The Holocaust in the twenty-first century
Titel: | The Holocaust in the twenty-first century : contesting/contested memories / edited by David M. Seymour and Mercedes Camino |
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Beteiligt: | ; |
Veröffentlicht: | London; New York : Routledge, 2019 |
Umfang: | x, 299 Seiten : Illustrationen |
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | Englisch |
Schriftenreihe/ mehrbändiges Werk: |
Routledge studies in cultural history ; 40 |
RVK-Notation: | |
ISBN: | 9780367264031 ; 9781315647968 |
- List of Figures
- p. ix
- List of Tables
- p. xi
- Acknowledgments
- p. xiii
- Introduction: Jews, Bolsheviks and the Shoah between Amnesia and Anamnesis
- p. 1
- Part I
- Holocaust Memory, Globalisation and Antisemitism
- p. 13
- 1
- Holocaust Memory: Between Universal and Particular
- p. 15
- 2
- Remembrance and Beyond: Holocaust Memory in Lived Time
- p. 32
- 3
- Instrumentalisation of Holocaust Memory and False Historical Analogies
- p. 57
- Part II
- Monuments and Sites of Memory
- p. 71
- 4
- The Jewish Cemetery of Währing, Vienna: Competing Voices and Contested Discourses in the Austrian Restoration Debates
- p. 73
- 5
- Through the Window: An Analysis of the US Holocaust Museum through the Theory of Zygmunt Bauman
- p. 92
- 6
- Contesting Memories in Text and Image: Discursive Representation and Cognitive Construal
- p. 108
- 7
- Memories of Jews and the Holocaust in Postcommunist Eastern Europe: The Case of Poland
- p. 132
- Part III
- Media and Education
- p. 161
- 8
- Contesting the Memory of Frank Beyer's Jacob the Liar (1974)
- p. 163
- 9
- 'One Day "Will Bear Witness to It like a Fossil': Echoes of the Past in the Language of the Present: Heartbeat Detector/La Question Humaine (2007)
- p. 182
- 10
- Suppression of the Nazi Past, Coded Languages and Discourses of Silence: Applying the Discourse-Historical Approach to Post-War Anrisemitism in Austria
- p. 197
- 11
- The 'Feminisation of Fascism' and National Identity Construction in Germany and Austria after 1945
- p. 221
- Part IV
- Personal, Familial and Collective Remembrance
- p. 243
- 12
- 'It Could All Have Been Much Worse': Benedikt Kautsky's Post-War Response to the Shoah
- p. 245
- 13
- The Discursive Construction of the Stolpersteine Memorial Project: Official, Educational and Familial Meanings
- p. 263
- Epilogue
- p. 277
- Epilogue: Family Commemoration, Lodz 2012-13
- p. 279
- Contributors
- p. 287
- Index
- p. 291