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Holocaust vs. Popular Culture debates and deconstructs the binary responses to the representation of the Holocaust in European and non-European forms of Popular Culture.
List of contents
Holocaust versus Popular Culture: A Critical Introduction
Part One: Explicating Incompatibility 1. Popular Fiction, Literary Culture, and Artistic Truth: Thane Rosenbaum's
The Golems of Gotham and Twenty-First Century Holocaust Representation 2. Playing with the Unspeakable: The Holocaust and Videogames 3. Representation, Appropriation, and Popular Culture: Food and the Holocaust in Roman Polanski's
The Pianist 4. Nazi Linguistics and Mass Manipulation: An Analysis of Holocaust Primary Sources vis-à-vis Popular Culture
Part Two: Rethinking Universalization 5. Hitler's Popularity and the Trivialization of the Holocaust in India 6. Decoding Holocaust Narratives in Japanese Pop Culture: Through the Lens of
Anne no Nikki (1995) and
Persona Non Grata (2015) 7. Holocaust Representations through Popular Music: Ferramonti di Tarsia amidst Documentation, Commemoration and Mystification 8. Holocaust Museums: A Study of the Memory Policies of the USA and Poland 9. Trace and Trauma: Early Holocaust Remembrance in American and Canadian Popular Culture
Part Three: In Defence of Popular Culture 10. Mothers, Daughters and the Holocaust: A Study of Miriam Katin's Graphic Memoirs 11. Superheroes and the Holocaust in American Comics 12. Unearthing the Real in the Magical: Holocaust Memory and Magic Realism in Select Post-Holocaust Fictions 13. "Once-upon-a-very-real-time": Fairy Tales and Holocaust in Jane Yolen's Novels 14. Retelling the Holocaust with Children: A Pedagogic Study of Stephen King's
Apt Pupil and Jane Yolen's
The Devil's Arithmetic 15. "Is it safe?":
Marathon Man as Holocaust Drama 16. Child's Play, Fantasy and the Holocaust in
Jojo Rabbit and
The Boy in the Striped Pajamas 17.
Incorrectamundo?: Holocaust, Humor, and Anti-Hate Satire in the Works of Brooks and Waititi
About the author
Mahitosh Mandal is Assistant Professor of English at Presidency University, Kolkata, India.
Priyanka Das is Assistant Professor of English at Presidency University, Kolkata, India.
Summary
Holocaust vs. Popular Culture debates and deconstructs the binary responses to the representation of the Holocaust in European and non-European forms of Popular Culture.