Reading the Holocaust

Reading the Holocaust

by Inga Clendinnen
Reading the Holocaust

Reading the Holocaust

by Inga Clendinnen

eBook

$20.49  $26.95 Save 24% Current price is $20.49, Original price is $26.95. You Save 24%.

Available on Compatible NOOK Devices and the free NOOK Apps.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers

LEND ME® See Details

Overview

Winner of the New South Wales Premier's History Award and one of the New York Times' ten best books of 1999.

In this searching and eloquent book, Inga Clendinnen explores the experience of the Holocaust from both the victims' and the perpetrators' points of view. She discusses the remarkable survivor testimonies of writers such as Primo Levi and Charlotte Delbo, the vexed issue of resistance in the camps, and strategies for understanding the motivations of Nazis at all levels.

Clendinnen focuses an anthropologist's precise gaze on the actions of the murderers in the police battalions and among the SS in the camps. And she considers how the Holocaust has been portrayed in poetry, fiction and film. Searching and eloquent, Reading the Holocaust is an uncompromising attempt to extract the comprehensible-the recognisably human-from the unthinkable.

'Inga Clendinnen claims for history the same power as poetry or fiction to enter the silences and make them speak.' David Malouf


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781921776489
Publisher: The Text Publishing Company
Publication date: 05/16/2010
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 264
Sales rank: 868,892
File size: 673 KB

About the Author

Inga Clendinnen was born in Geelong in 1934. