Reluctant witnesses : survivors, their children, and the rise of Holocaust consciousness

書誌事項

Reluctant witnesses : survivors, their children, and the rise of Holocaust consciousness

Arlene Stein

Oxford University Press, 2016, c2014

  • : pbk.

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注記

Includes bibliographical references (p. [219]-233) and index

"First issued as an Oxford University Press paperback, 2016"--T.p. verso

内容説明・目次

内容説明

Americans now learn about the Holocaust in high school, watch films about it on television, and visit museums dedicated to preserving its memory. But for the first two decades following the end of World War II, discussion of the destruction of European Jewry was largely absent from American culture and the tragedy of the Holocaust was generally seen as irrelevant to non-Jewish Americans. Today, the Holocaust is widely recognized as a universal moral touchstone. In Reluctant Witnesses, sociologist Arlene Stein-herself the daughter of a Holocaust survivor-mixes memoir, history, and sociological analysis to tell the story of the rise of Holocaust consciousness in the United States from the perspective of survivors and their descendants. If survivors tended to see Holocaust storytelling as mainly a private affair, their children-who reached adulthood during the heyday of identity politics-reclaimed their hidden family histories and transformed them into public stories. Reluctant Witnesses documents how a group of people who had previously been unrecognized and misunderstood managed to find its voice. It tells this story in relation to the changing status of trauma and victimhood in American culture. At a time when a sense of Holocaust fatigue seems to be setting in and when the remaining survivors are at the end of their lives, it affirms that confronting traumatic memories and catastrophic histories can help us make our world mean something beyond ourselves.

目次

Acknowledgments Introduction Chapter 1: Interrupted Lives Chapter 2: Desperately Seeking Normality Chapter 3: The Children Wish to Remember What the Parents Wish to Forget Chapter 4: Claiming Victimhood, Becoming Survivors Chapter 5: Ghosts into Ancestors Chapter 6: Too Much Memory? Holocaust Fatigue in the Era of the Victim Appendix: Methodological notes, Interviewees Notes References Index

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