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  • 1
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2023
    Titel der Quelle: Buchenwald
    Angaben zur Quelle: (2023) 113-138
    Keywords: Királyhegyi, Pál. ; Kertész, Imre, ; Kroó, László. ; Buchenwald (Concentration camp) ; Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945), in literature ; Nazi concentration camps in literature ; Hungarian literature History and criticism 20th century
    Abstract: The current paper explores the main Hungarian literary representations of Buchenwald. While the discussion below presents the most relevant historical facts, relates to transnational trends and briefly covers the reception of select texts’ Hungarian translations, it focuses primarily on three major works of literary fiction in the Hungarian language that address experiences of Buchenwald to a significant extent and in a fictionalized way: Pál Királyhegyi’s Mindenki nem halt meg [Not Everyone Has Died], Imre Kertész’s Sorstalanság [Fateless] and László Kroó’s Bölcsőm, koporsóm Buchenwald [Buchenwald: My Cradle, My Coffin]. The paper argues that Királyhegyi’s 1947 work is a fascinating experiment in black comedy, Kroó’s 1981 novel reconsiders anti-fascist certainties and develops a more hesitant and sceptical approach to past heroism within the broad parameters of state socialism, whereas Kertész’s 1975 novel amounts to an innovative attempt to create authentic testimony opposed to any and all forms of memory instrumentalisation.
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  • 2
    Language: German
    Year of publication: 2023
    Titel der Quelle: Buchenwald
    Angaben zur Quelle: (2023) 167-197
    Keywords: Antelme, Robert Criticism and interpretation ; Antelme, Robert. ; Kofman, Sarah Criticism and interpretation ; Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945)
    Abstract: This text compares and discusses early publications by five authors who were deported from Vienna to concentration camps after Austria’s so-called Anschluss with the German Reich in 1938. In their analyses, Bruno Bettelheim (1903-1990), Ernst Federn (1914-2007), Benedikt Kautsky (1894-1960), Eugen Kogon (1903-1987) and Paul M. Neurath (1911-2001) drew on their own experiences with modes of thinking from the fields of the social sciences and psychoanalysis. Their aimwas to formulate general statements about life under extreme conditions, going beyond the perspective of the eyewitness. This analysis reconstructs the genesis of these texts and their reception. Ultimately, it asks why “Austrians” seem to be overrepresented, as it were, among early analysts of the camp.
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