Holocaust Literature

Holocaust Literature

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  • Author: David G. Roskies
  • Publisher: UPNE
  • ISBN: 1611683599
  • Category : History
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 378

A comprehensive assessment of Holocaust literature, from World War II to the present day


By Words Alone

By Words Alone

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  • Author: Sidra DeKoven Ezrahi
  • Publisher: University of Chicago Press
  • ISBN: 0226233375
  • Category : Literary Criticism
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 277

The creative literature that evolved from the Holocaust constitutes an unprecedented encounter between art and life. Those who wrote about the Holocaust were forced to extend the limits of their imaginations to encompass unspeakably violent extremes of human behavior. The result, as Ezrahi shows in By Words Alone, is a body of literature that transcends national and cultural boundaries and shares a spectrum of attitudes toward the concentration camps and the world beyond, toward the past and the future.


Polish Literature and the Holocaust

Polish Literature and the Holocaust

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  • Author: Rachel Feldhay Brenner
  • Publisher: Northwestern University Press
  • ISBN: 0810139820
  • Category : Literary Criticism
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 184

In this pathbreaking study of responses to the Holocaust in wartime and postwar Polish literature, Rachel Feldhay Brenner explores seven writers’ compulsive need to share their traumatic experience of witness with the world. The Holocaust put the ideological convictions of Kornel Filipowicz, Józef Mackiewicz, Tadeusz Borowski, Zofia Kossak-Szczucka, Leopold Buczkowski, Jerzy Andrzejewski, and Stefan Otwinowski to the ultimate test. Tragically, witnessing the horror of the Holocaust implied complicity with the perpetrator and produced an existential crisis that these writers, who were all exempted from the genocide thanks to their non-Jewish identities, struggled to resolve in literary form. Polish Literature and the Holocaust: Eyewitness Testimonies,1942–1947 is a particularly timely book in view of the continuing debate about the attitudes of Poles toward the Jews during the war. The literary voices from the past that Brenner examines posit questions that are as pertinent now as they were then. And so, while this book speaks to readers who are interested in literary responses to the Holocaust, it also illuminates the universal issue of the responsibility of witnesses toward the victims of any atrocity.


Using and Abusing the Holocaust

Using and Abusing the Holocaust

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  • Author: Lawrence L. Langer
  • Publisher: Indiana University Press
  • ISBN: 0253023513
  • Category : History
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 192

"Langer, by the force of scholarship and literary precision rather than dogmatic affirmation and pathos, is one of the few writers, with the exception of significant poets and novelists, who unsettles both our customary language and conceptual instruments. His book is a moral as well as an intellectual act of a very high order." —Geoffrey Hartman, author of The Longest Shadow In this new volume, Langer—one of the most distinguished scholars writing on Holocaust literature and representation—assesses various literary efforts to establish a place in modern consciousness for the ordeal of those victimized by Nazi Germany’s crimes against humanity. Essays discuss the film Life Is Beautiful, the uncritical acclaim of Fragments, the fake memoir by Benjamin Wilkomirski, reasons for the exaggerated importance still given to Anne Frank’s Diary, and a recent cycle of paintings on the Old Testament by Holocaust artist Samuel Bak.


A Mortuary of Books

A Mortuary of Books

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  • Author: Elisabeth Gallas
  • Publisher: NYU Press
  • ISBN: 147980987X
  • Category : History
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 544

Winner, 2020 JDC-Herbert Katzki Award for Writing Based on Archival Material, given by the Jewish Book Council The astonishing story of the efforts of scholars and activists to rescue Jewish cultural treasures after the Holocaust In March 1946 the American Military Government for Germany established the Offenbach Archival Depot near Frankfurt to store, identify, and restore the huge quantities of Nazi-looted books, archival material, and ritual objects that Army members had found hidden in German caches. These items bore testimony to the cultural genocide that accompanied the Nazis’ systematic acts of mass murder. The depot built a short-lived lieu de memoire—a “mortuary of books,” as the later renowned historian Lucy Dawidowicz called it—with over three million books of Jewish origin coming from nineteen different European countries awaiting restitution. A Mortuary of Books tells the miraculous story of the many Jewish organizations and individuals who, after the war, sought to recover this looted cultural property and return the millions of treasured objects to their rightful owners. Some of the most outstanding Jewish intellectuals of the twentieth century, including Dawidowicz, Hannah Arendt, Salo W. Baron, and Gershom Scholem, were involved in this herculean effort. This led to the creation of Jewish Cultural Reconstruction Inc., an international body that acted as the Jewish trustee for heirless property in the American Zone and transferred hundreds of thousands of objects from the Depot to the new centers of Jewish life after the Holocaust. The commitment of these individuals to the restitution of cultural property revealed the importance of cultural objects as symbols of the enduring legacy of those who could not be saved. It also fostered Jewish culture and scholarly life in the postwar world.


The Subject of Holocaust Fiction

The Subject of Holocaust Fiction

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  • Author: Emily Miller Budick
  • Publisher: Indiana University Press
  • ISBN: 0253016320
  • Category : History
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 266

Fictional representations of horrific events run the risk of undercutting efforts to verify historical knowledge and may heighten our ability to respond intellectually and ethically to human experiences of devastation. In this captivating study of the epistemological, psychological, and ethical issues underlying Holocaust fiction, Emily Miller Budick examines the subjective experiences of fantasy, projection, and repression manifested in Holocaust fiction and in the reader’s encounter with it. Considering works by Cynthia Ozick, Art Spiegelman, Aharon Appelfeld, Michael Chabon, and others, Budick investigates how the reading subject makes sense of these fictionalized presentations of memory and trauma, victims and victimizers.


Representing the Holocaust in Children's Literature

Representing the Holocaust in Children's Literature

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  • Author: Lydia Kokkola
  • Publisher: Routledge
  • ISBN: 1135354049
  • Category : Literary Criticism
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 216

First Published in 2003. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.


Literature of the Holocaust

Literature of the Holocaust

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  • Author: Robb Erskine
  • Publisher: Infobase Publishing
  • ISBN: 1438114990
  • Category : Criticism
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 334

Examines the literature of the period of the Holocaust in Jewish history that includes the work of James E. Young, Lawrence W. Langer, Geoffrey H. Hartman and others.


Literature of the Holocaust

Literature of the Holocaust

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  • Author: Alan Rosen
  • Publisher: Cambridge University Press
  • ISBN: 1107008654
  • Category : History
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 323

During and in the aftermath of the dark period of the Holocaust, writers across Europe and America sought to express their feelings and experiences through their writings. This book provides a comprehensive account of these writings through essays from expert scholars, covering a wide geographic, linguistic, thematic and generic range of materials. Such an overview is particularly appropriate at a time when the corpus of Holocaust literature has grown to immense proportions and when guidance is needed in determining a canon of essential readings, a context to interpret them, and a paradigm for the evolution of writing on the Holocaust. The expert contributors to this volume, who negotiate the literature in the original languages, provide insight into the influence of national traditions and the importance of language, especially but not exclusively Yiddish and Hebrew, to the literary response arising from the Holocaust.


The Holocaust and the Literary Imagination

The Holocaust and the Literary Imagination

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  • Author: Lawrence L. Langer
  • Publisher:
  • ISBN: 9780300021219
  • Category : Literary Criticism
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 300

A critical and interpretive study of the literature of atrocity, major imaginative writing inspired and informed by the Holocaust, examining works in English translation by such writers as Aichinger, Boll, Kosinski, Lind, Sachs, Schwarz-Bart, and Wiesel.