Description |
xx, 199 pages ; 24 cm |
Contents |
Foreword / Robert Coles -- Introduction: From Testimony to Recounting -- 1. The Forms of Recounting: Tellable Beginnings -- 2. The Context of Recounting: Survivors and Their Listeners -- 3. A Gathering of Voices -- 4. The Stories of the Prosecutor I -- 5. The Stories of the Prosecutor II -- 6. On Having a Story to Tell -- 7. On Listening to Survivors: Some Conclusions |
Summary |
How do Holocaust survivors find words and voice for their memories of terror and loss? This book presents striking new insights into the process of recounting the Holocaust. While other studies have been based, typically, on single interviews with survivors, this work summarizes twenty years of the author's interviews and reinterviews with the same core group. In this book, therefore, survivors' recounting is approached not as one-time "testimony" but as an ongoing deepening conversation. Listening to survivors so intensively, we hear much that we have not heard before. We learn, for example, how survivors perceive us, their listeners, and the impact of listeners on what survivors do, in fact, retell. We meet the survivors themselves as distinct individuals, each with his or her specific style and voice. As we directly follow their efforts to recount, we see how Holocaust memories challenge their words even now - burdening survivors' speech, and sometimes fully consuming it |
Notes |
The Mazal Holocaust Collection |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references (pages [187]-192) and index |
Subject |
Holocaust survivors -- Interviews -- History and criticism.
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Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Personal narratives -- History and criticism.
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LC no. |
98004944 |
ISBN |
0275957187 (alk. paper) |
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