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Full Description
Close to a time when there will be no more survivors to speak about their suffering, this innovative study takes much-needed stock of the past, present and future of Holocaust testimony.
Drawing from a vast range of witness accounts - including a never-before-published survivor interview - and carefully situating analysis within broader historical and political discourses, this international team of scholars address many pertinent issues of testimony in the post-witness age. These include: questions of representation and testimony form; memory politics and the role of the witness; the legacy of the Holocaust and impact on future generations; the digital turn and issues of access; and gender and testimony in the wake of #MeToo. Stressing the importance of re-assessing, re-contextualizing, and re-presenting testimonies, these essays make a powerful case for the ongoing centrality of witnesses and witnessing in Holocaust research, education and memory. In doing so, Holocaust Testimonies skillfully paves the way for future research with survivor testimonies.
Contents
List of Illustrations
Foreword, Henry Hank Greenspan (University of Michigan, USA)
Introduction, Thomas Pegelow Kaplan ( University of Colorado Boulder, USA), Wolf Gruner (University of Southern California, USA), Miriam Offer (Western Galilee Colllege, Israel), and Boaz Cohen (Western Galilee College, Israel)
Section I Reevaluating Early Survivor Accounts of the 1940s and 1950s
1. The First Voices from the Shoah in the East: Integrating Soviet Records into Holocaust Studies, Paula Chan (All Souls College, University of Oxford, UK)
2. Shifted Expectations: From David P. Boder's 1946 Audio Interviews with Displaced Persons to Subsequent Holocaust Testimony, Daniel Schuch (University of Jena, Germany)
Section II Reinterpreting Holocaust Testimonies
3. Anita Lasker-Wallfisch's Memories of the Holocaust—a Text-Based Testimony, Christoph Thonfeld (KZ-Gedenkstätte Dachau, Germany)
4. Bearing Arms: An Israeli Woman's Holocaust Testimony as a Study in Testimonial Montage, Sheila Jelen (University of Chicago, USA)
5. The Conceptual and Methodological Usage of Holocaust Survivor
Testimonies in the Guatemalan Genocide and Its Victims, Yael Siman (Anáhuac University, Mexico) and Maria Rita Corticelli
6. From behind the Wall—from behind the Window—from behind the
Fence: Polish Testimonies of the Holocaust in Nowy Targ County, Karolina Panz (Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland)
Section III. Holocaust Testimonies and Gender Analysis: Accomplishments, Prospects, Politics
7. "All My Life I Have Kept This Secret": Sexual Violence in Testimony Eighty Years after the Holocaust, Pascale Bos (University of Texas-Austin, USA)
8. When Memories Come Late: Holocaust Testimonies and Sexual Abuse, Yaakov Ariel (University of North Carolina - Chapel Hill, USA)
9. The Merging Self and the Paradox of Testimony: Auto/biographies by Women Survivors and Their Descendants, Yael Ben-Zvi Morad (Ben-Gurion University, Israel)
Section IV. Digital Turns: New Forms of Representation and Access
10. Reconceptualizations of Testimony at the End of the "Era of the Witness": USC Shoah Foundation's Dimensions in Testimony Project, Sanna Stegmaier (King's College London, UK)
11. Prosthetic Witnesses: Interactive Witnessing in Three Digital Memory Media, Anne-Berenike Rothstein (University of Konstanz, Germany), Tabea Widmann, and Josefine Honk (University of Konstanz, Germany)
Section V The Next Generations: From First- to Second- and Third-Generation Testimonies
12. And You Shall Tell Your Children: Memory, Post-Memory, and the Future of Holocaust Testimony, Avi Patt (New York University, USA)
13. Re-witnessing: The Role of the Second and Third Generations in the Future of Holocaust Testimonies, Rebekah Slodounik (Bucknell University, USA)
Bibliography
Index