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Responses to the Holocaust: Discussing Jewish Identity through the Perspective of Social Construction

  • Richard williams
© 2020 Duke University Press, Durham, USA

© 2020 Duke University Press, Durham, USA

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. CONTENTS v
  3. Acknowledgments ix
  4. Part 1 Reconsidering holocaust study
  5. Introduction: Why the Holocaust? Why Sociology? Why Now? 1
  6. Sociology and Holocaust Study 11
  7. Part 2 Jewish identities in the diaspora
  8. Post-memory and Post-Holocaust Jewish Identity Narratives 35
  9. The Holocaust, Orthodox Jewry, and the American Jewish Community 55
  10. Traveling Jews, Creating Memory: Eastern Europe, Israel, and the Diaspora Business 67
  11. Trauma Stories, Identity Work, and the Politics of Recognition 84
  12. Responses to the Holocaust: Discussing Jewish Identity through the Perspective of Social Construction 92
  13. Part 3 Memory, memoirs, and post-memory
  14. In Cuba I Was a German Shepherd: Questions of Comparison and Generalizability in Holocaust Memoirs 111
  15. Collective Memory and Cultural Politics: Narrating and Commemorating the Rescue of Jewish Children by Belgian Convents during the Holocaust 134
  16. Holocaust Testimony: Producing Post-memories, Producing Identities 154
  17. Survivor Testimonies, Holocaust Memoirs: Violence in Latin America 176
  18. Historicizing and Locating Testimonies 185
  19. Part 4 Immigration and transnational practices
  20. In the Land of Milk and Cows: Rural German Jewish Refugees and Post-Holocaust Adaptation 197
  21. Post-Holocaust Jewish Migration: From Refugees to Transnationals 215
  22. ‘‘On Halloween We Dressed Up Like KGB Agents’’: Reimagining Soviet Jewish Refugee Identities in the United States 236
  23. The Paradigmatic Status of Jewish Immigration 260
  24. Circuits and Networks: The Case of the Jewish Diaspora 266
  25. Part 5 Collective action, collective guilt, collective memory
  26. Availability, Proximity, and Identity in the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising: Adding a Sociological Lens to Studies of Jewish Resistance 273
  27. The Agonies of Defeat: ‘‘Other Germanies’’ and the Problem of Collective Guilt 291
  28. The Cosmopolitanization of Holocaust Memory: From Jewish to Human Experience 313
  29. The Sociology of Knowledge and the Holocaust: A Critique 331
  30. Violence, Representation, and the Nation 337
  31. Bibliography 345
  32. Contributors 385
  33. Index 391
Sociology Confronts the Holocaust
This chapter is in the book Sociology Confronts the Holocaust
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