Talk:Jadwiga Lenartowicz Rylko

Potential bibliography adds
Bourgois, P. I. (2005). Missing the Holocaust: My father's account of Auschwitz from August 1943 to June 1944. Anthropological quarterly, 78(1), 89-123.

I think this provides some contextual information about type of environment Jadwiga was exposed to. I think it can provide some contrast, too.

Curtis, Glenn E. (1992). Poland, A Country Study: Education. Washington, DC: GPO for the Library of Congress. Retrieved from http://countrystudies.us/poland/42.htm

I like this article because it can contribute to her educational experience. How she defied certain social norms to go to schooling that was typically fit for men.

Rylko-Bauer, Barbara. (2005). Lessons about Humanity and Survival from My Mother and from the Holocaust. Anthropological Quarterly, 78.1. Retrieved from http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/anthropological_quarterly/v078/78.1rylko_bauer02.htmlRylko-Bauer, B. (2005). Lessons about Humanity and Survival from My Mother and from the Holocaust. Anthropological quarterly, 78(1), 11-41.

I think this article provides some more context of the humanity and better understanding of Jadwiga's experience and expose in the concentration camps. It provides a more detailed perception and understanding of her thoughts and feelings towards her experiences. Deeper than the biography.

Rylko-Bauer, Barbara (2014). A Polish Doctor in the Nazi Camps. United States: University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 9780806151915. This, of course, is the basis to this wikipage. It provides a lot of the key information this page can structural become built.

Swift-Orphis, Julia. (1916). A Brief History of Poland. New York, NY: Houghton Mifflin Company. Retrieved from https://archive.org/stream/briefhistoryofpo00orvirich#page/317/mode/1up

I like this because it gives us a tiny history of what it was like during her childhood, and even adolescence. About the past time of Poland becoming recognized for its sovereignty.

ETB44 (talk) 03:37, 21 February 2016 (UTC)


 * This is a general knowledge encyclopedic WP:BIO built on a number of core policy guidelines set by Wikipedia. Stuff not utilized in bodytext, but featured in bibliography, can sometimes be perceived by our editors (and often is...) as Spam promoting the author or the work being referenced, similar to any material offered for sale behind a pay-wall (see above). The WP:RS guideline puts emphasis on the third-party sources confirming factual data independently of the subject of the article. Books completely unrelated to the subject – and as you say – focused on the historical period usually are the first to go as irrelevant. Cheers,  Poeticbent  talk 05:34, 26 March 2016 (UTC)