Chapter 1 Introduction Part 2 Part I. Western Europe: Austria and France Chapter 3 Chapter 1: Staging Austria's Past in Contemporary Vienna: Robert Schindel's 2002 Film Adaptation of Gebürtig Chapter 4 Chapter 2: From g&$233;nocide to le shoah: Changing Patterns in Documentary Representations of the Holocaust in France Chapter 5 Chapter 3: Death in Vienna: Horrible Modernity in Michael Haneke's The Seventh Continent Part 6 Part II. Eastern Europe; Poland and Lithuania Chapter 7 Chapter 4: Lithuanian Nationalism and the Holocaust: Public Expressions of Memory in Museums and Sites of Memory in Vilnius, Lithuania Chapter 8 Chapter 5: Soil of Annihilation: Czeslaw Milosz's Pastoral Poland and the Holocaust Chapter 9 Chapter 6: Disgrace and Torment: The Holocaust in Zofia Nalkowska's Medallions Part 10 Part III. American Tales: The Holocaust in Novels, Hollywood, and the International Oscars Chapter 11 Chapter 7: Vulnerability in Spielberg's America: Schindler's List and the Ethic of Commerce Chapter 12 Chapter 8: The Erotics of Auschwitz: An American Tale Chapter 13 Chapter 9: Reading Holocaust Fiction at the End of the Twentieth Century: Jakob and the Liar and
Jennifer Taylor is associate professor of German Studies in the department of modern languages and literatures at the College of William and Mary.
Focusing on Austria, East Germany, France, Israel, Italy, Poland,
Lithuania, and the US, these ten essays analyze films, novels,
stories, poetry, and museums to reveal the country's dominant
Holocaust narrative–a narrative determined by the role the
population of the country played in the Holocaust and the
prevailing self-image of the nation. The contributors define a
country's dominant Holocaust discourse (and competing counter
narrative) by studying how cultural works reflect trauma, guilt,
and collaboration. Austria and France play down direct
collaboration in the Holocaust; Poland and Lithuania emphasize
victimhood rather than direct involvement in mass murder; the
former East Germany equated persecution of communists with that of
others; the US highlights itself as land of redemptive new
beginnings; Israel accentuates homecoming. The essays also analyze
works that emphasize the counter narrative or debunk works
reflecting the mainstream discourse. Films analyzed include Night
and Fog, The Sorrow and the Pity, Shoah, Schindler's List, and Life
Is Beautiful, to name just a few. Also examined are Holocaust
reports in the work of Zofia Nalkowska, Czesław Miłosz, Sherri
Szeman, Aharon Appelfeld, Yoram Kaniuk, Yehudit Hendel, and Shesh
Knafayim, and three historical museums in Lithuania. Summing Up:
Highly recommended. Lower-division undergraduates through faculty
and researchers.
*CHOICE*
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