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Holocaust and Human Rights Education

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Educators and students face many questions when exploring the history of the Holocaust. This book addresses the ways in which we teach and learn about the Holocaust, applying sociological concepts ...
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  • 15 May 2020
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Educators and students face many questions when exploring the history of the Holocaust. Both the harrowing historical narrative and its wider contemporary implications make the Holocaust an essential part of our education, whilst simultaneously bringing to the fore challenging questions of how best to recount such an event. This book addresses these crucial questions by exploring the way in which we teach and learn about the Holocaust. It demonstrates how we can dignify memories of the Holocaust by joining with resilient survivors, as well as how careful discussion and interpretation of definitions and appropriate representations can link the Holocaust to human rights and international law. It also highlights that understanding the Holocaust serves as a catalyst for the expansion of human rights and for genocide prevention. Throughout, Polgar applies sociological concepts that can help all of us to understand how the Holocaust has become both a particular concern for Jewish and European groups and also a basis for laws and practices that support universal human rights. Advocating for the inclusion of the Holocaust in multicultural education, this text will prove invaluable to students, researchers and educators alike.
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Price: $38.99
Pages: 168
Publisher: Emerald Publishing Limited
Imprint: Emerald Publishing Limited
Publication Date: 15 May 2020
ISBN: 9781787560017
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

EDUCATION / Multicultural Education, Ethnic groups & multicultural studies, EDUCATION / History, EDUCATION / Teaching Methods & Materials / Social Science

The author outlines motives and methods for teaching about the Holocaust. He discusses rationales for teaching about it, how to teach about it from the perspective of human rights education and make choices about what is taught and learned from the Holocaust, how to dignify and humanize the subjects of Holocaust education, how Holocaust education and Holocaust studies are becoming part of multicultural education and cultural studies, key topics related to choosing and interpreting Holocaust and survivor narratives, and global Holocaust education in the 21st century.
Michael Polgar is an Associate Professor of Sociology at Penn State Hazleton, Pennsylvania State University, USA. He collaborates with scholars in many disciplines. Polgar has published research and analyses on topics including public health, families, poverty, education, and the Holocaust. He is a son and grandson of Holocaust survivors.
1. Introduction 
2. Why We Teach
3. How We Teach: The Context of our learning objectives
4. Realizing Our Responsibilities 
5. Teaching Strong Cultures 
6. Survivors Share Resilience 
7. 21st Century Holocaust Education