作为排斥场所的家园:纳粹占领、住房短缺和法国大屠杀

IF 0.3 3区 历史学 Q2 HISTORY Journal of Modern European History Pub Date : 2022-05-01 DOI:10.1177/16118944221095134
Shannon L. Fogg
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引用次数: 0

摘要

第二次世界大战期间,法国面临住房危机,120多万套住房被毁或受损。除此之外,德国占领者还征用了数千处住所,其中包括巴黎约6-7 000处。反犹太迫害迫使数千名犹太人背井离乡,而普通的非犹太裔法国居民也面临着自己的住房问题,他们从这些空出的住房中受益。巴黎是战争期间德国占领下的欧洲最大城市,也是被占领的西欧最大的犹太社区的所在地,但也许由于其规模,我们对以住房问题为中心的日常互动知之甚少。本文探讨了法国解决住房危机的策略,并展示了住房和犹太人迫害日益交织在一起的方式。本文特别关注巴黎,认为各种各样的人积极参与排斥措施,以改善自己的住房状况。这挑战了非犹太人口“保护”法国75%的犹太人免受驱逐和死亡的观点。相反,它揭示了住房问题在促成大屠杀中的中心地位,以及个人出于经济、意识形态和地理原因而共谋排斥犹太人。
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Home as a Site of Exclusion: The Nazi Occupation, Housing Shortages and the Holocaust in France
During World War II, France faced a housing crisis with over 1.2 million dwellings destroyed or damaged. In addition to the destruction, the German occupiers requisitioned thousands of accommodations including some 6–7,000 locales in Paris. Anti-Jewish persecution forced thousands of Jews from their homes and the average non-Jewish French resident, facing their own housing issues, benefited from the availability of these vacated homes. Paris was the largest city in Europe under German occupation during the war and was home to the largest Jewish community in occupied Western Europe, but perhaps due to its size, we know relatively little about the daily interactions that centered on housing concerns. This article examines the strategies used to solve the housing crisis in France and demonstrates the ways in which housing and Jewish persecution were increasingly intertwined. With a particular focus on Paris, this article argues that a wide variety of individuals actively participated in exclusionary measures to improve their own housing situation. This challenges the view that the non-Jewish population ‘protected’ 75% of the Jews in France from deportation and death. It reveals, rather, the centrality of housing concerns in facilitating the Holocaust and the complicity of individuals in the exclusion of Jews for economic, ideological, and geographic reasons.
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CiteScore
0.70
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发文量
42
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