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Hungarian Jewish Women Survivors Remember the Holocaust presents
seventeen full life histories recorded from female Holocaust
survivors from Hungary. These women, born around 1920, mainly come
from traditional communities known for their protection of women.
In the Holocaust, they were exposed to extreme conditions and the
shattering of their previous lives, literally and symbolically. As
survivors, they fared hardships trying to rehabilitate their lives.
The book depicts the authentic voices of these women as they bear
witness to a dark period in history and in their lives.
This is a compassionate and insightful study of Hungarian women who
lived through the Holocaust, with an appendix containing their
complete stories.""Sister in Sorrow"" offers a glimpse into the
world of Hungarian Holocaust survivors through the stories of
fifteen survivors, as told by thirteen women and two spouses
presently living in Hungary and Israel. Analyzing the accounts as
oral narratives, author Ilana Rosen uses contemporary folklore
studies methodologies to explore the histories and the
consciousness of the narrators as well as the difficulty for
present-day audiences to fully grasp them. Rosen's research
demonstrates not only the extreme personal horrors these women
experienced but also the ways they cope with their memories.In four
sections, Rosen interprets the life histories according to two
major contemporary leading literary approaches: psychoanalysis and
phenomenology. This reading encompasses both the life spans of the
survivors and specific episodes or personal narratives relating to
the women's identity and history. The psychoanalytic reading
examines focal phases in the lives of the women, first in pre-war
Europe, then in World War II and the Holocaust, and last as
Holocaust survivors living in the shadow of loss and atrocity. The
phenomenological examination traces the terms of perception and of
the communication between the women and their different present-day
non-survivor audiences. An appendix contains the complete life
histories of the women, including their unique and affecting
remembrances.Although Holocaust memory and narrative have figured
at the center of academic, political, and moral debates in recent
years, most works look at such stories from a social science
perspective and attempt to extend the meaning of individual tales
to larger communities. Although Rosen keeps the image of the
general group - be it Jews, female Holocaust survivors, Israelis,
or Hungarians - in mind throughout this volume, the focus of
""Sister in Sorrow"" is the ways the individual women experienced,
told, and processed their harrowing experiences. Students of
Holocaust studies and women's studies will be grateful for the
specific and personal approach of ""Sister in Sorrow"".
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