See under: Shoah : : imagining the Holocaust with David Grossman / / edited by Marc De Kesel, Bettine Siertsema, Katarzyna Szurmiak.

Did the first generation Holocaust writers not warn us against the risks of imagination? Does it not create an illusion that the unimaginable can be imagined, the unrepresentable represented? Clearly this warning has not been taken up by David Grossman. Fully embracing imagination’s power, his novel...

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Bibliographic Details
Superior document:Brill Reference Library of Judaism, Volume 41
TeilnehmendeR:
Place / Publishing House:Leiden, Netherlands : : Brill,, 2014.
©2014
Year of Publication:2014
Edition:1st ed.
Language:English
Series:Brill reference library of Judaism ; Volume 41.
Physical Description:1 online resource (217 p.)
Notes:Description based upon print version of record.
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Table of Contents:
  • Preliminary Material
  • Introduction / Marc De Kesel and Katarzyna Szurmiak
  • Summary of the Novel / Jan Ceuppens
  • 1 Quod Vide, or the Displacement of Meaning in the Narrative Construction of Love / Dany Nobus
  • 2 Guerrilla War with Words—The Language of Resistance to the Shoah / Olga Kaczmarek
  • 3 Grossman’s White Room and Schulzian Empty Spaces / Katarzyna Szurmiak
  • 4 The Laugh of a God Who Doesn’t Exist / Marc De Kesel
  • 5 The Perpetrator / Bettine Siertsema
  • 6 Diasporic Remarks / Dirk De Schutter
  • 7 The Holocaust’s Muses—On Voices, Appropriation and Misappropriation in Grossman’s Novel and W.G. Sebald’s Prose Fiction / Jan Ceuppens
  • 8 The Novel Form and the Timing of the Nation / Pieter Vermeulen
  • 9 Torag, Dolgan, Ning, Gyoya, Orga: Diaspora under the Sign of Salmon / Ortwin de Graef
  • 10 On Some Adornean Catchwords / Erik Vogt
  • Bibliography
  • Index.