Intergenerational Narratives: American Responses to the Holocaust

abstract: This dissertation examines U. S. American intergenerational witnesses to the Holocaust, particularly how addressees turned addressors maintain an ethical obligation to First Generation witnesses while creating an affective relation to this history for new generations. In response to revisi...

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Other Authors: Dean, Sarah C. (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.14733
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-147332018-06-22T03:02:46Z Intergenerational Narratives: American Responses to the Holocaust abstract: This dissertation examines U. S. American intergenerational witnesses to the Holocaust, particularly how addressees turned addressors maintain an ethical obligation to First Generation witnesses while creating an affective relation to this history for new generations. In response to revisionism and the incommunicability of the Holocaust, a focus on (accurate) First Generation testimony emerged that marginalizes that of intergenerational witnesses. The risk of such a position is that it paralyzes language, locking the addressee into a movement always into the past. Using examples of intergenerational witnesses (moving from close to more distant relationships), this project argues that there is a possibility for ethical intergenerational response. There are two major discussion arcs that the work follows: self-reflexivity and the use of the Banality of Evil as a theme. Self-reflexivity in intergenerational witnessing calls attention to the role of the author as transgenerational witness, an act that does not seek to appropriate the importance or position of the Holocaust survivor because it calls attention to a subjective site in relation to the survivor and the communities of memory created within the text. The other major discussion arc moves from traditional depictions of the Banality of Evil to ones that challenge the audience to consider the way evil is conceptualized after the Holocaust and its implications in contemporary life. In these ways, intergenerational witnesses move from addressee to addressors, continuing to stress the importance of this history through the imperative to pass Holocaust testimony onward into the future. Dissertation/Thesis Dean, Sarah C. (Author) Foster, David W (Advisor) Sadowski-Smith, Claudia (Committee member) Reyes, Angelita (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) American literature American Holocaust Intergenerational Response Transgenerational eng 224 pages Ph.D. English 2012 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.14733 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2012
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic American literature
American
Holocaust
Intergenerational
Response
Transgenerational
spellingShingle American literature
American
Holocaust
Intergenerational
Response
Transgenerational
Intergenerational Narratives: American Responses to the Holocaust
description abstract: This dissertation examines U. S. American intergenerational witnesses to the Holocaust, particularly how addressees turned addressors maintain an ethical obligation to First Generation witnesses while creating an affective relation to this history for new generations. In response to revisionism and the incommunicability of the Holocaust, a focus on (accurate) First Generation testimony emerged that marginalizes that of intergenerational witnesses. The risk of such a position is that it paralyzes language, locking the addressee into a movement always into the past. Using examples of intergenerational witnesses (moving from close to more distant relationships), this project argues that there is a possibility for ethical intergenerational response. There are two major discussion arcs that the work follows: self-reflexivity and the use of the Banality of Evil as a theme. Self-reflexivity in intergenerational witnessing calls attention to the role of the author as transgenerational witness, an act that does not seek to appropriate the importance or position of the Holocaust survivor because it calls attention to a subjective site in relation to the survivor and the communities of memory created within the text. The other major discussion arc moves from traditional depictions of the Banality of Evil to ones that challenge the audience to consider the way evil is conceptualized after the Holocaust and its implications in contemporary life. In these ways, intergenerational witnesses move from addressee to addressors, continuing to stress the importance of this history through the imperative to pass Holocaust testimony onward into the future. === Dissertation/Thesis === Ph.D. English 2012
author2 Dean, Sarah C. (Author)
author_facet Dean, Sarah C. (Author)
title Intergenerational Narratives: American Responses to the Holocaust
title_short Intergenerational Narratives: American Responses to the Holocaust
title_full Intergenerational Narratives: American Responses to the Holocaust
title_fullStr Intergenerational Narratives: American Responses to the Holocaust
title_full_unstemmed Intergenerational Narratives: American Responses to the Holocaust
title_sort intergenerational narratives: american responses to the holocaust
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.14733
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