mail) |
Overseas (airmail) |
| US$: |
15 |
16.5 |
19.5 |
21 |
| Put in cart: |
|
|
|
|
|
Compare
Prices |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|