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E-raamat: Witnessing the Holocaust: Six Literary Testimonies

(University of California San Diego, USA)
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Both a psychoanalyst and a historian, Hughes presents six literary testimonies about the Holocaust, including autobiographical writing and diaries. She selected authors who are prominent either in the original or in translation, and with their works readily available to an English-speaking audience. Her overarching theme in the book is to bear witness, to preserve the memory of the Nazi onslaught. She cites the urgency to heed survivor voices when the White House can release a statement on International Holocaust Remembrance Day (2017) without even mentioning the Jews. She has been mindful of survivors, of their determination to provide a literary trail to ensure that those persecuted will not become nameless and faceless numbers. With the exemption of one writer who converted to Protestantism as a young adult, all others are, or were, secular Jews. The chronology and geography of the Nazi’s expansion, and the pursuit of their genocidal project governs the order of chapters. Annotation ©2018 Ringgold, Inc., Portland, OR (protoview.com)

Arvustused

[ T]his book offers a useful, engaging and well-written starting point. * Journal of Modern Jewish Studies * Historian and psychoanalyst Judith Hughes examines reactions to the destruction of European Jewry through the writings of six of its victims, caught in the destructive web of the Nazis murderous anti-Jewish program. The psychoanalyst captures the characters of her distinguished authors in often surreal situations; the historian chooses moments from among the panorama of sometimes surreal incidents, places and moments in time across the European continent. This is a splendid survey by an experienced scholar, recovering the specificity and concreteness of the Holocaust. * Michael R. Marrus, Professor Emeritus of History, University of Toronto, Canada *

Muu info

An introductory guide to six of the key writers who witnessed, survived and wrote about the Holocaust.
Preface ix
Introduction 1(4)
1 "Everything I Considered UnGerman ... Flourishes Here": Victor Klemperer
5(22)
"How completely homeless I am"
8(8)
"Murder is ... at our heels"
16(8)
Coda
24(3)
2 Childhoods, Disrupted: Ruth Kluger and Michal Glowinski
27(26)
"Timescapes"
27(13)
"Flashes of memory"
40(13)
3 "Hier ist kein warum" (There Is No Why Here): Primo Levi
53(28)
"The demolition of a man"
56(12)
January 1945
68(5)
Henri testifies
73(5)
Coda
78(3)
4 "Naturally": Imre Kertesz
81(20)
"I ought to have been learning ... about Auschwitz"
86(5)
"I would like to live a little longer"
91(8)
Coda
99(2)
5 An Escape Story: Bela Zsolt
101(16)
Missed opportunity (1)
102(3)
Missed opportunity (2)
105(3)
In the ghetto
108(7)
The Kasztner train
115(2)
Conclusion 117(4)
Notes 121(14)
Select Bibliography 135(18)
Index 153
Judith M. Hughes is Professor Emerita of History at the University of California, San Diego, USA. She is the author of several books, including The Holocaust and the Revival of Psychological History (2015), From Obstacle to Ally: The Evolution of Psychoanalytic Practice (2004) and Freudian Analysts/Feminist Issues (1999).