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This volume considers the uses and misuses of the memory of
assistance given to Jews during the Holocaust, deliberated in
local, national, and transnational contexts. History of this aid
has drawn the attention of scholars and the general public alike.
Stories of heroic citizens who hid and rescued Jewish men, women,
and children have been adapted into books, films, plays, public
commemorations, and museum exhibitions. Yet, emphasis on the
uplifting narratives often obscures the history of violence and
complicity with Nazi policies of persecution and mass murder. Each
of the ten essays in this interdisciplinary collection is dedicated
to a different country: Belarus, Denmark, France, Germany, Greece,
North Macedonia, the Netherlands, Poland, Slovakia, and Ukraine.
The case studies provide new insights into what has emerged as one
of the most prominent and visible trends in recent Holocaust memory
and memory politics. While many of the essays focus on recent
developments, they also shed light on the evolution of this
phenomenon since 1945.
Jewish Women's History from Antiquity to the Present is broad in
geographical scope exploring Jewish women's lives in what is now
Eastern and Western Europe, Britain, Israel, Turkey, North Africa,
and North America. Editors Federica Francesconi and Rebecca Lynn
Winer focus the volume on reconstructing the experiences of
ordinary women and situating those of the extraordinary and famous
within the gender systems of their times and places. The twenty-one
contributors analyze the history of Jewish women in the light of
gender as religious, cultural, and social construct. They apply new
methodologies in approaching rabbinic sources, prescriptive
literature, and musar (ethics), interrogating them about female
roles in the biblical and rabbinic imaginations, and in relation to
women's restrictions and quotidian actions on the ground. They
explore Jewish's women experiences of persecution, displacement,
immigration, integration, and social mobility from the medieval age
through the nineteenth century. And for the modern era, this volume
assesses women's spiritual developments; how they experienced
changes in religious and political societies, both Jewish and
non-Jewish; the history of women in the Holocaust, their struggle
through persecution and deportation; women's everyday concerns,
Jewish lesbian activism, and the spiritual sphere in the
contemporary era. Contributors reinterpret rabbinical responsa
through new lenses and study a plethora of unpublished and
previously unknown archival sources, such as community ordinances
and court records, alongside autobiographies, letters, poetry,
narrative prose, devotional objects, the built environment,
illuminated manuscripts, and early printed books. This publication
is significant within the field of Jewish studies and beyond; the
essays include comparative material and have the potential to reach
scholarly audiences in many related fields but are also written to
be accessible to all, with the introductions in every chapter aimed
at orienting the enthusiast from outside academia to each time and
place.
Since Polish Catholics embraced some anti-Jewish notions and
actions prior to WWII, many intertwined the Nazi death camps in
Poland with Polish anti-Semitism. As a result, more so than local
non-Jewish population in other Nazi-occupied countries, Polish
Catholics were considered active collaborators in the destruction
of European Jewry. Through the presentation of these negative
images in Holocaust literature, documentaries, and teaching, these
stereotypes have been sustained and infect attitudes toward
contemporary Poland, impacting on Jewish youth trips there from
Israel and the United States. This book focuses on the role of
Holocaust-related material in perpetuating anti-Polish images and
describes organizational efforts to combat them. Without minimizing
contemporary Polish anti-Semitism, it also presents more positive
material on contemporary Polish-American organizations and Jewish
life in Poland. To our knowledge this will be the first book to
document systematically the anti-Polish images in Holocaust
material, to describe ongoing efforts to combat these negative
stereotypes, and to emphasize the positive role of the Polish
Catholic community in the resurgence of Jewish life in Poland.
Thus, this book will present new information that will be of value
to Holocaust Studies and the 100,000 annual foreign visitors to the
German death camps in Poland.
Changes in childhood and children’s roles in society, and in how
children participate in determining their own lives, have long been
of interest to historians. Recent years have seen the emergence of
new perspectives on the study of childhood, both in historical
scholarship and in literary and cultural studies. Children’s
experiences are now scrutinized not only as a means of examining
the lives and self-representation of young individuals and their
families, but also to investigate how the early experiences of
individuals can shed light on larger historical questions. This
volume applies both approaches in the context of Jewish eastern
Europe. Historian Gershon Hundert has argued that studying the
experience of children and attitudes towards coming of age offers
an important corrective to the way we think of the Jewish past.
This volume proves the potential of this approach in exploring many
areas of historical interest. Among the topics investigated here
are changes in perceptions of childhood and family, progress in the
medical treatment of children, and developments in education. The
work of charitable institutions is also considered, along with
studies of emotion, gender history, and Polish–Jewish relations.
A special section is devoted to how children were affected by the
traumas they experienced from 1914 to 1947.
