We Remember with Reverence and Love
Autor Hasia R. Dineren Limba Engleză Hardback – apr 2009
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780814719930
ISBN-10: 0814719937
Pagini: 546
Ilustrații: 26 illustrations
Dimensiuni: 164 x 236 x 42 mm
Greutate: 0.87 kg
Editura: NYU Press - IPS
ISBN-10: 0814719937
Pagini: 546
Ilustrații: 26 illustrations
Dimensiuni: 164 x 236 x 42 mm
Greutate: 0.87 kg
Editura: NYU Press - IPS
Cuprins
AcknowledgmentsDeeds and Words: An Introduction; 1: We Remember with Reverence and Love; 2: Telling the World; 3: To the Survivors; 4: Germany on Their Minds; 5: Wrestling with the Post War World; 6: Facing the Jewish Future; Conclusion: The Corruption of History, the Betrayal of MemoryNotes; Bibliography; Index; About the Author
Recenzii
"A startling and passionate work of history. No one has written about the early American Jewish response to the Holocaust with more insight, sophistication, and sensitivity." Gary Gerstle, author of American Crucible
A powerful book worthy of its important subject. Diner revises our understanding of the critical post-war decades when American Jews incorporated bitter memories of the murder of European Jews into their collective consciousness. Deborah Dash Moore, author of GI Jews
Diner hurls a passionate, well-delineated attack on the conventional view that postwar Jews and survivors wanted to forget the Holocaust rather than memorialize the tragedy...she uncovers a rich and varied history of how Jews have incorporated and made sense of the Holocaust...Diner is particularly compelling in her exploration of how the postwar Jewish liberal agenda-transformed by the experience of the Holocaust, immigration discrimination and anti-Semitism in America-boldly embraced the civil-rights crusade...A work of towering research and conviction that will surely enliven academic debates for years to come. Kirkus Review, 2nd Jan 09
"An important contribution to American Jewish historiography, this book is recommended for all libraries."-Library Journal, Feb 09
Diner...sets out to refute what she contends is an accepted truth: that until the 1960s, American Jewry suffered from a self-imposed collective amnesia about the Holocaust. Diner marshals considerable evidence that American Jews were aware of the Holocaust and their culture was influenced by it...Diner's worthy, innovative, diligently researched work should spark controversy and meaningful dialogue among Holocaust scholars and in the Jewish community.-Publishers Weekly, 23rd Feb 2009
"Perhaps the 'myth of silence' was a necessary stage in American Jewrys ongoing struggle to make sense of its place in a post-Holocaust world. But even if that myth once served a need, thanks to Hasia Diners work, it must now be retired for good." Adam Kirsch, Tablet, 23rd June 2009
A powerful book worthy of its important subject. Diner revises our understanding of the critical post-war decades when American Jews incorporated bitter memories of the murder of European Jews into their collective consciousness. Deborah Dash Moore, author of GI Jews
Diner hurls a passionate, well-delineated attack on the conventional view that postwar Jews and survivors wanted to forget the Holocaust rather than memorialize the tragedy...she uncovers a rich and varied history of how Jews have incorporated and made sense of the Holocaust...Diner is particularly compelling in her exploration of how the postwar Jewish liberal agenda-transformed by the experience of the Holocaust, immigration discrimination and anti-Semitism in America-boldly embraced the civil-rights crusade...A work of towering research and conviction that will surely enliven academic debates for years to come. Kirkus Review, 2nd Jan 09
"An important contribution to American Jewish historiography, this book is recommended for all libraries."-Library Journal, Feb 09
Diner...sets out to refute what she contends is an accepted truth: that until the 1960s, American Jewry suffered from a self-imposed collective amnesia about the Holocaust. Diner marshals considerable evidence that American Jews were aware of the Holocaust and their culture was influenced by it...Diner's worthy, innovative, diligently researched work should spark controversy and meaningful dialogue among Holocaust scholars and in the Jewish community.-Publishers Weekly, 23rd Feb 2009
"Perhaps the 'myth of silence' was a necessary stage in American Jewrys ongoing struggle to make sense of its place in a post-Holocaust world. But even if that myth once served a need, thanks to Hasia Diners work, it must now be retired for good." Adam Kirsch, Tablet, 23rd June 2009
Notă biografică
Hasia Diner is Paul S. and Sylvia Steinberg Professor of American Jewish History, Skirball Department of Hebrew and Judaic Studies at New York University. She is the author of the award-winning We Remember with Reverence and Love: American Jews and the Myth of Silence after the Holocaust, 1945-1962 (NYU Press, 2009).
Descriere
A major re-examination of postwar American Jewry that debunks the assumption of silence