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  • 2020-2024  (7)
  • Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) Historiography  (5)
  • Research Methodology  (4)
  • 1
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2021
    Titel der Quelle: S: I. M. O. N.
    Angaben zur Quelle: 8,2 (2021) 5-12
    Keywords: Karny, Miroslav ; Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) ; Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) Historiography ; Bohemia and Moravia (Protectorate, 1939-1945)
    Abstract: This introduction summarises the rationale for this ‘national’ special issue devoted to thehistory of the Holocaust in the Bohemian lands. It discusses the legacy of the historian Miroslav Kárný and the historiographic pause and disorientation following his death in 2001.Before summarising the articles, it analyses the recent polarisation of historiographic debates with regard to the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia. It tackles disputes around thelocal, or Czech, entanglement in the persecution of Roma and Sinti and around comparisonswith the genocide of Jews. It discusses the attacks on research that critically challenges common assumptions about Czech solidarity with Jews and the one-sided, top-down approachto the history of the Holocaust in the Protectorate.
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  • 2
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2020
    Titel der Quelle: S: I. M. O. N.
    Angaben zur Quelle: 7,1 (2020) 4-12
    Keywords: Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) ; Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) Historiography ; War crime trials Sources History
    Abstract: This article draws on Soviet postwar investigations of crimes and trial materials in order to illuminate how the representation of wartime anti-Jewish violence shapes contemporary historians’ knowledge of the Holocaust. The study intertwines two different but tightly connected strands of analysis: the first delineates gaps in Soviet postwar trial documentation while placing them in the sources’ specific legal and social contexts. The second thread of inquiry highlights the challenges resulting for the study of the Holocaust.
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  • 3
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2023
    Titel der Quelle: S: I. M. O. N.
    Angaben zur Quelle: 10,2 (2023) 50-72
    Keywords: Children's drawings Psychological aspects ; Jewish children in the Holocaust ; Holocaust survivors ; Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) Research ; Research Methodology
    Abstract: A source group consisting of twenty-six drawings that was created by thirteen- and fourteen-year-old survivors in the immediate aftermath of the Holocaust is analysed in this article. The youngsters who drew the testimonial drawings as compulsory school assignments were pupils of the High School for Girls of the Neolog Jewish Community of Pest. Our aim is to demonstrate that these drawings are crucial historical sources that document both the Holocaust and its immediate aftermath. Until recently, these kinds of documents have been routinely viewed as merely marginal sources of historical information, mainly because they are visual in nature and were created by young teenagers. Certain factors, such as the school environment, age, gender, and the shared historical experiences of the children turn the drawings into a source group from which additional information can be gleaned by analysing the individual pieces in one another’s contexts. The analyses of the drawings show that the girls consciously took the role of the witness upon themselves. We also examine how the fact that these drawings were created by females influences the source group.
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  • 4
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2023
    Titel der Quelle: S: I. M. O. N.
    Angaben zur Quelle: 10,2 (2023) 111-132
    Keywords: Kadar, Janos, ; Magyar Auschwitz Alapitvany ; Holokauszt Emlekkozpont (Budapest, Hungary) ; Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) Commemoration ; Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) Archival resources ; Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) Historiography ; Hungary Politics and government 1945-1989
    Abstract: The ambivalent attitude of socialist memory politics towards the Holocaust during János Kádár’s regime (1956–1989) is reflected in the history of personal collections. Although museums did collect Holocaust memorabilia, this was not encouraged or publicised. Because of such delayed and restrained collection, the objects relating to persecution are mostly to be found in family homes. Since the end of socialism did not change this attitude, the contemporary memorial landscape of the Holocaust covers not only the institutions dedicated to the history of persecution but also the (second- and third-generation) survivors’ homes. On the other hand, the public collection of the victims’ documents – albeit in an incomplete, unprofessional, and politically motivated manner – had already been established during the Kádár era, and within the framework of a non-Jewish, party organisation. In this paper, we will attempt to describe the activity of the Committee for Persons Persecuted by the Nazis (Nácizmus Üldözötteinek Bizottsága, NÜB), the first organisation to specifically collect Holocaust memorabilia. Through examples, we will show the extent to which privately owned personal material traces contributed to the building of public collections in the post-communist period. The study particularly focusses on the collecting strategies and practices of the post-1990 Hungarian Auschwitz Foundation (Magyar Auschwitz Alapítvány) and the state-run Holocaust Memorial Center (Holokauszt Emlékközpont, HE), thus completing the institutionalisation process of Holocaust-related materials. We argue that the post-war era’s memory politics and memory processes, mainly in the 1960s and 1980s, influenced both the biography of the objects and the histories of the world around them. Therefore, through the stories of the objects, we can better understand the relationship between institutional and personal memory. We seek to answer the question of what happened to the tangible heritage of the Holocaust during the Kádár era and how the survivors related to their preserved objects in the 2010s.
