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Full Description
This volume explores post-2000s artistic engagements with Holocaust memory arguing that imagination plays an increasingly important role in keeping the memory of the Holocaust vivid for contemporary and future audiences.
Contents
1. Introduction: Memory and Imagination in the Post-witness Era; Diana I. Popescu PART I: REVISITING ARTISTIC PRACTICES OF HOLOCAUST COMMEMORATION 2. List Mania in Holocaust Commemoration; Ernst van Alphen 3. Acts of Remembering in the Work of Esther Shalev-Gerz: From Embodied to Mediated Memory; Jacob Lund 4. Countermonuments as Spaces for Deep Memory; James E. Young 5. Sites that Matter: Current Developments of Urban Holocaust Commemoration in Berlin and Munich; Imke Girssmann 6. Contemporary Holocaust Memorials in Berlin: On the Borders of Sacred and Profane; Tracy Jean Rosenberg PART II: SITES OF STRUGGLE WITH HAUNTING PASTS 7. Holocaust Tourism: The Strange yet Familiar/the Familiar yet Strange; Tim Cole 8. To Go or Not to Go? Reflections on the Iconic Status of Auschwitz, its Increasing Distance and Prevailing Urgency; Tanja Schult 9. Holocaust Zombies: Mourning and Memory in Polish Contemporary Culture; Jan Borowicz 10. 'A Picnic Underpinned with Unease': Spring in Warsaw and New Genre Polish-Jewish Memory Work; Erica Lehrer and Magdalena Waligorska 11. The Limits of Forgiveness and Postmodern Art; Ceri Eldin PART III: RETHINKING REPRESENTATION IN LITERATURE AND POPULAR CULTURE 12. Auschwitz, Adorno and the Ambivalence of Representation: The Holocaust as a Point of Reference in Contemporary Literature; Hampus Osth Gustafsson 13. Questions of Re(Presentation) in Uwe Boll's Auschwitz (2011); Elizabeth Ward 14. 'Ordinary' Women as Perpetrators in European Holocaust Films; Ingrid Lewis 15 Real Imagination? Holocaust Comics in Europe; Christine Gundermann PART IV: MEMORY POLITICS IN POST-2000 (TRANS)NATIONAL CONTEXTS 16. Austria's Post-Holocaust Jewish Community: A Subaltern Counterpublic between the Ethics and Morality of Memory; Christian Karner 17. Cosmopolitan Memory in a National Context: The Case of the 'Living History Forum'; Kristin Wagrell 18. Holocaust Remembrance as 'Civil Religion'? The Case of the Stockholm Declaration (2000); Larissa Allwork