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The Kindertransport in Literature - Reimagining Experience (Paperback, New edition)
Loot Price: R1,353
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The Kindertransport in Literature - Reimagining Experience (Paperback, New edition)
Series: Exile Studies, 20
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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"In this insightful book, Stephanie Homer interrogates how
different genre conventions (memoir, autobiographical fiction and
novels) influence the representation of the Kindertransport. Her
theoretical approach is sophisticated, her selection of texts
judicious and representative. Homer's contribution to the study of
the reception history of the Kindertransport is important and
timely." (Bill Niven, Professor of Contemporary German History,
Nottingham Trent University) "An immensely valuable intervention
into studies of Kindertransport representations, this book invites
readers into the ambiguities of memory. With clarity and
confidence, the book explores the liberating creative potential of
autobiographical fiction and polyphonic fictional voices which have
reimagined the places and perspectives on Kindertransport as a
migratory experience and literary compulsion. The book makes an
important contribution to our understanding of Kindertransport
literature as a genuinely transnational genre of witnessing and
re-witnessing." (Dr Simone Gigliotti, Senior Lecturer in Holocaust
Studies, Royal Holloway, University of London) With the dwindling
number of Kindertransportees alive today, the living memory of this
rescue operation is being transformed into cultural memory, a trend
noticeable in the publication of popular Kindertransport fiction
since the beginning of the twenty-first century. This change in
memory invites the following questions: how is the child refugee's
experience remembered, represented and reimagined in literature?
And, consequently, what understanding of the Kindertransport is
being transmitted to the following generations? Drawing on
understandings of genre, narratology and empathy, this book
examines works in English, German and Dutch from three literary
genres: memoirs and autobiographical fiction by Kindertransportees
and recent fiction by authors with no first-hand experience of the
Kindertransport. This study exposes the various conventions,
tensions and reader expectations attached to each genre and how
these influence the author's construction of the text and, in turn,
the nature of the representation. This topical research engages in
debates at the heart of current discussions on Holocaust and
Kindertransport memory, such as the limits of representability, the
"unspeakability" of trauma, and issues of ethics and aesthetics.
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