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  • 5
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2023
    Titel der Quelle: S: I. M. O. N.
    Angaben zur Quelle: 10,2 (2023) 4-14
    Keywords: Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) Archival resources ; Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) Research ; Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) Historiography ; Research Methodology
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  • 6
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2023
    Titel der Quelle: S: I. M. O. N.
    Angaben zur Quelle: 10,2 (2023) 15-30
    Keywords: Mendelsohn, Daniel Adam, ; Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) Research ; Research Methodology ; Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) Archival resources ; Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) Historiography
    Abstract: If the children of Shoah victims have inherited the experiences of their parents, their own children, the third-generation descendants, are faced with an additional distance toward this inheritance. Daniel Mendelsohn’s 2006 book The Lost: A Search for Six of Six Million is somehow paradigmatic of the members of this generation. Writing about the life and death of his Jewish great-uncle, who was with his wife and four daughters killed by the Nazis during World War II in Bolechow, a Polish city now located in Ukraine, Mendelsohn’s quest is challenged by the fact that there are almost no archival traces about the circumstances of their death. In this article, I will examine a specific part of the book in which Mendelsohn writes about the death of one of his extended relatives, Ruchele, who is killed in the first Aktion perpetrated by the Nazis in Bolechow, and about which no archives and no testimonies were left behind. The author is faced with the impossibility of rendering a coherent and complete narrative of her last moments and has no way of using the archives to fill this gap. He proposes something else: rather than writing about the specifics of her last moments, he writes about the epistemological and ethical limits he encounters, caused by the absence of archival transmission that could have linked him to this event. As the narrator, he offers a new methodology that confronts the precarity of the archives by questioning – whether it is by using literary devices such as the preterition or by using the interrogative form – what really happened to his relative.
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  • 7
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2023
    Titel der Quelle: S: I. M. O. N.
    Angaben zur Quelle: 10,2 (2023) 133-150
    Keywords: Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) Archival resources ; Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) Research ; Research Methodology ; Grandchildren of Holocaust survivors Interviews ; Interdisciplinary research
    Abstract: This article is an attempt to employ arts-based research, a non-traditional, interdisciplinary methodology to create a non-exiting “family archive” from anecdotes photographs and scattered documents. The “family archive” is based on interviews of family members who were born after the Holocaust and supplemented with additional research conducted at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, the Arolsen Archives, Yad Vashem, and other archives. The text itself navigates the reader between the different truths, plumbing the fundamental disagreements between the interviewees who belong to the Second Generation, the generation of postmemory. In the center of the interviews there is a backpack which plays an important role as it is a “ghost”, functioning as a magical object, a vessel of the family fable. The recreated backpack helped to push aside the taboo on speaking about the Holocaust, and opened up an active dialogue, by bringing together comparative and interdisciplinary approaches through visual art. This intellectual and artistic move seeks to give credit where credit was not given before, for those narratives which were never listened to earlier.
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