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A survivor of concentration camps and the Death March, Eli
Pfefferkorn looks back on his Holocaust and post-Holocaust
experiences to compare patterns of human behavior in extremis with
those of ordinary life. What he finds is that the concentration
camp Muselmann, who has lost his hunger for life and is thus
shunned by his fellow inmates on the soup line, bears an eerie
resemblance to an office employee who has fallen from grace and
whose coworkers avoid spending time with him at the water cooler.
Though the circumstances are unfathomably far apart, the human
response to their situations is triggered by self-preservation
rather than by calculated evil. By juxtaposing these two separate
worlds, Pfefferkorn demonstrates that ultimately the human
condition has not changed signifi cantly since Cain slew Abel and
the Athenians sentenced Socrates.
Winner of the 2012 Helen and Stan Vine Canadian Jewish Book Award
in Holocaust Literature. A survivor of concentration camps and the
Death March, Eli Pfefferkorn looks back on his Holocaust and
post-Holocaust experiences to compare patterns of human behavior in
extremis with those of ordinary life. What he finds is that the
concentration camp Muselmann, who has lost his hunger for life and
is thus shunned by his fellow inmates on the soup line, bears an
eerie resemblance to an office employee who has fallen from grace
and whose coworkers avoid spending time with him at the water
cooler. Though the circumstances are unfathomably far apart, the
human response to their situations is triggered by
self-preservation rather than by calculated evil. By juxtaposing
these two separate worlds, Pfefferkorn demonstrates that ultimately
the human condition has not changed significantly since Cain slew
Abel and the Athenians sentenced Socrates.
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Justyna's Narrative (Paperback)
Gusta Davidson Draenger; Volume editing by Eli Pfefferkorn; Introduction by Eli Pfefferkorn, David H. (Professor Emeritus of English and Judaic Studies Hirsch; Edited by David H. Hirsch; Translated by …
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R982
Discovery Miles 9 820
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Written during World War II, Justyna's Narrative is a compelling
account of the Krakow Jewish resistance. From February through
April 1943, Gusta Davidson Draenger (aka "Justyna"?) composed the
narrative on scraps of paper smuggled into her prison cell. Between
sessions of torture and interrogation at the hands of the Gestapo,
she recorded the activities and spiritual aspirations of the
clandestine group of young Jewish idealists who forged documents,
acquired weapons, and committed acts of defiance against the Nazis.
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