MAKING STORIES, MAKING SELVES: FEMINIST REFLECTIONS ON THE HOLOCAUST
Autor R. RUTH LINDENen Limba Engleză Paperback – 29 ian 2021
Vital reading for Holocaust scholars, students of modern Jewish life, sociologists, feminist theorists, and all readers seeking to understand their own relationship to the Holocaust.
Cutting across the boundaries of ethnography and autobiography to create a new kind of text, Making Stories, Making Selves offers a significant contribution to interpretive social science and the literature of the Holocaust. In it, feminist sociologist R. Ruth Linden begins with her own experience in an assimilated Jewish family, where Holocaust silence shaped her path. In 1983, she began interviewing Holocaust survivors, uncovering how personal narratives are continuously shaped and reshaped.
Through the intimate accounts she captures here, Linden reveals how storytelling constructs the self—not as a static truth, but as a living, evolving process. Her reflections challenge traditional social science, emphasizing the deep connection between researcher and subject. The result is a striking montage of voices, where interviewer and interviewee are inseparably linked.
This transformative study invites readers to reconsider the Holocaust not just historically, but personally. It offers a powerful contribution to interpretive social science and Holocaust literature, inspiring scholars and general readers alike to rethink survival, memory, and the stories we tell to understand who we are.
Cutting across the boundaries of ethnography and autobiography to create a new kind of text, Making Stories, Making Selves offers a significant contribution to interpretive social science and the literature of the Holocaust. In it, feminist sociologist R. Ruth Linden begins with her own experience in an assimilated Jewish family, where Holocaust silence shaped her path. In 1983, she began interviewing Holocaust survivors, uncovering how personal narratives are continuously shaped and reshaped.
Through the intimate accounts she captures here, Linden reveals how storytelling constructs the self—not as a static truth, but as a living, evolving process. Her reflections challenge traditional social science, emphasizing the deep connection between researcher and subject. The result is a striking montage of voices, where interviewer and interviewee are inseparably linked.
This transformative study invites readers to reconsider the Holocaust not just historically, but personally. It offers a powerful contribution to interpretive social science and Holocaust literature, inspiring scholars and general readers alike to rethink survival, memory, and the stories we tell to understand who we are.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780814205846
ISBN-10: 0814205844
Pagini: 208
Ilustrații: photos, tables
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.31 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Ohio State University Press
Colecția Ohio State University Press
ISBN-10: 0814205844
Pagini: 208
Ilustrații: photos, tables
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.31 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Ohio State University Press
Colecția Ohio State University Press
Recenzii
"[Ruth Linden] writes movingly about her passage from assimilation to radical activism. She helped create the Holocaust Oral History Project in San Francisco, and this work brought about her engaged self-definition as a Jew." —The Woman's Review of Books
"In researching the experiences of female Holocaust survivors, interpreting their recollections, and making those memories relevant to her own life, she has challenged us all to re-examine the relationship of intellectual pursuits with personal attitudes and personal experiences." —Women Library Workers Journal
"This work is a primer on ethnographic research methodology. . . . It is a valuable analysis." —Belles Lettres
"In researching the experiences of female Holocaust survivors, interpreting their recollections, and making those memories relevant to her own life, she has challenged us all to re-examine the relationship of intellectual pursuits with personal attitudes and personal experiences." —Women Library Workers Journal
"This work is a primer on ethnographic research methodology. . . . It is a valuable analysis." —Belles Lettres
Notă biografică
R. Ruth Linden is a health advocate, researcher, and academic. A cofounder of the Bay Area Holocaust Oral History Project, she has taught at the University of California-San Francisco, Wesleyan University, Brandeis University, and elsewhere.
Descriere
A pioneering work of autoethnography that makes a significant contribution to interpretive social science and the literature of the Holocaust.