Перейти к содержимому

The PBS documentary series The U.S. and the Holocaust , directed by Ken Burns, Lynn Novick, and Sarah Botstein, serves as a profound examination of American history, challenging the comforting myth of the United States as a consistently heroic and welcoming refuge. Through a meticulous blend of archival footage and survivor testimony, the series explores how American isolationism, xenophobia, and racism influenced the nation’s tepid response to the rise of Nazism and the subsequent genocide of European Jews.

A central theme of the documentary is the tension between American ideals and the political realities of the 1930s and 40s. While the U.S. prides itself on being a nation of immigrants, the series highlights how the restrictive Immigration Act of 1924, fueled by eugenics and nativism, effectively barred thousands of desperate refugees. The narrative does not shy away from the prevalence of antisemitism within the American public and high-ranking government officials, which frequently stalled rescue efforts even as the horrors of the "Final Solution" became known to the State Department.

The series also provides a nuanced look at President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s leadership. It depicts a commander-in-chief caught between humanitarian concerns and the pragmatic demands of a public largely opposed to entering another foreign war. By situating the American response within the broader context of Jim Crow laws and domestic racial hierarchies, the filmmakers suggest that the ideology of white supremacy was not an alien concept to the American psyche, but rather a bridge that made some segments of the population indifferent to the persecution of "others" abroad.

Подробности - о сервере?
Играй на нашем сервере!
Бесплатный сервер WoW 3.3.5 Wrath of the Lich King - уже 17 лет мы радуем наших игроков, присоединяйся к ним!
Без доната! Всё работает!
Нет - продаже предметов, влияющих на игровой процесс. Да - высокой работоспособности - проверь!

The U.s. - And The Holocaust Subtitles English S0...

The PBS documentary series The U.S. and the Holocaust , directed by Ken Burns, Lynn Novick, and Sarah Botstein, serves as a profound examination of American history, challenging the comforting myth of the United States as a consistently heroic and welcoming refuge. Through a meticulous blend of archival footage and survivor testimony, the series explores how American isolationism, xenophobia, and racism influenced the nation’s tepid response to the rise of Nazism and the subsequent genocide of European Jews.

A central theme of the documentary is the tension between American ideals and the political realities of the 1930s and 40s. While the U.S. prides itself on being a nation of immigrants, the series highlights how the restrictive Immigration Act of 1924, fueled by eugenics and nativism, effectively barred thousands of desperate refugees. The narrative does not shy away from the prevalence of antisemitism within the American public and high-ranking government officials, which frequently stalled rescue efforts even as the horrors of the "Final Solution" became known to the State Department. The U.S. and the Holocaust subtitles English S0...

The series also provides a nuanced look at President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s leadership. It depicts a commander-in-chief caught between humanitarian concerns and the pragmatic demands of a public largely opposed to entering another foreign war. By situating the American response within the broader context of Jim Crow laws and domestic racial hierarchies, the filmmakers suggest that the ideology of white supremacy was not an alien concept to the American psyche, but rather a bridge that made some segments of the population indifferent to the persecution of "others" abroad. The PBS documentary series The U