The Crimes of War: Guilt and Denial in the Twentieth Century
By (Author) Omer Bartov
Edited by Mary Nolan
The New Press
The New Press
21st June 2002
United States
General
Non Fiction
940.5405
Hardback
344
Width 139mm, Height 209mm
552g
Including original contributions from distinguished European and American historians such as Saul Friedlnder, Omer Bartov, John Dower, Christopher Browning, and Marilyn Young, Crimes of War surveys wartime atrocities committed by the United States, Germany, and Japan across the twentieth century. The book presents startling new evidence of the killing of unarmed Koreans by American troops at No Gun Ri, of atrocities committed by Nazi soldiers on the Russian front, and of Japanese barbarity in China during World War II. Emerging from these accounts is a distinctive, repeated pattern, which typically includes a half-century of denial before the truth is confronted.
Omer Bartov is the John P. Birkelund Professor of European History at Brown University and the author of Erased, Mirrors of Destruction, and Hitlers Army, among other books.
Atina Grossmann is a professor of history at the Cooper Union in New York. She is the author of Reforming Sex and Jews, Germans, and Allies, which was awarded the American Historical Associations George L. Mosse Prize and the Fraenkel Prize in Contemporary History from the Wiener Library in London.
Mary Nolan is the author of Visions of Modernity and is a professor of history at New York University.