Teaching the representation of the Holocaust

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[E-BOOK]

โ€œCan the story be told?โ€ Jorge Semprun asked after his liberation from Buchenwald. The question is addressed from many angles in this volume of essays on teaching about the Holocaust. In their introduction, Marianne Hirsch and Irene Kacandes argue that Semprunโ€™s question is as vital now, and as difficult and complex, as it was for the survivors in 1945. The thirty-eight contributors to Teaching the Representation of the Holocaust come from various disciplines (history, literary criticism, psychology, film studies) and address a wide range of issues pertinent to the teaching of a subject that many teachers and students feel is an essential part of a liberal arts education. This volume offers approaches to such works as Jurek Beckerโ€™s Jacob the Liar, Roberto Benigniโ€™s Life Is Beautiful, Anne Frankโ€™s diary, Daniel Jonah Goldhagenโ€™s Hitlerโ€™s Willing Executioners, Claude Lanzmannโ€™s Shoah, Primo Leviโ€™s Survival in Auschwitz, Cynthia Ozickโ€™s The Shawl, Dan Pagisโ€™s โ€œWritten in Pencil in the Sealed Railway Car,โ€ Art Spiegelmanโ€™s Maus, Steven Spielbergโ€™s Schindlerโ€™s List, Elie Wieselโ€™s Night, and Abraham Yehoshuaโ€™s Mr. Mani. To the challenge โ€œHow do we transmit so hurtful an image of our own species without killing hope and breeding indifference?โ€ posed by Geoffrey Hartman in this volume, the editors respond, โ€œOnly in the very human context of classroom interaction can we hope to avoid either false redemption or unending despair.โ€ (By the publisher)