Kapitel
Open Access
Towards a Shared Memory? The Hungarian Holocaust in Mass-Market Socialist Literature, 1956–1970
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Richard S. Esbenshade
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Figures vii
- Acronyms and Abbreviations ix
- Acknowledgments xi
- Introduction 1
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Part One Historiography
- Edition of Documents from the Ringelblum Archive (the Underground Archive of the Warsaw Ghetto) in Stalinist Poland 19
- “A Great Civic and Scientific Duty of Our Historiography” Czech Historians and the Holocaust in the 1970s and 1980s 39
- The Conflicted Identities of Helmut Eschwege: Communist, Jew, and Historian of the Holocaust in the German Democratic Republic 63
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Part Two Sites of Memory
- Parallel Memories? Public Memorialization of the Antifascist Struggle and Martyr Memorial Services in the Hungarian Jewish Community during Early Communism 85
- Holocaust Narrative(s) in Soviet Lithuania: The Case of the Ninth Fort Museum in Kaunas 109
- Memory Incarnate: Jewish Sites in Communist Poland and the Perception of the Shoah 129
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Part Three Artistic Representations
- Writing a Soviet Holocaust Novel: Traumatic Memory, the Search for Documents, and the Soviet War Narrative in Anatolii Rybakov’s Heavy Sand 153
- Commissioned Memory: Official Representations of the Holocaust in Hungarian Art (1955–1965) 175
- Towards a Shared Memory? The Hungarian Holocaust in Mass-Market Socialist Literature, 1956–1970 207
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Part Four Media and Public Debate
- Distrusting the Parks: Heinz Knobloch’s Journalism and the Memory of the Shoah in the GDR 229
- “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
- “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
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Conclusions
- Making Sense of the Holocaust in Socialist Eastern Europe 303
- Contributors 319
- Index 323
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Figures vii
- Acronyms and Abbreviations ix
- Acknowledgments xi
- Introduction 1
-
Part One Historiography
- Edition of Documents from the Ringelblum Archive (the Underground Archive of the Warsaw Ghetto) in Stalinist Poland 19
- “A Great Civic and Scientific Duty of Our Historiography” Czech Historians and the Holocaust in the 1970s and 1980s 39
- The Conflicted Identities of Helmut Eschwege: Communist, Jew, and Historian of the Holocaust in the German Democratic Republic 63
-
Part Two Sites of Memory
- Parallel Memories? Public Memorialization of the Antifascist Struggle and Martyr Memorial Services in the Hungarian Jewish Community during Early Communism 85
- Holocaust Narrative(s) in Soviet Lithuania: The Case of the Ninth Fort Museum in Kaunas 109
- Memory Incarnate: Jewish Sites in Communist Poland and the Perception of the Shoah 129
-
Part Three Artistic Representations
- Writing a Soviet Holocaust Novel: Traumatic Memory, the Search for Documents, and the Soviet War Narrative in Anatolii Rybakov’s Heavy Sand 153
- Commissioned Memory: Official Representations of the Holocaust in Hungarian Art (1955–1965) 175
- Towards a Shared Memory? The Hungarian Holocaust in Mass-Market Socialist Literature, 1956–1970 207
-
Part Four Media and Public Debate
- Distrusting the Parks: Heinz Knobloch’s Journalism and the Memory of the Shoah in the GDR 229
- “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
- “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
-
Conclusions
- Making Sense of the Holocaust in Socialist Eastern Europe 303
- Contributors 319
- Index 323