2009
DOI: 10.7771/1481-4374.1422
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Introduction to and Bibliography of Central European Women's Holocaust Life Writing in English

Abstract: Part of the Comparative Literature Commons, and the Critical and Cultural Studies Commons Dedicated to the dissemination of scholarly and professional information, Purdue University Press selects, develops, and distributes quality resources in several key subject areas for which its parent university is famous, including business, technology, health, veterinary medicine, and other selected disciplines in the humanities and sciences. CLCWeb: Comparative Literature and Culture, the peer-reviewed, full-text, and … Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…Most such works have been written by those of the assimilated middle classes, with memoirs by both the poor and the very religious, who perished in far higher numbers. (see Vasvári 2009, as well as earlier reviews of memoirs in this journal by Blaikie 2009). The memoirs under review here are not about the fate of the persecuted masses but about how the rich and the super-rich Hungarian Jews in Budapest fared during the 1930s, World War II and the Holocaust, and beyond.…”
mentioning
confidence: 82%
“…Most such works have been written by those of the assimilated middle classes, with memoirs by both the poor and the very religious, who perished in far higher numbers. (see Vasvári 2009, as well as earlier reviews of memoirs in this journal by Blaikie 2009). The memoirs under review here are not about the fate of the persecuted masses but about how the rich and the super-rich Hungarian Jews in Budapest fared during the 1930s, World War II and the Holocaust, and beyond.…”
mentioning
confidence: 82%
“…As the title of this paper indicates and as I have also discussed in earlier studies, my primary focus is on women's Holocaust testimonies within a gendered frame of analysis, specifically to examine the still relatively neglected role of gender differences generally in wartime, and specifically the important role of women's life writing in the history of the Holocaust, where, in fact, women have written considerably more than have men (Vasvári 2006(Vasvári , 2009a. While the best-known scholars of the Holocaust tend to focus more on the macro level, it has been women scholars, usually feminists, who analyze the Holocaust in terms of women, gender, children, and family life.…”
Section: Divided Hungarian Social Memory: 1944-2014mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…But while Anne Frank's diary, written in hiding, is less than twenty percent about the plight of the Jews, and much more about the unfolding of an adolescent girl's maturation, Éva Heyman's diary presents a much more painful and tragic perspective. Éva lived in Nagyvárad/Oradea/Grossvardein and was first confined there in the ghetto, which was second in 4 Since my focus here is on the events of 1944 in Hungary, I will not discuss the diary of Anikó Szenes (Hannah Senesh) (1921, whose Hungarian diary up to her departure from Hungary for Palestine in 1939 testifies to a surprisingly normal middle class Jewish world that continued to exist in Hungary, while the rest of Europe's Jewry was being decimated (Senesh 2004, Vasvári 2006). Nor will I discuss the Hungarian-language diary of Zimra Harsányi (later known as Ana Novac), born, like Éva Heyman, in Nagyvárad, Transylvania in 1929, who began to write her diary in Auschwitz about her camp experiences and briefly about her postwar return to Transylvania (Vasvári 2009b: 5).…”
Section: Hungarian Women's Diaries and Immediate Memoirs Of 1944mentioning
confidence: 99%
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