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E-raamat: Toward Postmemory: Second Generation Holocaust Survivors in Contemporary Polish Memoir Literature

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Toward Postmemory: Second Generation Holocaust Survivors in Contemporary Polish Memoir Literature

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The book thoroughly explores postmemory in the Polish historical and political contexts to reveal the multidimensional identity strategies of the second generation of Jews in Poland after the Holocaust, also called the "generation after". Kuchta provides a captivating reflection by focusing on transgenerational transmission of trauma, strategies adapted toward the Holocaust legacy, and ways of constructing Polish-Jewish identity projects in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. The book comparatively analyzes literary works by the "generation after" while considering the influence of postmemory on the identity of people born after the Second World War. To that end, Kuchta analyzes autobiographical threads in texts by six Polish writers born in the 1940s and 1950s into families of Holocaust survivors, whose works can be read as identity declarations, namely Ewa Kuryluk, Boena Keff, Roman Gren, Magdalena Tulli, Agata Tuszyska, and Monika Sznajderman.
Introduction to the English Edition
Chapter 1: Postmemory
Chapter 2:
The Nature of Polish Postmemory and Associated Research
Chapter 3: Polish
Postmemorial Texts and Their Status in Holocaust Discourse
Chapter 4:
Identity in the Context of Poland's Second Generation of Jews After the
Holocaust
Chapter 5: Opalizing Identity of the Second Generation of Jews in
Poland After the Holocaust
Chapter 6: History Hidden in Boots: Ewa
Kuryluk's Goldi. Apoteoza zwierzaczkowatosci (2004), Frascati. Apoteoza
topografii (2009), and Feluni. Apoteoza enigmy (2019)
Chapter 7: Fight for
Territory, Fight for Identity: Bozena Keff's On Mother and Fatherland (2017)

Chapter 8: The Dream About the Jewish Family: Roman Gren's Wyznanie (2012)

Chapter 9: The Girl Who Is Learning How to Speak: Magdalena Tulli's Wloskie
szpilki (2011) and Szum (2014)
Chapter 10: The Biography of a Mystery:
Agata Tuszynska's Family History of Fear (2005)
Chapter 11: An Alternative
to Presence: Monika Sznajderman's Falszerze pieprzu. Historia rodzinna (2016)
- Conclusion
Anna Kuchta is an Assistant Professor at the Centre for Comparative Studies of Civilisations at the Jagiellonian University. Her research interests include postmemory, trauma, and tracing relations between literature and culture.