ABSTRACT

For the last decade scholars have been questioning the idea that the Holocaust was not talked about in any way until well into the 1970s. After the Holocaust: Challenging the Myth of Silence is the first collection of authoritative, original scholarship to expose a serious misreading of the past on which, controversially, the claims for a ‘Holocaust industry’ rest. Taking an international approach this bold new book exposes the myth and opens the way for a sweeping reassessment of Jewish life in the postwar era, a life lived in the pervasive, shared awareness that Jews had narrowly survived a catastrophe that had engulfed humanity as a whole but claimed two-thirds of their number.

The chapters include:

    • an overview of the efforts by survivor historians and memoir writers to inform the world of the catastrophe that had befallen the Jews of Europe
    • an evaluation of the work of survivor-historians and memoir writers
    • new light on the Jewish historical commissions and the Jewish documentation centres
    • studies of David Boder, a Russian born psychologist who recorded searing interviews with survivors, and the work of philosophers, social thinkers and theologians
    • theatrical productions by survivors and the first films on the theme made in Hollywood
    • how the Holocaust had an impact on the everyday life of Jews in the USA
    • and a discussion of the different types, and meanings, of ‘silence’.

 

A breakthrough volume in the debate about the ‘Myth of Silence’, this is a must for all students of Holocaust and genocide.

chapter |14 pages

Introduction

chapter |24 pages

Challenging the ‘Myth of Silence'

Postwar Responses to the Destruction of European Jewry

chapter |16 pages

Re-Imagining the Unimaginable

Theater, Memory, and Rehabilitation in the Displaced Persons Camps

chapter |12 pages

No Silence in Yiddish

Popular and Scholarly Writing about the Holocaust in the Early Postwar Years

chapter |15 pages

Breaking the Silence

The Centre de Documentation Juive Contemporaine in Paris and the Writing of Holocaust History in Liberated France

chapter |20 pages

Dividing the Ruins

Communal Memory in Yiddish and Hebrew

chapter |13 pages

“We Know Very Little In America”

David Boder and un-belated testimony

chapter |12 pages

David P. Boder

Holocaust Memory in Displaced Persons Camps

chapter |13 pages

If God was Silent, Absent, Dead, or Nonexistent, What About Philosophy and Theology?

Some Aftereffects and Aftershocks of the Holocaust

chapter |18 pages

Trial by Audience

Bringing Nazi war criminals to justice in Hollywood films, 1944–59

chapter |11 pages

“This Too is Partly Hitler's Doing”

American Jewish Name Changing in the wake of the Holocaust, 1939–57

chapter |11 pages

The Myth of Silence

Survivors Tell a Different Story