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Postmodernism and Holocaust Denial

Postmodernism and Holocaust Denial
Author: Robert Eaglestone
Publisher: Totem Books
Total Pages: 92
Release: 2001
Genre: History
ISBN:

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Deborah Lipstadt claimed that David Irving was a Hitler partisan wearing blinkers bending and manipulating evidence: the most dangerous spokesperson for Holocaust denial. Irving sued her and her publishers in a high profile case and lost.


Postmodernism and the Holocaust

Postmodernism and the Holocaust
Author: Alan Milchman
Publisher: Rodopi
Total Pages: 344
Release: 1998
Genre: History
ISBN: 9789042005914

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This book is the first sustained inquiry into the ways in which postmodern thinkers have grappled with the historical bases, implications, and methodological problems of the Holocaust. The book examines the thinking of Arendt, Levinas, Foucault, Lyotard, and Derrida, all of whom have recognized the centrality of the Nazi genocide to the epoch in which we live. The essays written for this volume constitute a wide-ranging study of the efforts of postmodernism to articulate the Holocaust.


The Holocaust and the Postmodern

The Holocaust and the Postmodern
Author: Robert Eaglestone
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Total Pages: 380
Release: 2004-12-09
Genre: History
ISBN: 0199265933

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Robert Eaglestone argues that postmodernism is a response to the Holocaust. He offers a range of new perspectives, including new ways of looking at testimony and at and recent Holocaust fiction; explores controversies in Holocaust history; looks at the importance of the Holocaust for recent philosophy; and asks what the Holocaust means for reason, ethics, and for being human


Postmodernizing the Holocaust

Postmodernizing the Holocaust
Author: Marta Tomczok
Publisher: V&R unipress
Total Pages: 231
Release: 2024-01-22
Genre:
ISBN: 373701678X

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Marta Tomczok presents all Polish postmodern novels about the Holocaust, starting with “The First Splendor” by Leopold Buczkowski and ending with “The Suspected Dybbuk” by Andrzej Bart. She also presents their rich relationships with selected foreign-language prose, which intensified especially at the turn of the 20th and 21st centuries. The culmination of the entire trend is a discussion around two novels: “Tworki” by Marek Bieńczyk and “Fly Trap Factory” by Andrzej Bart, which reveals the aestheticizing and post-memorial profile of Polish postmodernization and its advantage over the historiosophical trend. This monograph is not only the first such collection of post-Holocaust postmodern novels, but also the first comprehensive study of postmodernism in the literature about the Holocaust, which, thanks to comparative analysis, tries to analyze and explain the circumstances of the appearance and later disappearance of this trend from cultural landscape of the world and Poland.


How to Write About the Holocaust

How to Write About the Holocaust
Author: Theodor Pelekanidis
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 217
Release: 2022-05-05
Genre: History
ISBN: 1000584984

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How to Write About the Holocaust is a contribution to ongoing debates in historiography and Holocaust studies. More specifically, it combines the theoretical framework that has developed in historiography in the last half a century with the demands of Holocaust representation. The first part of the book analyzes the newest trends in theory of history, focusing especially on postmodernism, starting from the works of the American historian and theorist Hayden White and tracing the genealogy of the postmodern influence in history both from an epistemological and from a political perspective. The second part continues by incorporating these theoretical developments into specific written examples on the Holocaust. By analyzing major works about it, including Saul Friedländer’s and Dan Stone’s histories of the Holocaust, the book attempts to answer questions like: what is the most appropriate way to write about the Holocaust and what can theory teach us about the practice of history? To conclude, the volume explores the connection between history and literature and asks if the distinction between fact and fiction has become outdated.


The Holocaust and the Postmodern

The Holocaust and the Postmodern
Author: Robert Eaglestone
Publisher:
Total Pages: 369
Release: 2004
Genre:
ISBN:

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"The Holocaust and the Postmodern argues that postmodernism, especially understood in the light of the work of Emmanuel Levinas and Jacques Derrida, is a response to the Holocaust. This way of thinking offers new perspectives on Holocaust testimony, literature, historiography, and post-Holocaust philosophy. While postmodernism is often derided for being either playful and superficial or obscure and elitist, this book demonstrates its commitment to facing the past and to ethics." "Weaving together theory and practice, testimony, literature, history, and philosophy, this interdisciplinary book is the first to explore in detail the significance of the Holocaust for postmodernism, and the significance of postmodernism for understanding the Holocaust."--Résumé de l'éditeur


Between Auschwitz and Tradition

Between Auschwitz and Tradition
Author: James R. Watson
Publisher: Rodopi
Total Pages: 244
Release: 1994
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9789051835670

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Argues that the Holocaust has caused a mutation of the world. Our new world is Planet Auschwitz, an unworld with satellites separate and incommunicable. In this new world, the forces of nihilism are at work - e.g. terrorism, mass murder. Face-to-face with this destruction process, its administrators, and its survivors, we mutations must rewrite everything that has been projectively written about us in the old world. The tendency to repression keeps us from thinking, binding us to cynicism and nostalgia. The response to this new world condition must be to remember the Holocaust - repression leads to indifference and destruction.


Postmodernism and Holocaust Denial

Postmodernism and Holocaust Denial
Author: Robert Eaglestone
Publisher:
Total Pages: 75
Release: 2001
Genre: History
ISBN: 9781840469325

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Explores the idea that the questions postmodernism asks of history and historians are in fact strong weapons in combating Holocaust denial.


Holocaust Impiety in Jewish American Literature

Holocaust Impiety in Jewish American Literature
Author: Joost Krijnen
Publisher: BRILL
Total Pages: 249
Release: 2016-05-02
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9004316078

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The Holocaust is often said to be unrepresentable. Yet since the 1990s, a new generation of Jewish American writers have been returning to this history again and again, insisting on engaging with it in highly playful, comic, and “impious” ways. Focusing on the fiction of Michael Chabon, Jonathan Safran Foer, Nicole Krauss, and Nathan Englander, this book suggests that this literature cannot simply be dismissed as insensitive or improper. It argues that these Jewish American authors engage with the Holocaust in ways that renew and ensure its significance for contemporary generations. These ways, moreover, are intricately connected to efforts of finding new means of expressing Jewish American identity, and of moving beyond the increasingly apparent problems of postmodernism.


Trauma, Postmodernism and the Aftermath of World War II

Trauma, Postmodernism and the Aftermath of World War II
Author: P. Crosthwaite
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 222
Release: 2009-01-29
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 0230594727

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The first sustained study of the relationship between Anglo-American postmodernist fiction and the Second World War, Crosthwaite demonstrates that postmodernism has not abandoned history but has rather reformulated it in terms of trauma that is traceable, time and again, to the catastrophes of the 1940s.