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Surreal Geographies: A New History of Holocaust Consciousness: George L. Mosse Series in the History of European Culture, Sexuality, and Ideas

Autor Kathryn L. Brackney
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 20 aug 2024
Surreal Geographies recovers a forgotten archive of Holocaust representation. Examining art, literature, and film produced from the immediate postwar period up to the present moment, Kathryn L. Brackney investigates changing portrayals of Jewish victims and survivors. In so doing, she demonstrates that the Holocaust has been understood not only through the documentary realism and postmodern fragmentation familiar to scholars but also through a surreal mode of meaning making. From an otherworldly “Planet Auschwitz” to the spare, intimate spaces of documentary interviews, Brackney shows that the humanity of victims has been produced, undermined, and guaranteed through evolving scripts for acknowledging and mourning mass violence.

Brackney offers a new look at familiar works by authors and artists such as Claude Lanzmann, W. G. Sebald, and Paul Celan, while making surprising connections to contemporary scholars like Timothy Snyder and Donna Haraway, and events such as the Space Race. In the process, she maps out a decades-long process through which transnational conventions of mourning have emerged in Western Europe, North America, and Israel, functioning to constitute Jewish victimization as “grievable life.” Ultimately, she shows how the Holocaust has developed into a figure for the destabilization and reformulation of the category of humanity and the problem of mourning across difference.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780299346003
ISBN-10: 0299346005
Pagini: 252
Ilustrații: 36 b-w illus.
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.51 kg
Ediția:First Edition
Editura: University of Wisconsin Press
Colecția University of Wisconsin Press
Seria George L. Mosse Series in the History of European Culture, Sexuality, and Ideas


Notă biografică

Kathryn L. Brackney is an assistant professor of history at Leiden University. Her research explores how aesthetic norms have developed for remembering the Holocaust and other crimes against humanity. 

Cuprins

List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments

Introduction
Chapter 1. Beyond Bearing Witness: Early Art and Literature of Holocaust Remembrance
Chapter 2. Remembering "Planet Auschwitz" during the Cold War
Chapter 3. Testimony and Transformation
Chapter 4. Claude Lanzmann’s Shoah: Historicizing the Limits of Representation
Chapter 5. The Holocaust in Natural History
Conclusion. New Shapes of Holocaust Memory in the Anthropocene

Notes
Index

Recenzii

“Brackney’s detailed account of the evolving consciousness and portrayal of the Holocaust demands and rewards careful reading.”

“Ambitious, provocative, and important. Through creative readings of a wealth of texts, from survivor testimonies and documentary films to science fiction, Brackney ‘denaturalizes’ current canonical representations of the Holocaust, while remembering and reconstructing other, less well-known—and more disturbing—interpretations.”

“An erudite, beautifully written book that journeys from the Yiddish poetry of Avrom Sutzkever to Donna Haraway’s manifesto on the ‘Chthulucene.’ Brackney shows how artists have not always deemed the Holocaust ‘unrepresentable.’ Rather, through surrealist articulations including science fiction and abstraction, representations of the Shoah have been unapologetically produced from the very beginning.”