802 resultados para Holocaust Fiction


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Prenant comme point de départ le rapport paradoxal qui existe entre le témoignage et la littérature (l’un étant considéré comme véridique et l’autre, comme fictive) le présent mémoire s’intéresse à l’utilisation de la fiction dans les récits autobiographiques et testimoniaux de Jorge Semprun, avec L’Écriture ou la vie (1994), et de Régine Robin, avec L’Immense fatigue des pierres (1996). L’étude de ces textes tente de vérifier l’hypothèse selon laquelle, en faisant de leur témoignage une œuvre littéraire qui assume sa part de fiction, les deux auteurs arriveraient à offrir un témoignage plus juste de leur expérience de la Shoah. Le premier chapitre constitue un panorama critique et historique des deux axes théoriques principaux sur lesquels s’appuie ce travail, d’une part les études sur l’écriture testimoniale et sur la littérature de la Shoah (Derrida, Bornand, Prstojevic) et d’autre part les travaux sur l’autobiographie (Lejeune, Robin, Viart et Vercier). Il s’interroge sur les liens qui les unissent tout en tentant de positionner Robin et Semprun à travers ce champ de pratiques littéraires. Les deuxièmes et troisièmes chapitres s’intéressent ensuite aux différents effets de fiction et de réel qui se trouvent dans les deux œuvres du corpus et analysent, dans un premier temps, la mise en scène d’un pacte de vérité ambiguë passant par la représentation littéraire de la figure auctoriale et de l’acte d’écriture et, dans un deuxième temps, la représentation littéraire du réel en étudiant les nombreuses références intertextuelles, la présence du topos de la visite au camp de concentration, ainsi que l’utilisation particulière de l’archive par Semprun et Robin.

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This paper studies the novel The Kindly Ones, whose main plot charts the anguished memories of a Nazi officer. The reader of this novel is plunged into the harshest atrocities of the Holocaust and WWII, as these are recounted by a perverse conscience who is unmoved by the most terrible actions. Fiction and reality are contrasted in the novel against the framework of history writing and the subsequent debates sparked by historical elaboration. This novel perceptively captures historical truth, thus calling for critical attention upon the collective responsibility which will prevent the repetition of events.

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This dissertation discusses contemporary Anglophone children’s literature representing the Holocaust and it claims that, through the reading of historical novels, children can acquire a specific kind of postmemory, which I call ‘attitudinal postmemory’. The works analyzed have been written by ‘non-related’ authors, meaning writers who are not witnesses nor their descendants. Attitudinal postmemory is based on the readers’ establishment of a personal-emotional link with the Holocaust by means of narrative empathy towards the characters; it is an ‘active’ kind of memory because it will hopefully convert into an informed, respectful attitude towards peers that opposes the Nazi ideology. The dissertation is structured into two main parts. Part One provides an overview of the origins and development of Holocaust memory in Western countries. Chapter 1 introduces two major historiographical-literary debates and the following chapter discusses three main issues concerning the representation of the Holocaust (naming, the need to represent, and the ‘right to’ represent) while considering the forms and genres traditionally used and considered ‘appropriate’. Focusing on the scope of literary narratives, Chapter 3 explains how the presence of a personal-emotional link is essential to acquire Holocaust postmemory and, in particular, attitudinal postmemory. The criteria adopted with regard to the case studies are described in Chapter 4. Part Two discusses the process of interweaving historical truth with fiction and how historical fiction helps child readers acquire attitudinal postmemory. After a brief overview of the genre in Chapter 5, Chapter 6 probes how it is possible to meet the two main expectations of historical fiction while avoiding a disrespectful stance towards the Holocaust. Chapter 7 discusses the idea of empathy and some issues in the representation of Nazi evil, while Chapter 8 offers a comparative analysis of the case studies proposed, including authors from the UK, Ireland, Australia, and the USA.