In the context of the current German memory discourse, the age-old question of the interplay of remembrance and effacement has been revived. This article proposes to shed light on some of its ramifications through the prism of Maxim Biller’s novella Harlem Holocaust. Biller, born 1960 in Prague, is a German-Jewish short-story writer, novelist and newspaper columnist. Initially known for his incisive articles in the quasi legendary Tempo magazine and now for his satirical column “Moralische Geschichten” in the Frankfurter Allgemeine Sonntagszeitung, Biller writes on socio-political, cultural and personal issues, touching on German reunification, American literature, latent anti-semitism and convoluted love relationships. His novels and short...
International audienceThis article aims to off er a refl ection on the interaction between literatur...
This essay extends Michael Levine’s theory of the ‘belated witness’ as an approach to the question o...
The ‘Third Reich’ has been one of the most traumatic experiences of the 20th century. It comes there...
In the context of the current German memory discourse, the age-old question of the interplay of reme...
In the shifting media landscape of the twenty-first century, the second and third generations of Ger...
This paper explores links between narration and memory in Holocaust literature and examines ways in ...
This article examines subjunctive approaches to history and memory as a novel aesthetic and ethical ...
This interdisciplinary study suggests that the time has come to pursue a new modality of Holocaust r...
The purpose of this article is to explore how memory is constructed in Victor Klemperer’s diaries. I...
This article deals with second-generation Holocaust literature, i.e. writings belonging to the gener...
This essay aims to study the figure of the perpetrator and how trauma can be transmitted through sev...
Der vorliegende Beitrag präsentiert die literatur- und erinnerungsgeschichtlichen Entwicklungen, die...
This essay offers a reflection on the concepts of identity and personal narrative, a line of argumen...
The urgency of the problem of how to learn from the relatively recent past in order not to repeat it...
In her article Narrative Silences Between History and Memory in Schumann\u27s Being Present: Growin...
International audienceThis article aims to off er a refl ection on the interaction between literatur...
This essay extends Michael Levine’s theory of the ‘belated witness’ as an approach to the question o...
The ‘Third Reich’ has been one of the most traumatic experiences of the 20th century. It comes there...
In the context of the current German memory discourse, the age-old question of the interplay of reme...
In the shifting media landscape of the twenty-first century, the second and third generations of Ger...
This paper explores links between narration and memory in Holocaust literature and examines ways in ...
This article examines subjunctive approaches to history and memory as a novel aesthetic and ethical ...
This interdisciplinary study suggests that the time has come to pursue a new modality of Holocaust r...
The purpose of this article is to explore how memory is constructed in Victor Klemperer’s diaries. I...
This article deals with second-generation Holocaust literature, i.e. writings belonging to the gener...
This essay aims to study the figure of the perpetrator and how trauma can be transmitted through sev...
Der vorliegende Beitrag präsentiert die literatur- und erinnerungsgeschichtlichen Entwicklungen, die...
This essay offers a reflection on the concepts of identity and personal narrative, a line of argumen...
The urgency of the problem of how to learn from the relatively recent past in order not to repeat it...
In her article Narrative Silences Between History and Memory in Schumann\u27s Being Present: Growin...
International audienceThis article aims to off er a refl ection on the interaction between literatur...
This essay extends Michael Levine’s theory of the ‘belated witness’ as an approach to the question o...
The ‘Third Reich’ has been one of the most traumatic experiences of the 20th century. It comes there...