In the Holocaust novel, silence is always a character, and the word is always its subject matter. So writes David Patterson in this profound and original study of more than thirty important writers. Contrary to existing views, he argues, the Holocaust novel is not an attempt to depict an unimaginable reality or an ineffable horror. It is, rather, an endeavor to fetch the word from silence and restore it to meaning, to resurrect the human soul, to regenerate the relation between the self and God, the self and other, the self and itself. This book is less a critical study in the usual sense than an impassioned meditation on the deeper sources of the Holocaust novel. Among the authors examined are Elie Wiesel, Arnost Lustig, Aharon Appelfeld,...
The approach I have chosen for my study is to analyse the narrative techniques in Wiesel's fiction, ...
Holocaust literature is a challenging space in which to write, seeking to convey an event that canno...
This essay examines the function of language during a time of genocide as displayed in Imre Kertesz\...
Following World War II the novel faced a crisis in its mode of address. How could the human and huma...
(print) xx, 256 p. ; 24 cmAcknowledgments ix -- Preface xi -- Ch. 1 The Incredibility of the Holocau...
Elie Wiesel, a Holocaust survivor, confronts a tragic dilemma: he must bear witness in order to pay ...
The present paper attempts to cast light on an important aspect of Holocaust literature. Basically, ...
"There is no explanation for Auschwitz", was a line heard from an anonymous character in the novel K...
"Ask now and see, was there ever such a holocaust as this since the days of Adam?" The question pose...
Despite the proliferation of Holocaust literature and survivor testimonials, philosophy has largely ...
Holocaust literature is an artistic expression, which in many ways sits outside the established unde...
Studies have tended to focus on implied, not indicated, silences and/or to define the silence as the...
The exploration of the theme and narration of silence in Virginia Woolf\u27s novels in this disserta...
© 2020 Talia E. Crockett. Holocaust literature is a challenging space in which to write, seeking to ...
In his 1951 essay on Auschwitz, “Cultural Criticism and Society,” Theodor Adorno wrote: “To write po...
The approach I have chosen for my study is to analyse the narrative techniques in Wiesel's fiction, ...
Holocaust literature is a challenging space in which to write, seeking to convey an event that canno...
This essay examines the function of language during a time of genocide as displayed in Imre Kertesz\...
Following World War II the novel faced a crisis in its mode of address. How could the human and huma...
(print) xx, 256 p. ; 24 cmAcknowledgments ix -- Preface xi -- Ch. 1 The Incredibility of the Holocau...
Elie Wiesel, a Holocaust survivor, confronts a tragic dilemma: he must bear witness in order to pay ...
The present paper attempts to cast light on an important aspect of Holocaust literature. Basically, ...
"There is no explanation for Auschwitz", was a line heard from an anonymous character in the novel K...
"Ask now and see, was there ever such a holocaust as this since the days of Adam?" The question pose...
Despite the proliferation of Holocaust literature and survivor testimonials, philosophy has largely ...
Holocaust literature is an artistic expression, which in many ways sits outside the established unde...
Studies have tended to focus on implied, not indicated, silences and/or to define the silence as the...
The exploration of the theme and narration of silence in Virginia Woolf\u27s novels in this disserta...
© 2020 Talia E. Crockett. Holocaust literature is a challenging space in which to write, seeking to ...
In his 1951 essay on Auschwitz, “Cultural Criticism and Society,” Theodor Adorno wrote: “To write po...
The approach I have chosen for my study is to analyse the narrative techniques in Wiesel's fiction, ...
Holocaust literature is a challenging space in which to write, seeking to convey an event that canno...
This essay examines the function of language during a time of genocide as displayed in Imre Kertesz\...