The Memory of Pain: Women’s Testimonies of the HolocaustIn this book, Camila Loew analyzes four women’s testimonial literary writings on the Holocaust to examine and question some of the tenets of the fields of Holocaust studies, gender studies, and testimony. Through a close reading of the works of Charlotte Delbo, Margarete Buber-Neumann, Ruth Klüger, and Marguerite Duras, Loew foregrounds these authors’ search for a written form to engage with their experiences of the extreme. Although each chapter contains its individual focus and features, the book possesses a unity in intention, concerns, and consequences. In the theoretical introduction that unites the four chapters, Loew eschews essentialism and revises the emergence of the field of Women and Holocaust studies from the early 1980s on, and signals some of its shortcomings. In response, and in accordance with a recent turn in various disciplines of the Humanities, Loew highlights the ethical dimension of testimony and its responsible commitment to the other. In dealing with the texts as literary testimonies—a complex genre, between literature and history—, testimony is freed from the obligation to respond to the requirements of factual truth, and becomes a privileged form to voice the traumatic event, and to symbolically explore the role of excess. |
Contents
1 | |
The Spectacle of Hurt Memory | 23 |
Witness to the Century | 63 |
Embracing Exclusion | 107 |
Witness to the Witness | 145 |
FIVE Conclusion | 185 |
191 | |
ABOUT THE AUTHOR | 206 |
209 | |
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allows Antelme Antelme's Antigone argues aspects attempt Auschwitz autobiographical bears witness becomes body Buber Buber-Neumann Charlotte Delbo concentration camps concentrationary experience Convoi du 24 cultural feminism death Delbo deportation discourse douleur ethical extreme Felman feminist French Resistance Gefangene bei Stalin gender German Holocaust horror human humankind ibid individual Jewish Jews Jorge Semprún Kaddish Kalavrita kitsch La douleur language linked literary literature lives Margarete Buber-Neumann Marguerite Duras Mémoire Milena narrative narrator Nazi Neumann notebooks pain paradoxes past perspective poetics political Potsdam nach Moskau present Primo Levi prisoners published Rabier Ravensbrück reader reflection relationship representation resistance responsibility rience Robert Antelme role Ruth Klüger says sense memory silence speak Stalin und Hitler story strategies suffering survival survivors tell testimony textual thanks tion Todorov torture traditional trauma traumatic event trilogy truth victims voice weiter leben woman women writing