Totalitarian Terror and Cultural Resistance
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Köp båda 2 för 891 krConcentrationary Memories rests on a provocative, carefully theorized consideration of the nature of the concentrationary universe, extending and reframing terms and ideas introduced by Hannah Arendt, on the one hand, and lesser known but significant figures in the French context such as David Rousset, Robert Antelme and Jean Cayrol. As its editors note, the first word of their title is unfamiliar in English, and this is perhaps a sign of the need for renewed and close attention to the phenomenon named by the French writer Rousset in 1946. The volume answers this need with care and a justly high level of critical vigilance. Without deflecting the importance attached to the term holocaust and to the issues and concerns of the racial genocides of the twentieth-century, the volume shifts attention towards the politics of deportation and internment, and pursues vital questions about the adequacy and nature of aesthetic responses, questions which bear upon the nature and concept of representation. A crucial emphasis of the volume is on the permanent presence of the concentrationary, since its inception; the volume thus includes powerful and essential analyses of the phenomenon across examples in literature, film and photography since the liberation of the camps, and in varying global contexts. The 11 essays in the volume are supported by an extensive introduction by the editors, a contribution in its own right to ongoing debates about politics and representation, and the politics of representation. Given this focus, the meticulous attention to the presentation of the substantial number of images which feature in the volume is unsurprising, and deserves special recognition. This is a unique project, insofar as it breaks new ground in the establishment of a new object of enquiry and research, and goes some way into the exploration of this territory. The volume makes a substantial contribution to research on the legacies of the political evils of the last century and will be essential reading for anyone concerned with it and by it. The book makes a clear case that this includes all of us. * Patrick ffrench, Kings College, University of London, UK *
Griselda Pollock is Professor of Social and Critical Histories of Art and Director of the Centre for Cultural Analysis, Theory and History at the University of Leeds, UK. She is Editor, with Anthony Bryant, of "Digital and Other Virtualities: Renegotiating the Image" and of "Visual Politics of Psychoanalysis: Art and the Image in Post-Traumatic Cultures" (both I.B. Tauris) and is Series Editor of Tauris' "New Encounters" Series. Max Silverman is Professor of Modern French Studies at the University of Leeds. His recent publications include "Palimpsestic Memory: the Holocaust and Colonialism in French and Francophone Fiction and Film" (Berghahn, 2013). Griselda Pollock and Max Silverman are joint authors of "Concentrationary Cinema: Aesthetics as Political Resistance in Alain Resnais's 'Night and Fog', " which won the Kraszna-Krausz Award for Best Book on the Moving Image, 2011.
Concentrationary Memories Series Preface Griselda Pollock & Max Silverman Table of Contents List of Illustrations Acknowledgements Introduction The Politics of Memory: From Concentrationary Memory to Concentrationary Memories Griselda Pollock & Max Silverman: Part 1: Theorising the Political Space and Beyond Chapter 1 The Memory of Politics: Hannah Arendt, Carl Schmitt and the Possibility of Encounter John Wolfe Ackerman Part 2: Mediations of Memory Chapter 2 Migration and Motif: the (Parapractic) Memories of an Image Thomas Elsaesser Chapter 3 The Two Stages of the Eichmann Trial Sylvie Lindeperg & Annette Wieviorka Chapter 4 Brushing the Film Against the Grain: Locating Jean Cayrols Lazarean Figure in Alain Resnaiss Muriel ou le temps dun retour Matthew John Part 3: Camp Visions Chapter 5 Symbol Re-formation: Concentrationary Memory in Charlotte Delbos Auschwitz and After Nicholas Chare Chapter 6 A New Visual Structure for the Unthinkable: The Surrealist Aesthetic and the Concentrationary Sublime in Lee Millers Photographs of Buchenwald and Dachau Isabelle de le Court Chapter 7 Muselmann: a distilled image of the Lager? Glenn Sujo Chapter 8 Nameless before the Concentrationary Void: Charlotte Salomons Leben? oder Theater? 194142 after Gurs Griselda Pollock Part 4: Beyond the Limits Chapter 9 Animated Memory: Ari Folmans Waltz with Bashir Claire Launchbury Chapter 10 Isnt this where? Projections on Pink Floyd The Wall: Tracing the Concentrationary Image Benjamin Hannavy Cousen Chapter 11 Memory Work in Argentina 1976-2006 Laura Malosetti Costa Notes on Contributors Bibliography Index