Prisoners of the Nazi concentration camps explained that the necessity to count all that horror stayed with them in life. In this moment, they were founding an "ethics of the testimony", that is to say, the salvation of the victims by means of their memory. Indeed Ricoeur shows that "time becomes human time in the measurement in which it is articulated in a narrative way". In this sense, he points out that narrative plots constitute "the privileged means by which we form our confused, shapeless and, at limit, dumb, temporary experience". In spite of that, experience not always reaches to being object of a story. Sometimes, the traumatic experience prevents the individual from taking control of his/her personal history. There is a strong te...
Auschwitz remains one of the key phenomena for understanding the history of the 20th century. It has...
Starting from the perspective that Holocaust theory offers a paradigmatic framework that may form th...
In Storytelling, Rodolphe Gasché reexamines the muteness of Holocaust survivors, that is, their inab...
While the witnesses of the events which have shaped the twentieth century have been disappearing, th...
Stories offer us some of the richest and most enduring insights into the human condition and have pr...
This article illustrates the plurality of subjectivities linked to the memory of victims. The author...
Ricoeur made an important modification in his conception of history in History, Memory, Forgetting w...
This article approaches the reflections of Paul Ricoeur regarding testimony to befound in his work ...
Inheriting the unpublished story of a concentration camp experience implies accepting the moral duty...
Through the oral narrative of a French survivor – Resistant and Jewish – deported to the nazi concen...
In itself the Holocaust was an event of such enormity that it defies normal comprehension. Whatever ...
International audienceBased on the contribution of memory theorists who thought about the complex re...
This article develops a theoretical reflection on one of the central axes of the problems of victims...
Acting and suffering subjectivity makes a grand sujet in Ricoeur's philosophy. In his Time and Narra...
History and memory: To this pairing, philosopher P. Ricoeur and others often draw attention an addit...
Auschwitz remains one of the key phenomena for understanding the history of the 20th century. It has...
Starting from the perspective that Holocaust theory offers a paradigmatic framework that may form th...
In Storytelling, Rodolphe Gasché reexamines the muteness of Holocaust survivors, that is, their inab...
While the witnesses of the events which have shaped the twentieth century have been disappearing, th...
Stories offer us some of the richest and most enduring insights into the human condition and have pr...
This article illustrates the plurality of subjectivities linked to the memory of victims. The author...
Ricoeur made an important modification in his conception of history in History, Memory, Forgetting w...
This article approaches the reflections of Paul Ricoeur regarding testimony to befound in his work ...
Inheriting the unpublished story of a concentration camp experience implies accepting the moral duty...
Through the oral narrative of a French survivor – Resistant and Jewish – deported to the nazi concen...
In itself the Holocaust was an event of such enormity that it defies normal comprehension. Whatever ...
International audienceBased on the contribution of memory theorists who thought about the complex re...
This article develops a theoretical reflection on one of the central axes of the problems of victims...
Acting and suffering subjectivity makes a grand sujet in Ricoeur's philosophy. In his Time and Narra...
History and memory: To this pairing, philosopher P. Ricoeur and others often draw attention an addit...
Auschwitz remains one of the key phenomena for understanding the history of the 20th century. It has...
Starting from the perspective that Holocaust theory offers a paradigmatic framework that may form th...
In Storytelling, Rodolphe Gasché reexamines the muteness of Holocaust survivors, that is, their inab...