Biography and Memory: The Generational Experience of the Shoah Survivors (Jews of Poland)
Kaja Kazmierska
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Description for Biography and Memory: The Generational Experience of the Shoah Survivors (Jews of Poland)
Hardcover. Translation of: Biografia i pamiec: na przykladzie pokoleniowego doswiadczenia ocalonych z Zagady. Krakow: Zakad Wydawniczy NOMOS, 2008. Series: Jews in Poland. Num Pages: 450 pages, black & white illustrations. BIC Classification: JH. Category: (P) Professional & Vocational. Dimension: 234 x 156 x 22. Weight in Grams: 730.
Biography and Memory discusses the return of Jews to their places of birth in Poland. A biographical urge to come full circle often leads to symbolic journeys to one’s roots, but in the case of Shoah survivors, such journeys are unexpected, defying the generational definition of their biography, which mostly draws a demarcation line between wartime trauma and a new post-Holocaust life. Analyzed biographical stories collected from Israeli survivors indicate that such returns may be considered the last chapters of their wartime experiences. Survivors’ biographies are examined in the context of both Jewish and Polish memory. This book will be ... Read more
Show LessProduct Details
Format
Hardback
Publication date
2012
Publisher
Academic Studies Press
Condition
New
Series
Jews in Poland
Number of Pages
396
Place of Publication
Brighton, United States
ISBN
9781936235780
SKU
V9781936235780
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 15 to 20 working days
Ref
99-15
About Kaja Kazmierska
Kaja Kazmierska (PhD University of Lodz) is an associate professor at the Department of Sociology of Culture, University of Lodz. Her publications include Polish War Experiences and Ethnic Identity: An Analysis of Eastern Borderland Narratives (1999) and the Polish language edition of this book, Biography and Memory: The Generational Experience of the Shoah Survivors (2008).
Reviews for Biography and Memory: The Generational Experience of the Shoah Survivors (Jews of Poland)
The author has faced quite a task: of bringing together and, simultaneously, meeting the requirements of many various perspectives characteristic of sociology, psychology/social psychology, anthropology, narratology and generally discourse theories, and–on the other hand–history, in its inevitable entanglement in the perspectives of other social and cultural studies, transcending today’s traditional historiography, which tries to answer the question, “how was it?” ... Read more