<p><strong>'This important and thought-provoking book addresses both personal and structural aspects of memory and history. It highlights how memories rendered or silences maintained about the Holocaust have both personal and public significance across national contexts. Drawing on biographical interviews and texts it also makes important contributions to methods discussions.'</strong> - <em>Ann Nilsen, University of Bergen, Norway</em></p>
<p><strong>'This important and thought-provoking book addresses both personal and structural aspects of memory and history. It highlights how memories rendered or silences maintained about the Holocaust have both personal and public significance across national contexts. Drawing on biographical interviews and texts it also makes important contributions to methods discussions.'</strong> - Ann Nilsen, University of Bergen, Norway</p>
Introduction: The Holocaust as active memory 1. Linking religion and family memories of children hidden in Belgian convents during the Holocaust 2. Collective trajectory and generational work in families of Jewish displaced persons: Epistemological processes in the research situation 3. In a double voice: Representations of the Holocaust in Polish literature, 1980-2011 4. Winners once a year? How Russian-speaking Jews in Germany make sense of WWII and the Holocaust as part of transnational biographic experience 5. Women’s peace activism and the Holocaust: Reversing the hegemonic Holocaust discourse in Israel 6. ‘The history, the papers, let me see it!’ Compensation processes: The second generation between archive truth and family speculations 7. From rescue to escape in 1943: On a path to de-victimizing the Danish Jews 8. Finland, the Vernichtungskrieg and the Holocaust 9. Swedish rescue operations during the Second World War: Accomplishments and aftermath 10. The social phenomenon of silence
Produktdetaljer
Biografisk notat
Marie Louise Seeberg is Senior Researcher at NOVA (Norwegian Social Research), Norway.
Irene Levin is Professor of Social Work at the Graduate School for Social Work and Social Research at Oslo and Akershus University College, Norway.
Claudia Lenz is Research & Development Coordinator at the European Wergeland Centre for Education on Human Intercultural Understanding, Human Rights and Democratic Citizenship, Norway.