Since Polish Catholics embraced some anti-Jewish notions and
actions prior to WWII, many intertwined the Nazi death camps in
Poland with Polish anti-Semitism. As a result, more so than local
non-Jewish population in other Nazi-occupied countries, Polish
Catholics were considered active collaborators in the destruction
of European Jewry. Through the presentation of these negative
images in Holocaust literature, documentaries, and teaching, these
stereotypes have been sustained and infect attitudes toward
contemporary Poland, impacting on Jewish youth trips there from
Israel and the United States. This book focuses on the role of
Holocaust-related material in perpetuating anti-Polish images and
describes organizational efforts to combat them. Without minimizing
contemporary Polish anti-Semitism, it also presents more positive
material on contemporary Polish-American organizations and Jewish
life in Poland. To our knowledge this will be the first book to
document systematically the anti-Polish images in Holocaust
material, to describe ongoing efforts to combat these negative
stereotypes, and to emphasize the positive role of the Polish
Catholic community in the resurgence of Jewish life in Poland.
Thus, this book will present new information that will be of value
to Holocaust Studies and the 100,000 annual foreign visitors to the
German death camps in Poland.
Diaries, testimonies and memoirs of the Holocaust often include at
least as much on the family as on the individual. Victims of the
Nazi regime experienced oppression and made decisions embedded
within families. Even after the war, sole survivors often described
their losses and rebuilt their lives with a distinct focus on
family. Yet this perspective is lacking in academic analyses.
In this work, scholars from the United States, Israel, and
across Europe bring a variety of backgrounds and disciplines to
their study of the Holocaust and its aftermath from the family
perspective. Drawing on research from Belarus to Great Britain, and
examining both Jewish and Romani families, they demonstrate the
importance of recognizing how people continued to function within
family units—broadly defined—throughout the war and afterward.
Polish Jewish Culture beyond the Capital: Centering the
Periphery is a path-breaking exploration of the diversity and
vitality of urban Jewish identity and culture in Polish lands from
the second half of the nineteenth century to the outbreak of the
Second World War (1899–1939). In this multidisciplinary essay
collection, a cohort of international scholars provides an
integrated history of the arts and humanities in Poland by
illuminating the complex roles Jews in urban centers other than
Warsaw played in the creation of Polish and Polish Jewish culture.
Each essay presents readers with the extraordinary
production and consumption of culture by Polish Jews in literature,
film, cabaret, theater, the visual arts, architecture, and music.
They show how this process was defined by a reciprocal cultural
exchange that flourished between cities at the periphery—from
Lwów and Wilno to Kraków and Łódź—and international centers
like Warsaw, thereby illuminating the place of Polish Jews within
urban European cultures.
Polish Jewish Culture beyond the Capital: Centering the
Periphery is a path-breaking exploration of the diversity and
vitality of urban Jewish identity and culture in Polish lands from
the second half of the nineteenth century to the outbreak of the
Second World War (1899–1939). In this multidisciplinary essay
collection, a cohort of international scholars provides an
integrated history of the arts and humanities in Poland by
illuminating the complex roles Jews in urban centers other than
Warsaw played in the creation of Polish and Polish Jewish culture.
Each essay presents readers with the extraordinary
production and consumption of culture by Polish Jews in literature,
film, cabaret, theater, the visual arts, architecture, and music.
They show how this process was defined by a reciprocal cultural
exchange that flourished between cities at the periphery—from
Lwów and Wilno to Kraków and Łódź—and international centers
like Warsaw, thereby illuminating the place of Polish Jews within
urban European cultures.
Changes in childhood and children’s roles in society, and in how
children participate in determining their own lives, have long been
of interest to historians. Recent years have seen the emergence of
new perspectives on the study of childhood, both in historical
scholarship and in literary and cultural studies. Children’s
experiences are now scrutinized not only as a means of examining
the lives and self-representation of young individuals and their
families, but also to investigate how the early experiences of
individuals can shed light on larger historical questions. This
volume applies both approaches in the context of Jewish eastern
Europe. Historian Gershon Hundert has argued that studying the
experience of children and attitudes towards coming of age offers
an important corrective to the way we think of the Jewish past.
This volume proves the potential of this approach in exploring many
areas of historical interest. Among the topics investigated here
are changes in perceptions of childhood and family, progress in the
medical treatment of children, and developments in education. The
work of charitable institutions is also considered, along with
studies of emotion, gender history, and Polish–Jewish relations.
A special section is devoted to how children were affected by the
traumas they experienced from 1914 to 1947.
