Startseite Geschichte Towards a Shared Memory? The Hungarian Holocaust in Mass-Market Socialist Literature, 1956–1970
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Towards a Shared Memory? The Hungarian Holocaust in Mass-Market Socialist Literature, 1956–1970

  • Richard S. Esbenshade
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© 2022, Central European University Press, Budapest, Hungary

© 2022, Central European University Press, Budapest, Hungary

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  1. Frontmatter i
  2. Contents v
  3. Figures vii
  4. Acronyms and Abbreviations ix
  5. Acknowledgments xi
  6. Introduction 1
  7. Part One Historiography
  8. Edition of Documents from the Ringelblum Archive (the Underground Archive of the Warsaw Ghetto) in Stalinist Poland 19
  9. “A Great Civic and Scientific Duty of Our Historiography” Czech Historians and the Holocaust in the 1970s and 1980s 39
  10. The Conflicted Identities of Helmut Eschwege: Communist, Jew, and Historian of the Holocaust in the German Democratic Republic 63
  11. Part Two Sites of Memory
  12. Parallel Memories? Public Memorialization of the Antifascist Struggle and Martyr Memorial Services in the Hungarian Jewish Community during Early Communism 85
  13. Holocaust Narrative(s) in Soviet Lithuania: The Case of the Ninth Fort Museum in Kaunas 109
  14. Memory Incarnate: Jewish Sites in Communist Poland and the Perception of the Shoah 129
  15. Part Three Artistic Representations
  16. Writing a Soviet Holocaust Novel: Traumatic Memory, the Search for Documents, and the Soviet War Narrative in Anatolii Rybakov’s Heavy Sand 153
  17. Commissioned Memory: Official Representations of the Holocaust in Hungarian Art (1955–1965) 175
  18. Towards a Shared Memory? The Hungarian Holocaust in Mass-Market Socialist Literature, 1956–1970 207
  19. Part Four Media and Public Debate
  20. Distrusting the Parks: Heinz Knobloch’s Journalism and the Memory of the Shoah in the GDR 229
  21. “We Pledge, as if It Was the Highest Sanctum, to Preserve the Memory”: Sovetish Heymland, Facets of Holocaust Commemoration in the Soviet Union and the Cold War 253
  22. “The Jewish Diaries . . . Undergo One Edition after the Other”: Early Polish Holocaust Documentation, East German Antifascism, and the Emergence of Holocaust Memory in Socialism 275
  23. Conclusions
  24. Making Sense of the Holocaust in Socialist Eastern Europe 303
  25. Contributors 319
  26. Index 323
Heruntergeladen am 2.10.2025 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9789633864364-013/html
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