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This volume addresses a problem of high controversy: Relating the
Holocaust to poetic and aesthetic phenomena has often been seen as
a taboo, as only authentic testimonies, documents, or at least
unliterary, prosaic approaches were considered appropriate for
dealing with the topic. However, from the very beginning of
Holocaust literature and culture, there were tendencies towards
literarisation, poetisation, and ornamentalisation. Nowadays,
aesthetic approaches -- also in provocative, taboo-breaking ways --
are more and more regarded as important instruments to evoke the
attention required for keeping the cataclysm in the collective
memory. The contributions of the volume using examples
predominantly from Polish, Czech, and German Holocaust literature
and culture focus on selected aspects of this complex of problems,
such as: poetry of concentration camp detainees; lyrical poetry
about the Holocaust; poetical tendencies in narrative literature
and drama; ornamental prose about the Holocaust; devices and
functions of aestheticisation in Holocaust literature and culture.
Vasily Yan (Vassily Grigoryevich Yanchevetsky, 18741954) was a
writer of historical novels whose popularity survives the test of
time. He was widely read throughout the Soviet era and continues to
be popular in the post-Soviet era. This book is not just a
biographical sketch of an important Russian/Soviet writer basically
unknown to the Western public. The focus on Yan and his work also
impressively demonstrates the dominant role of ideology in a
totalitarian society, which is not just a socio-economic and
political system of the past, but could reemerge in the future as
ISIS has demonstrated. Shlapentokh shows that ideology and the
cultural and intellectual life in totalitarian regimes are more
complex than is often assumed. Intellectuals often enough engaged
in stressful, but -- in its literary outcome -- captivating cat and
mouse games with censors, the powerful, and the government.
Text in English & German. This volume assembles 22 English and
German contributions dealing with the literature and culture of the
Holocaust in the years since 1989 thereby focussing on Poland, the
Czech Republic and Germany. It becomes apparent from these essays
that the Nazi genocide continues to be a pivotal issue in
literature, theatre and film even at the end of the 20th and the
beginning of the 21st century. Included are overviews of the
literary and cultural developments of the last decades, comparative
studies and numerous analyses of the works of individual authors of
the older as well as the middle and younger generation. Among the
authors whose works are discussed are R. Kluger, R Ligocka, L
Weliczker, A Bart, M Bienczyk, M Tulli, Z Rudzka, O B Kraus, M
Uhde, A Goldflam, J Topol, I Douskova, R Denemarkova and H
Andronikova. The growing use of provocative and taboo-breaking
forms of expression turns out to be an important instrument in
keeping the memory of the horrible events alive in the collective
memory.
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