%0 Generic
%T The Holocaust Theoretical Readings
%A Levi, Neil
%A Rothberg, Michael
%A Adorno, Theodor W.
%A Agamben, Giorgio
%A Amery, Jean
%A Arendt, Hannah
%A Bartov, Omer
%A Bataille, Georges
%A Baudrillard, Jean
%A Bauer, Yehuda
%A Bauman, Zygmunt
%A Benjamin, Walter
%A Bernstein, Michael Andre\x27
%A Blanchot, Maurice
%A Bock, Gisela
%A Bos, Pascale Rachel
%A Browning, Christopher
%A Burke, Kenneth
%A Caruth, Cathy
%A Cohen, Arthur A.
%A Delbo, Charlotte
%A Derrida, Jacques
%A Diner, Dan
%A Eackenheim, Emil L.
%A Ezrahi, Sidra DeKoven
%A Felman, Shoshana
%A Friedberg, Lilian
%A Friedlander, Henry
%A Friedlander, Saul
%A Gilroy, Raul
%A Habermas, Jurgen
%A Hartman, Geoffrey H.
%A Hirsch, Marianne
%A Horkheimer, Max
%A Howe, Irving
%A Huyssen, Andreas
%A Kluger, Ruth
%A Koch, Gertrud
%A LaCapra, Dominick
%A Lacoue-Labarthe, Philippe
%A Lang, Berel
%A Langer, Lawrence L.
%A Laub, Dori
%A Levi, Neil
%A Levi, Primo
%A Levinas, Emmanuel
%A Lyotard, Jean-Frangois
%A Mamdani, Mahmood
%A Milchman, Alan
%A Novick, Feter
%A Postone, Moishe
%A Raczymow, Henri
%A Ringelheim, Joan
%A Rose, Gillian
%A Rosenberg, Alan
%A Rothberg, Michael
%A Santner, Eric L.
%A Theweleit, Klaus
%A Weigel, Sigrid
%A Weissberg, Lilliane
%A White, Hayden
%A Young, James E.
%I Edinburgh University Press
%@ 9781474470230
%K Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945)
%K HISTORY / Holocaust
%D [2022]
%D , ©2003
%X Frontmatter
%X CONTENTS
%X Acknowledgements
%X Publisher’s Acknowledgements
%X About this book
%X General Introduction
%X PART I: THEORY AND EXPERIENCE
%X Introduction
%X 1 The Drowned and the Saved
%X 2 ‘Resentments’
%X 3 Days and Memory
%X 4 ‘The Camps’
%X PART II: HISTORICIZING THE HOLOCAUST?
%X 5 ‘On the Public Use of History’
%X 6 ‘The “ Final Solution” : On the Unease in Historical Interpretation
%X 7 ‘Historical Understanding and Counterrationality: The Judenrat as Epistemological Vantage’
%X 8 ‘The Uniqueness and Normality of the Holocaust’
%X 9 ‘The European Imagination in the Age of Total War’
%X 10 The Origins of the Nazi Genocide
%X PART III: NAZI CULTURE, FASCISM, AND ANTISEMITISM
%X 11 ‘The Rhetoric of Hitler’s “ Battle” ’
%X 12 ‘The Psychological Structure of Fascism’
%X 13 ‘Elements of Anti-Semitism’
%X 14 ‘The Fiction of the Political’
%X 15 ‘Anti-Semitism and National Socialism’
%X 16 ‘Ordinary Men’
%X PART IV: RACE, GENDER, AND GENOCIDE
%X 17 ‘Floods, Bodies, History’
%X 18 ‘Racism and Sexism in Nazi Germany’
%X 19 ‘The Unethical and the Unspeakable: Women and the Holocaust’
%X 20 ‘Women and the Holocaust: Analyzing Gender Difference’
%X PART V: PSYCHOANALYSIS, TRAUMA, AND MEMORY
%X 21 ‘Trauma and Experience’
%X 22 ‘Trauma, Absence, Loss’
%X 23 ‘Trauma and Transference’
%X 24 ‘History Beyond the Pleasure Principle: Some Thoughts on the Representation of Trauma’
%X 25 ‘Bearing Witness or the Vicissitudes of Listening’
%X PART VI: QUESTIONS OF RELIGION, ETHICS, AND JUSTICE
%X 26 ‘Thinking the Tremendum’
%X 27 ‘To Mend the World’
%X 28 ‘Ethics and Spirit’
%X 29 Eichmann in Jerusalem
%X 30 ‘What is a Camp?’
%X 31 The Differend
%X 32 ‘New Political Theology - Out of Holocaust and Liberation’
%X PART VII: LITERATURE AND CULTURE AFTER AUSCHWITZ
%X 33 ‘Theses on the Philosophy of History’
%X 34 ‘Cultural Criticism and Society’
%X 35 ‘Meditations on Metaphysic
%X 36 ‘Writing and the Holocaust’
%X 37 ‘Non-Philosophical Amazement - Writing in Amazement: Benjamin’s Position in the Aftermath of the Holocaust’
%X 38 The Writing of the Disaster
%X 39 ‘Shibboleth’
%X 40 ‘Language and Culture after the Holocaust’
%X 41 ‘Representing Auschwitz’
%X PART VIII: MODES OF NARRATION
%X 42 ‘The Moral Space of Figurative Discourse’
%X 43 ‘Writing the Holocaust’
%X 44 ‘The Modernist Event’
%X 45 ‘Against Foreshadowing’
%X 46 ‘Deep Memory: The Buried Self’
%X 47 ‘The Return of the Voice: Claude Lanzmann’s Shoah’
%X PART IX: RETHINKING VISUAL CULTURE
%X 48 Reflections of Nazism
%X 49 ‘Holocaust’
%X 50 ‘Anselm Kiefer: the Terror of History, the Temptation of Myth’
%X 51 ‘The Aesthetic Transformation of the Image of the Unimaginable: Notes on Claude Lanzmann’s Shoah’
%X 52 ‘In Plain Sight’
%X PART X: LATECOMERS: NEGATIVE SYMBIOSIS, POSTMEMORY, AND COUNTERMEMORY
%X 53 ‘Memory Shot Through with Holes’
%X 54 ‘Mourning and Postmemory’
%X 55 ‘Negative Symbiosis: Germans and Jews after Auschwitz’
%X 56 ‘The Countermonument: Memory Against Itself in Germany’
%X PART XI: UNIQUENESS, COMPARISON, AND THE POLITICS OF MEMORY
%X 57 ‘Two Kinds of Uniqueness: The Universal Aspects of the Holocaust’
%X 58 ‘What Was the Holocaust?’
%X 59 The Black Atlantic
%X 60 ‘Thinking about Genocide’
%X 61 ‘Dare to Compare: Americanizing the Holocaust’
%X 62 The Holocaust in American Life
%X Index
%C Edinburgh University Press
%C Edinburgh
%U http://slubdd.de/katalog?TN_libero_mab2
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