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Daniel Jonah Goldhagen : ウィキペディア英語版
Daniel Goldhagen

Daniel Jonah Goldhagen (born June 30, 1959)〔''U.S. Public Records Index'' Vol 1 & 2 (Provo, UT: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc.), 2010.〕 is an American author and former associate professor of government and social studies at Harvard University. Goldhagen reached international attention and broad criticism as the author of two controversial books about the Holocaust: ''Hitler's Willing Executioners'' (1996) and ''A Moral Reckoning'' (2002). He is also the author of ''Worse Than War'' (2009), which examines the phenomenon of genocide, and ''The Devil That Never Dies,'' in which he traces a worldwide rise in virulent anti-Semitism. (2013).〔http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-4262553,00.html〕〔(Jonah Goldhagen's Devil That Never Dies )〕
==Biography==
Daniel Goldhagen was born in Boston, Massachusetts to Erich and Norma Goldhagen. He grew up in nearby Newton. His wife Sarah (née Williams) is an architectural historian, and critic for ''The New Republic'' magazine.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=The New Republic Masthead )
Erich Goldhagen is a retired Harvard professor and is the father of Goldhagen. He is a Holocaust survivor who with his family was interned in a Jewish ghetto in Czernowitz (present-day Ukraine).〔 He credits his father as a "model of intellectual sobriety and probity". Goldhagen has written that his "understanding of Nazism and of the Holocaust is firmly indebted" to his father's influence.〔 In 1977, Goldhagen entered Harvard and remained there for some twenty years, first as an undergraduate and graduate student, then as an assistant professor in the Government and Social Studies Department.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Daniel Jonah Goldhagen's Website )
During early graduate studies, he attended a lecture by Saul Friedländer, in which he had what he describes as a "lightbulb moment": the functionalism versus intentionalism debate did not address the question, “When Hitler ordered the annihilation of the Jews, why did people execute the order?” Goldhagen wanted to investigate ''who'' the German men and women who killed the Jews were and their reasons for killing.〔

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