Holocaust and Memory explained
Holocaust and Memory (or more completely, Holocaust and Memory: The Experience of the Holocaust and its Consequences, an Investigation Based on Personal Narratives), originally published in 1996 in Polish and translated into English in 2001, is a book by Barbara Engelking and edited by Gunnar S. Paulsson. Engelking analyzes a series of Jewish survivors living in Poland to explore how their life under the Nazis impacted them. It was published in English by Leicester University Press.[1]
Reception
Aviel Roshwald reviewed the book in European History Quarterly.[2] Reviews were also published in Holocaust and Genocide Studies, Shofar, and Ethnopolitics.[3] [4]
Notes and References
- Fleming. Michael. 2005. Holocaust and memory. Ethnopolitics. 4. 1. 115–123. 10.1080/17449050500072457. 143854425.
- Roshwald. Aviel. Aviel Roshwald. 2002. Review Article: Accounting for Complicity: Recent Works on the Holocaust. European History Quarterly. 32. 4. 581–593. 10.1177/0269142002032004255. 141737639.
- Aleksiun. Natalia. 2003-01-01. Holocaust and Memory: The Experience of the Holocaust and Its Consequences: An Investigation Based on Personal Narratives. Holocaust and Genocide Studies. en. 17. 1. 163–167. 10.1093/hgs/17.1.163. 8756-6583.
- Patterson. David. 2003-04-16. Holocaust and Memory (review). Shofar: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Jewish Studies. en. 21. 3. 180–182. 10.1353/sho.2003.0027. 143458569. 1534-5165.