The Holocaust and Colonialism in French and Francophone Fiction and Film
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Köp båda 2 för 783 krThe central premise of this brilliant study that the poetics of palimpsestic memory can be the basis of a new politics of memory is convincingly articulated and argued through sophisticated and detailed analysis of a range of theories of cultural memory, as well as through close readings of a range of literary and cinematic texts a genuinely groundbreaking study that paves the way for further exploration of the poetics and politics of (palimpsestic) memory. French Studies Silverman's writing is as dynamic as the memory process he describes I would recommend Palimpsestic Memory to quite a large audience: to those interested in Holocaust and postcolonial studies, obviously, but also to those interested in literature or history in general. Contemporary French Cinema All in all, this [extremely erudite book] is an important contribution to the study of memorys multidirectionality, its capacity through its artistic representations to juxtapose the memories of traumatic pasts in fruitful and imaginative ways. For those skeptical of this approach to memory, Palimpsestic Memory is largely persuasive. H-France Review a very impressive contribution to discussions of memory in relation to the Holocaust and colonialism in French and Francophone contexts. It is original, erudite, theoretically highly sophisticated and likely to be of immense value in developing debates in the field. It is also very well-written: eloquent and subtle in its expression of and contribution to the theoretical complexities of memory studies. Ursula Tidd, University of Manchester In my view this book is an outstanding piece of academic scholarship. It is rich, dense and draws on a wealth of literary and filmic texts and theory I think it has ground-breaking potential. Enda McCaffrey, Nottingham Trent University In this timely book, Max Silverman deepens our understanding of the transcultural and transnational dynamics of memory. Lucidly written, boldly argued, and wide-ranging in its cultural and theoretical references, Palimpsestic Memory challenges sectarian, competitive approaches to the past. It derives a critical politics of remembrance from an openness to memorys multiple layerings and poetic haunting - its palimpsestic nature. Inspired by early postwar theorists of extreme violence such as Arendt, Csaire, Fanon, and Rousset, Silverman reveals the interconnected histories of genocide and colonialism that have been there all along, but are too frequently ignored or repressed. Through nuanced readings of French-language literary, cinematic, and theoretical texts - from Assia Djebar and Georges Perecto Alain Resnais and Jean-Luc Godard, by way of Jacques Derrida and Hlne Cixous - he offers a necessary new understanding of both the work of memory and the ethics of the human in a post-Holocaust, postcolonial world. Michael Rothberg, University of Illinois; author of >Multidirectional Memory: Remembering the Holocaust in the Age of Decolonization Max Silvermans Palimpsestic Memory is a significant contribution to the renewal of memory studies over the past decade. Silverman argues for a model of memory that is non-linear and non-exclusive, not bound to the cultural narrative of a single group or nation but pointing simultaneously to diverse histories. This model suggests coexistence and mutual reinforcement of memories of specific events, rather than competition among groups vying for uniqueness. Silverman aims for a paradigm shift in building bridges between post-colonial studies and Holocaust studies. Susan Rubin Suleiman, Harvard University; author of Crises of Memory and the Second World War.
Max Silverman is Professor of Modern French Studies at the University of Leeds. He has written on cultural memory, representations of the Holocaust, post-colonial theory and cultures, and immigration, race and nation in France. His recent publications include Concentrationary Cinema: Aesthetics as Political Resistance in Alain Resnaiss Night and Fog, co-edited with Griselda Pollock (Berghahn Books, 2011).
Introduction: Staging Memory as Palimpsest Chapter 1. The Politics and Poetics of Memory 1.1 The Concentrationary Universe and Total Domination 1.2 The Politics of Memory: Between the Holocaust and Colonialism 1.3 The Poetics of Memory 1.4 Interconnecting Memories Chapter 2. Concentrationary Memory 2.1 Fearful Imagination 2.2 Alain Resnaiss Nuit et brouillard 2.3 Mmoire-monde Chapter 3. Anti-colonialism Revisited 3.1 Frantz Fanon: Peau noire masques blancs 3.2 Mohammed Dib: Qui se souvient de la mer 3.3 Assia Djebar: Femmes dAlger dans leur appartement Chapter 4. Colonial Hauntings of the Holocaust Imaginary 4.1 Charlotte Delbo: Auschwitz et aprs 4.2 Georges Perec: W ou le souvenir denfance 4.3 Patrick Modiano: Dora Bruder Chapter 5. The Memory of the Image 5.1 Jean-Luc Godard:Histoire(s) du cinma 5.2 Michael Haneke: Cach 5.3 Un montage qui ne spare rien Chapter 6. Memory Traces 6.1 Hlne Cixouss Pieds nus and Jacques Derridas Le Monolinguisme de lautre, ou le prothse de lorigine 6.2 Patrick Chamoiseau and Rodolphe Hammadi: Guyane: Traces-mmoires du bagne Chapter 7. Cosmopolitical Memory Bibliography Index