Columbia University Press
Black Lives Under Nazism
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Author / Editor information
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Black Lives Under Nazism provides an in-depth analysis of a largely unknown corpus of Black African diaspora artworks and literature that address Black lives under Nazism. By making this corpus coherently visible, this book illuminates the complex relations of Black and Jewish experiences in World War II Europe and challenges extant scholarship in Black and Holocaust Studies.
Erin McGlothlin, author of The Mind of the Holocaust Perpetrator in Fiction and Nonfiction:
The experience of people of African descent in the Third Reich has been hauntingly absent in the public imagination of the Holocaust. With her penetrating and sophisticated study, Sarah Casteel illuminates the lived histories of Black victims and survivors of the Nazi regime, thereby expanding the canon of Holocaust representation.
Robbie Aitken, coauthor of Black Germany: The Making and Unmaking of a Diaspora Community, 1884-1960:
Sarah Phillips Casteel’s rich, imaginative, and compelling study seeks to make visible the Black experience of the wartime period. Through her deft analysis of a diverse range of Black testimonial and creative work she brilliantly illustrates the limitations and possibilities these offer in creating countermemories of the Holocaust.
Michael Rothberg, author of The Implicated Subject: Beyond Victims and Perpetrators:
Sarah Phillips Casteel’s beautifully written Black Lives Under Nazism offers a startling new account of the memory of World War II and the Holocaust that centers Black artists and writers. Moving from internment camp art and memoirs by historical eyewitnesses to the novels, photography, and dance of later generations, Casteel’s book reveals how certain histories are rendered invisible while simultaneously showing us the power of art and literature to reanimate the forgotten past and decolonize hegemonic perspectives. Black Lives Under Nazism is a fascinating work of recovery and a strong argument for a relational approach to memory.
Topics
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Frontmatter
i -
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Contents
vii -
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Preface and Acknowledgments
ix -
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List of Abbreviations
xv -
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Introduction: Invisible and Invented Archives
1 - Part I Documenting the Past: The Artist as Witness
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Introduction to Part I
21 -
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1. Outside the Frame: Josef Nassy’s Visual Diary of Internment in Nazi Germany
27 -
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2. Broken Citizenship: Survivor Memoirs by Hans J. Massaquoi, Theodor Michael, and John William
61 - Part II Imagining the Past: The Artist as Historian
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Introduction to Part II
91 -
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3. Jazz Fiction and the Holocaust: Testimonial Objects in the Novels of John A. Williams and Esi Edugyan
98 -
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4. Performing to Survive: “Queen of the Trumpet” Valaida Snow in Fiction, Drama, and Graphic Narrative
128 -
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5. Postmemorial Landscapes of Black Europe: Maud Sulter’s Alpine Photomontages
155 -
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Coda: Dancing Out History in Oxana Chi’s Durch Gärten Tanzen
186 -
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Notes
195 -
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Bibliography
227 -
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Index
241