Results 51 to 60 of about 39,058 (271)
Holocaust Remembrance: Making Meaning through Oral History across the Generations [PDF]
Our university writing course, Visual Media and Holocaust Narrative, brings students closer to the Holocaust through affective engagement with the stories of survivors.
Goodman Gould, Jill+2 more
core +1 more source
Geographical imaginaries of escape: Discourses of escapism in the Tasmanian archive
Tasmania is imagined as a place of escape. From bunkers and black boxes to lifestyle change, escape in Tasmania is interrelated through shared British colonial conceptions of the island state. These conceptions help form the archive of discourses that describe Tasmania, but there are still opportunities to reinterpret these discourses in more positive ...
Alexander Luke Burton
wiley +1 more source
Embodying History: Preserving Memories of Holocaust Survivors Through Performance
Manya Frydman Perel (born in 1924) survived eight concentration camps and dedicated almost fifty years of her life to educating thousands of students on the horrors of Nazi crimes against humanity.
Anthony Hostetter
doaj
Jewish Youth in the Minsk Ghetto: How Age and Gender Mattered [PDF]
Explores how young Soviet Jews survived the German occupation of Soviet territories, specifically ghettoization and mass ...
Anika Walke
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Abstract A significant observational literature identifies a link between collective victimhood and conflict‐enhancing attitudes, though results from experimental work increasing victimhood's salience vary. This article thus revisits this question in two studies in a context in which increased salience is especially likely to shift attitudes.
Nadav Shelef, Ethan vanderWilden
wiley +1 more source
Poetry as testimony: Primo Levi's collected poems [PDF]
The article reviews the book "Poetry as Testimony: Primo Levi's Collected Poems," by Antony ...
Rowland, AC
core +2 more sources
Mapping British Latinx Writing
There are an estimated quarter of a million Latin Americans living in the UK, yet they remain outside the British national imaginary. This invisibility has historically extended to the literary scene and publishing industry, with only very few British‐based Latin American and Latinx writers gaining any exposure.
Karina Lickorish Quinn
wiley +1 more source
Jonathan Safran Foer’s representation of the Holocaust in his first novel, Everything is Illuminated, has been the subject of much controversy and critical debate.
Sarah Coakley
doaj +1 more source
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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“Born into a Broken World:” The Holocaust Carrier
In this article, a second-generation author explores the conflicts and challenges of post-war Jewish identity and the inheritance from her father, through the medium of literature by and about sons and daughters of Holocaust survivors.
Susan Jacobowitz
doaj +1 more source