This thesis examines how German-Canadian immigrant families have addressed and remembered the Holocaust. Using a generational perspective, it is based on interviews with ten second- and third-generation German-Canadians who were born between 1950-1975. Their families emigrated from Germany in the first two decades after World War II. The questions this thesis seeks to explore are: How were memories of perpetration, the Nazi past and the Holocaust communicated within families? What information was or was not talked about? Did growing up in Canada shape how families remember their German past? How are the patterns in the stories of second- and third-generation German-Canadians similar to or different from Germans in Germany? Thematic narrativ...
What form does the dialogue about the family past during the Nazi period take in families of those p...
Examines what role traumatic family narratives play in identity formation of subsequent generations....
Rees J, Papendick M, Zick A. Mapping Memory Culture in Germany: What, how, and why Germans remember....
This thesis investigates the transformation of German-Canadian WWII family legacies as they are pass...
This study explores the perspectives of nine third-generation Germans (educated across five federal ...
This thesis explores how non-Jewish Germans who live abroad relate to their national and family hist...
For postwar Canadians, especially for those who had served in Europe or had lost relatives and frien...
In the aftermath of World War II approximately 12-14 million ethnic Germans were forced to leave the...
This dissertation examines how Jewish children of Holocaust survivors (COS), growing up in the 1950s...
The years after the end of World War II were characterized by the constant arrival of new Canadians....
Between 1992-1996 I was in charge of a research project in Germany and Israel sponsored by the Germa...
Using as a sample a group of nearly 400 Jewish survivors of the Holocaust who entered Vancouver, Bri...
Objective: Previous experimental research has yielded inconclusive findings regarding the effects of...
This project explores the history of Germans in Canada: their experiences prior to, during, and aft...
Collective memory of historical events can be transmitted across generations not only through cultur...
What form does the dialogue about the family past during the Nazi period take in families of those p...
Examines what role traumatic family narratives play in identity formation of subsequent generations....
Rees J, Papendick M, Zick A. Mapping Memory Culture in Germany: What, how, and why Germans remember....
This thesis investigates the transformation of German-Canadian WWII family legacies as they are pass...
This study explores the perspectives of nine third-generation Germans (educated across five federal ...
This thesis explores how non-Jewish Germans who live abroad relate to their national and family hist...
For postwar Canadians, especially for those who had served in Europe or had lost relatives and frien...
In the aftermath of World War II approximately 12-14 million ethnic Germans were forced to leave the...
This dissertation examines how Jewish children of Holocaust survivors (COS), growing up in the 1950s...
The years after the end of World War II were characterized by the constant arrival of new Canadians....
Between 1992-1996 I was in charge of a research project in Germany and Israel sponsored by the Germa...
Using as a sample a group of nearly 400 Jewish survivors of the Holocaust who entered Vancouver, Bri...
Objective: Previous experimental research has yielded inconclusive findings regarding the effects of...
This project explores the history of Germans in Canada: their experiences prior to, during, and aft...
Collective memory of historical events can be transmitted across generations not only through cultur...
What form does the dialogue about the family past during the Nazi period take in families of those p...
Examines what role traumatic family narratives play in identity formation of subsequent generations....
Rees J, Papendick M, Zick A. Mapping Memory Culture in Germany: What, how, and why Germans remember....