Jewish Women's History from Antiquity to the Present is broad in
geographical scope exploring Jewish women's lives in what is now
Eastern and Western Europe, Britain, Israel, Turkey, North Africa,
and North America. Editors Federica Francesconi and Rebecca Lynn
Winer focus the volume on reconstructing the experiences of
ordinary women and situating those of the extraordinary and famous
within the gender systems of their times and places. The twenty-one
contributors analyze the history of Jewish women in the light of
gender as religious, cultural, and social construct. They apply new
methodologies in approaching rabbinic sources, prescriptive
literature, and musar (ethics), interrogating them about female
roles in the biblical and rabbinic imaginations, and in relation to
women's restrictions and quotidian actions on the ground. They
explore Jewish's women experiences of persecution, displacement,
immigration, integration, and social mobility from the medieval age
through the nineteenth century. And for the modern era, this volume
assesses women's spiritual developments; how they experienced
changes in religious and political societies, both Jewish and
non-Jewish; the history of women in the Holocaust, their struggle
through persecution and deportation; women's everyday concerns,
Jewish lesbian activism, and the spiritual sphere in the
contemporary era. Contributors reinterpret rabbinical responsa
through new lenses and study a plethora of unpublished and
previously unknown archival sources, such as community ordinances
and court records, alongside autobiographies, letters, poetry,
narrative prose, devotional objects, the built environment,
illuminated manuscripts, and early printed books. This publication
is significant within the field of Jewish studies and beyond; the
essays include comparative material and have the potential to reach
scholarly audiences in many related fields but are also written to
be accessible to all, with the introductions in every chapter aimed
at orienting the enthusiast from outside academia to each time and
place.
Although the reconciliation of Jewish and Polish memories of the
Holocaust is the central issue in contemporary Polish-Jewish
relations, this is the first attempt to examine these divisive
memories in a comprehensive way. Until 1989, Polish consciousness
of the Second World War subsumed the destruction of Polish Jewry
within a communist narrative of Polish martyrdom and heroism.
Post-war Jewish memory, by contrast, has been concerned mostly with
Jewish martyrdom and heroism (and barely acknowledged the plight of
Poles under German occupation). Since the 1980s, however, a
significant number of Jews and Poles have sought to identify a
common ground and have met with partial but increasing success,
notwithstanding the new debates that have emerged in recent years
concerning Polish behaviour during the Nazi genocide of the Jews
that Poles had ignored for half a century. This volume considers
these contentious issues from different angles. Among the topics
covered are Jewish memorial projects, both in Poland and beyond its
borders, the Polish approach to Holocaust memory under communist
rule, and post-communist efforts both to retrieve the Jewish
dimension to Polish wartime memory and to reckon with the dark side
of the Polish national past. An interview with acclaimed author
Henryk Grynberg touches on many of these issues from the personal
perspective of one who as a child survived the Holocaust hidden in
the Polish countryside, as do the three poems by Grynberg
reproduced here. The 'New Views' section features innovative
research in other areas of Polish-Jewish studies. A special section
is devoted to research concerning the New Synagogue in Poznan,
built in 1907, which is still standing only because the Nazis
turned it into a swimming-pool. CONTRIBUTORS: Natalia Aleksiun,
Assistant Professor in Eastern European Jewish History, Touo
College, New York; Jolanta Ambrosewicz-Jacobs, Head, Section for
Holocaust Studies, Centre for European Studies, Jagiellonian
University, Krakow; curator, International Centre for Education
about Auschwitz and the Holocaust, Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum;
Boaz Cohen, teacher in Jewish and Holocaust Studies, Shaanan and
Western Galilee Colleges, northern Israel; Judith R. Cohen,
Director of the Photographic Reference Collection, United States
Holocaust Memorial Museum, Washington DC; Gabriel N. Finder,
Associate Professor, Department of Germanic Languages and
Literatures, University of Virginia; Rebecca Golbert, researcher;
Regina Grol, Professor of Comparative Literature, Empire State
College, State University of New York; Jonathan Huener, Associate
Professor of History, University of Vermont; Carol Herselle
Krinsky, Professor of Fine Arts, New York University; Marta
Kurkowska, Lecturer, Institute of History, Jagiellonian,
University, Krakow; Joanna B. Michlic, Assistant Professor,
Holocaust and Genocide Program, Richard Stockton College, Pomona,
New Jersey; Eva Plach, Assistant Professor of History, Wilfrid
Laurier University, Waterloo, Canada; Antony Polonsky, Albert
Abramson Professor of Holocaust Studies, Brandeis University and
the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, Washington DC;
Alexander V. Prusin, Associate Professor of History, New Mexico
Institute of Mining and Technology, Socorro; Jan Schwarz, Senior
Lecturer, Department of Germanic Studies, University of Chicago;
Maxim D. Shrayer, Professor of Russian and English, Chair of the
Department of Slavic and Eastern Languages, Co-Director, Jewish
Studies Program, Boston College; Michael C. Steinlauf, Professor of
Jewish History and Culture, Gratz College, Pennsylvania; Robert
Szuchta, History teacher, Stanislaw I. Witkiewicz High School,
Warsaw; Joanna Tokarska-Bakir, Lecturer in Cultural Anthroplogy,
Warsaw University; Chair, Department of Cultural Anthropology,
Collegium Civitas, Poland; Scott Ury, Post-Doctoral Fellow,
Department of Jewish History, Tel Aviv University; Bret Werb,
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, Washington DC; Seth L.
Wolitz, Gale Chair of Jewish Studies and Professor of Comparative
Literature, University of Texas at Austin.
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