Growing in the Shadow of Antifascism : : Remembering the Holocaust in State-Socialist Eastern Europe.

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Bibliographic Details
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TeilnehmendeR:
Place / Publishing House:Budapest : : Central European University Press,, 2022.
©2022.
Year of Publication:2022
Edition:1st ed.
Language:English
Online Access:
Physical Description:1 online resource (341 pages)
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Table of Contents:
  • Cover
  • Front Matter
  • Half Title
  • Title Page
  • Copyrigth Page
  • Table of Contents
  • Figures
  • Acronyms and Abbreviations
  • Acknowledgments
  • Introduction
  • Part One: Historiography
  • Chapter 1: Edition of Documents from the Ringelblum Archive
  • Political Censorship
  • Editorial Changes as Internal Censorship?
  • Conclusion
  • Chapter 2: "A Great Civic and Scientific Duty of Our Historiography"
  • Miroslav Kárný
  • Holocaust Witness and Scholar
  • Class Struggle and Imperialism, or the Persecution and Murder of the Jews?
  • Conclusion
  • Chapter 3: The Conflicted Identities of Helmut Eschwege
  • Conclusion
  • Part Two: Sites of Memory
  • Chapter 4: Parallel Memories?
  • Mutually Exclusive Memories?
  • Screaming Silences? Memorialization of World War IIin Public Spaces
  • Marginalized Memory? Martyr Memorial Servicesin the Jewish Community
  • Conclusions
  • Chapter 5: Holocaust Narrative(s) in Soviet Lithuania
  • Agency and Power: Creating the Ninth Fort Museum
  • Creation of a Commemorative Idiom
  • Medialization of the Ninth Fort as a Site of Memoryin Soviet Lithuania:
  • Conclusions
  • Post Scriptum: Changes in the Memorialization in the 1980s
  • Chapter 6: Memory Incarnate: Jewish Sites in Communist Polandand the Perception of the Shoah
  • "The Ground is Burning Beneath My Feet"
  • New Legal Framework
  • Such Profanation is Unacceptable
  • Open Door to the Abyss
  • A Turning Point
  • The Final Years
  • Part Three: Artistic Representations
  • Chapter 7: Writing a Soviet Holocaust Novel
  • Literature and the Holocaust in the Soviet Union:The Example of Rybakov
  • Heavy Sand: Finding Facts and Making Use of Soviet Realist Templates
  • Heavy Sand: The Soviet Holocaust Narrative and Its Discontents
  • Conclusion: Remembering and Forgetting the Holocaust in the USSR.
  • Chapter 8: Commissioned Memory: Official Representationsof the Holocaust in Hungarian Art
  • Introduction: Official Memory Politics and State Funded Projects
  • The Hungarian Memorial in Mauthausen
  • Victors vs. Victims: A Non-Commissioned Hungarian Plan
  • Victors vs. Victims: The Yugoslav Memorial
  • 1965, Auschwitz: The Permanent Hungarian Exhibition
  • 1965, Hungarian National Gallery
  • Conclusion
  • Chapter 9: Towards a Shared Memory? The Hungarian Holocaustin Mass-Market Socialist Literature, 1956-1970*
  • The Kádárist Cultural Landscape
  • Jews and Non-Jews: Responsibility and Guilt
  • Narrative Strategies
  • Fate and Memory
  • Official Criticism and the Issue of Reception
  • Conclusions: Towards a Shared Holocaust Memory?
  • Part Four: Media and Public Debate
  • Chapter 10: Distrusting the Parks: Heinz Knobloch's Journalismand the Memory of the Shoah in the GDR
  • Heinz Knobloch
  • Herr Moses in Berlin
  • Meine liebste Mathilde
  • Der beherzte Reviervorsteher
  • Conclusion
  • Chapter 11: "We Pledge, as if It Was the Highest Sanctum, to Preservethe Memory": Sovetish Heymland, Facets ofHolocaust Commemoration in the Soviet Union and theCold War
  • Yiddish in Postwar Soviet Union
  • Towards a Straightening of the Lopsided Historical Record
  • A Monument over Babyn Yar
  • Commemoration Activities in Popervāle, Latvia
  • Commemoration Activities in Medzhybizh, Ukraine
  • Conclusion
  • Chapter 12: "The Jewish Diaries . . . Undergo One Edition after theOther": Early Polish Holocaust Documentation, EastGerman Antifascism, and the Emergence of HolocaustMemory in Socialism
  • The Jewish Historical Institute and Antifascist Literature in the GDR
  • The Three Books
  • The Censors' Verdict on the Polish Books
  • The Intended Role of the Books in the East GermanPress Debate and their Effect
  • The Perception of the Books.
  • Diffusion of Knowledge into Artistic, Documentary, and Educational Projects
  • Conclusion
  • Conclusions
  • Making Sense of the Holocaust in Socialist EasternEurope
  • Discursive Frameworks for Addressing the Holocaust
  • Eastern Europe in its Diversity
  • Making Sense of the Holocaust with Agency
  • Demarginalizing Eastern Europe
  • List of Contributors
  • Index
  • Back cover.