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  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    London
    Language: English
    Pages: 60 Minuten
    Year of publication: 1945
    Keywords: Konzentrationslager ; Dokumentation ; Konzentrationslager Bergen-Belsen ; Konzentrationslager Weimar-Buchenwald ; Konzentrationslager Dachau ; Konzentrationslager Majdanek ; Konzentrationslager Mauthausen ; Schoa
    Abstract: Sixty years ago, in the spring of 1945, Allied forces liberating Europe found evidence of atrocities which have tortured the world's conscience ever since. As the troops entered the German concentration camps, they made a systematic film record of what they saw. Work began in the summer of 1945 on the documentary, but the film was left unfinished. FRONTLINE found it stored in a vault of London's Imperial War Museum and, in 1985, broadcast it for the first time using the title the Imperial War Museum gave it, "Memory of the Camps." As the film's history shows, it was a project that was supervised by the British Ministry of Information and the American Office of War Information. And during that summer of 1945 some of the documentary editing was done under the direction of Alfred Hitchcock. "At the time we found the film, it was not entirely clear what role Hitchcock played in its development," says David Fanning, executive producer of FRONTLINE. "Moreover, one reel of the original six, shot by the Russians, was missing. There was a typed script intact -- undated and unsigned -- but it had never been recorded." FRONTLINE took the film, added the script and asked the late British actor, Trevor Howard, to record it. The aim was to present the film unedited, as close as possible to what the producers intended in 1945. "Memory of the Camps" includes scenes from Dachau, Buchenwald, Belsen and other Nazi concentration camps whose names are not as well known. Some of the horrors documented took place literally moments before the Allied troops arrived, as the Germans hurried to cover the evidence of what they had done.
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  • 2
    Year of publication: 1945
    Dates of Publication: 1945/1950(2008)
    Keywords: Geschichte 1945-1949 ; Displaced Person ; DP-Lager ; Nationallizenz
    Abstract: Zentrales Thema der Datenbank ist die Geschichte der Displaced Persons (DP) in Europa. Zu diesem Zweck wurden etwa 3.000 Dokumente zusammengetragen, die als Bilddateien und über Volltextsuche angeboten werden. Die Daten stammen im Wesentlichen aus der Wiener Library in London und aus den National Archives of the UK mit Beständen aus der General Correspondence des Foreign Office, dem Control Office for Germany and Austria und der Control Commission for Germany. Wissenschaftlich begleitet wurde dieses Projekt von Dan Stone (Royal Holloway College, University of London), der ein einleitendes Essay verfasst hat. Weitere die Datenbank ergänzende Beiträge zur Thematik stammen von namhaften Historikern der jüdischen und DP-Geschichte aus Großbritannien, Deutschland und Israel, darunter Michael Brenner (München) und Angelika Königseder (Berlin). Durch die Bestände aus der Wiener Library liegt ein gewisser Schwerpunkt auf der jüdischen DP-Geschichte.
    Note: Einzelpersonen mit ständigem Wohnsitz in der Bundesrepublik Deutschland können sich persönlich für einen kostenlosen Zugriff registrieren lassen, falls ihnen der Zugang über ein Universitätsnetz bzw. eine Wissenschaftliche Bibliothek nicht zur Verfügung steht. E-Mail-Adresse für Rückfragen: nationallizenzen@bsb-muenchen.de
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