Histories, films, stories, novels, memorials, museums and survivor testimonies involve problems of witnessing: how do those who survived, and those who lived long after the Holocaust, make clear to us what happened? How can we distinguis... M Bernard-Donals,R Glejzer - 《Holocaust & Genocid...
High SchoolsIndependent StudyIndividualized InstructionInstructional InnovationLearning ModulesNovelsThe article reports on the significance of studying the Holocaust at the International School for Holocaust Studies, the Yad Vashem, in Jerusalem. The teachers who wanted to teach this historic event should ...
I read them, but always afterwards because I like to come to novels as objectively as I can. And so, this is what I did with Herz Bergner’sBetween sky and seawhichwontheAustralian Literature Society’s Gold Medalfor Book of the Year in 1948. I’d never heard of it. (Well, I wasn...
Louisiana under the conditions and badges of human bondage. She often talked about the hard times. Sometimes when she talked about thecotton farm, I could see the fear that still lingered in her heart and soul. She walked miles to school sometimes thru the snow without shoes. She didn’...
Victor:No. me: Look, I’ve already read the first book and I need to know what happens in part two. I’ve been emotionally hijacked by this “Maus” story for the last year. Victor: Remember that time when I had to hide all your Sylvia Path books from you?
During the conference I learned that two novels about the Nanking massacre were already in the works (Tree of HeavenandTent of Orange Mist, both published in 1995), as well as a pictorial book about the massacre (The Rape of Nanking: An Undeniable History in Photographs, published in 1996)...
5 They have also been drawn to fictional mediums, including novels, poems, short stories6, and plays, as in Grumberg’s case7, to express the emotions of the Holocaust. Grumberg’s search for a medium often led him to the more unconventional genre, in terms of writing about the ...
Deploying a style suggested by high modernist novels, Auerbach began writing as a cosmopolitan spokesperson for a ―European classico-Christian literary culture‖ [109,110]. He appeared as a pan- European, at once a Christian humanist and a modernist, drawing the boundaries and charting the ...
The articulation of the concept of discrimination and poverty in the view of immigration and environmental change is well reflected in the novels “Things Could be Worse” by L. Brett and “Holocaust Education and Remembrance in Australia” by S. Rutland and S. Hampel. Lola feels the impact ...