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In today’s Germany, the memory of the Holocaust has become institutionalized. However, its institutionalization should not be mistaken for stability. In fact, Holocaust memory has been and still is questioned and contested.
Liane Schäfer
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In recent years, digital technologies have presented new opportunities for innovative Holocaust commemoration and education. Accordingly, scholars across disciplines have focused on “digital Holocaust memory” as a new frontier in both research and ...
Noam Tirosh, Roni Mikel-Arieli
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The article gives an overview of a research project dedicated to the history of the expression « devoir de mémoire » (“duty to remember”) and how it was challenged by the unexpected discovery of early sources pertaining to the first memory of the ...
Sébastien Ledoux
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Tradition, Nationalism and Holocaust Memory: Reassessing Antisemitism in Post-Communist Romania [PDF]
This article is a re-evaluation of the Holocaust memory in the contemporary Romanian society. It shows that from its inception, Romania’s nation-building process went hand in hand with antisemitism. Furthermore, it points out that after 1989 the country’
Valeria CHELARU
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Whose Feelings Matter? Holocaust Memory, Empathy, and Redemptive Anti-Antisemitism
This article explores the history and impact, from the end of the Cold War to the present, of the intertwined relationships between increased Holocaust consciousness, the rise of moral pedagogies and political rhetorics of anti-antisemitism, and the ...
A. Sutcliffe
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Skirting the abyss: Eastern European space and the limits of German Holocaust memory
This article discusses some of the ambivalences that arise in Western efforts to represent Eastern Europe in the context of Holocaust memory. Focusing on German-language literature, I examine how tropes of boundlessness, violence and contamination ...
Jenny Watson
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On Becoming a Non-Jewish Holocaust Writer: Yann Martel’s Beatrice and Virgil
To appraise Martel’s non-Jewish perspective of Holocaust thematic, it is important to assess it in the context of the Jewish relations with the Holocaust.
Rachel F. Brenner
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This article analyses the ideas defining the role of memorial places that are relevant to research concerning the development of Holocaust memory in Lithuania.
Hektoras Vitkus
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Commemorating from a distance: the digital transformation of Holocaust memory in times of COVID-19
The severe restrictions on public life in many countries following the spread of the COVID-19 pandemic specifically affected Holocaust memorials and museums in all parts of the world, especially in Europe and in Israel. These measures posed a significant
Tobias Ebbrecht-Hartmann
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Following his visit to Salonica in 1946 Cecil Roth became the first historian to engage with the significance of the Holocaust in Salonica. This essay analyses Roth’s published writings on Salonica to examine how they radically revise our understanding ...
Jay Prosser
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