Fr. 115.00

Saving Our Survivors - How American Jews Learned About the Holocaust

English · Hardback

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Description

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"How did American Jews come to learn about the Holocaust in the immediate aftermath of the war? What kinds of images and representations of Holocaust survivors first circulated in America, when most Jewish survivors were still stuck in European displaced persons camps? Drawing on communal records and previously unexamined cultural materials, Saving Our Survivors details the kinds of narratives that inspired American Jewish action in the wake of the Holocaust and argues that American Jewish communal life became a significant site of knowledge formation and dissemination about the Holocaust. Through organizational campaign materials, public speeches, appeal letters, brochures, posters, radio broadcasts, and short films, American Jews were compelled to act as heroes, saving Jewish lives and a Jewish future. Bringing postwar communal narratives into the longer history of Holocaust memory in America challenges our understanding of what Holocaust narratives look and sound like and invites us to consider the relationship between humanitarian aid and the narratives they employ to inspire action. By expanding our understanding of how stories about the Holocaust became part of an American discourse and considering multiple forms of Holocaust survivor accounts, Saving Our Survivors highlights the messy, diffuse, and contested nature of memory construction in the immediate aftermath of the Holocaust, as well as each new tragedy we confront"-- Provided by publisher.

List of contents










Acknowledgments

List of Abbreviations

Introduction: In a World Still Trembling

1. Heartstrings and Purse Strings: Fundraising and the Battle for Jewish Survival

2. Voicing Survivor Narratives: Postwar American Radio and Refugee Policy

3. Translating Postwar Europe: American Jewish Aid Workers as Secondary Witnesses

4. Sending Hope, Securing Peace: Volunteerism and Direct Aid in the Early Cold War

Conclusion: Toward a Longer History of American Holocaust Memory

Notes

Bibliography

Index


About the author










Rachel Deblinger is Director of the Modern Endangered Archives Program at the UCLA Library, a granting program that supports digitization, preservation, and access to at-risk cultural heritage materials from around the world. She is a member of the UCLA Holocaust Research Lab and continues to write and teach about digital archives and Holocaust memory in America.


Product details

Authors Rachel Deblinger
Publisher Indiana University Press
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 06.05.2025
 
EAN 9780253072696
ISBN 978-0-253-07269-6
No. of pages 224
Series The Modern Jewish Experience
Subject Humanities, art, music > History > 20th century (up to 1945)

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