Journal of Modern European History 14 (2016), 4

Title 
Journal of Modern European History 14 (2016), 4
Other title information 
New Perspectives on the Post-Second-World-War-Trials of Nuremberg and Tokyo

Published on
München 2016: C.H. Beck Verlag
Frequency 
vierteljährlich
ISBN
ISSN 1611-8944
Extent
144
Price
Jährlich € 92,–[D] / sFr 125,– / € 94,60[A]. Einzelheft € 34,–[D] / sFr 45,90 / € 35,–[A].

 

Kontakt

Organization name
Journal of Modern European History
Country
United States
c/o
Schriftleitung: Andreas Eckert, Christina von Hodenberg, Joachim von Puttkamer, Milos Reznik Kontakt: Jörg Später Historisches Seminar der Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg im Breisgau joerg.spaeter@geschichte.uni-freiburg.de
By
Später, Jörg

The global dimension of the Second World War shaped the forms of transitional justice in the following years and made the second half of the 1940s a legal moment in international history. This special issue takes a fresh look at the two major post-Second-World-War-trials, the International Military Tribunal in Nuremberg (1945–1946) and the International Military Tribunal for the Far East in Tokyo (1946–1948). From the moment these two major trials took place, historians and legal scholars were engaged in a lively and often controversial exchange that proved to have long-term effects, in Europe, Asia and beyond. By analysing the interrelation between legal procedures and historiography starting at Nuremberg and Tokyo, the contributors examine these transfer processes and question how the perception of the actors involved turned judges into historians and historians into judges. They demonstrate that courtroom practices and judicial procedures affected the global as well as regional historiographies of the Second World War until this very day.

Table of contents

INHALT

New Perspectives on the Post-Second-World-War-Trials of Nuremberg and Tokyo

D. Hedinger / D. Siemens: Global Perspectives on Doing Law and Writing History

D. Hedinger: The Berlin-Tokyo-Rome Axis on Trial and its Impact on the Historiography

K. Chr. Priemel: The Holocaust at Nuremberg Revisited

D. Siemens: Writing the History of the SA at the International Military Tribunal

U. M. Zachmann: Nanking, Hiroshima, Seoul: (Post-)Transitional Justice and the Wartime Memory

Forum I: How to Write European History?

Statements to Jörn Leonhard by Chr. Conrad, F. Cooper, M. Espagne, J. Kreienbaum and Ph. Ther

Forum II: A Theory of Violence?

Jörg Baberowskis’ Theses of Räume der Gewalt and responds by R. Gerwarth, A. T. Paul and W. Knöbl

Other issues ⇓
Editors Information
Published on
Contributor
Classification
Temporal Classification
Regional Classification
Subject - Topic
Additional Informations
Language
Holdings 1611-8944