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Ruth's journey : a survivor's memoir
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ISBN: 081301400X Year: 1996 Publisher: Gainesville Orlando Jacksonville University Press of Florida

Paroles d'étranger : textes, contes et dialogues
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ISBN: 2020062720 9782020062725 Year: 1982 Publisher: Paris : Editions du Seuil,

Tous les fleuves vont à la mer. 1
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ISBN: 2020285215 2020339218 2020215985 9782020215985 Year: 1994 Volume: P502 Publisher: Paris : Editions du Seuil,


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Holocaust literature : a history and guide
Authors: ---
ISBN: 1283915677 1611683599 9781611683592 9781611683578 9781611683585 1611683572 9781611683578 9781283915670 1611683580 9781611683585 Year: 2012 Publisher: Waltham : Brandeis University Press,

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Abstract

What is Holocaust literature? When does it begin and how is it changing? Is there an essential core of diaries, eyewitness accounts of the concentration camps, tales of individual survival in hiding? Is it the same everywhere: in the West as in the East, in Australia as in the Americas, in poetry as in prose? Is this literature sacred and sui generis, or can it be studied in the light of other literatures? What of the perpetrators and bystanders, the hidden children, the children of Holocaust survivors: Do they speak with the same authority? What works of Holocaust literature will be read a hundred years from now--and why? Here, for the first time and told from beginning to end, is an historical survey of Holocaust literature in all genres, countries, and major languages. Beginning in wartime, it proceeds from the literature of mobilization and mourning in the Free World to the vast and varied literature produced in the Nazi-occupied ghettos, the bunkers and places of hiding, the transit and concentrations camps. Within weeks of the liberation, in displaced persons camps, a new memorial and testamentary literature begins to take shape. Moving from Europe to Israel, the U.S., and beyond, the authors situate the writings by real and proxy witnesses within three distinct postwar periods: a period of "communal memory," still internal and internecine; a period of "provisional memory" in the '60s and '70s that witnesses the birth of a self-conscious Holocaust genre; to the period of "authorized memory" in which we live today, following the collapse of the Soviet Union (1989-91), and the opening of the US Holocaust Museum (1993). Twenty book covers - first editions in their original languages - and an eminently readable guide to the "first hundred books" together show the multilingual scope, historical depth, the moral and artistic range of this extraordinary body of writing.

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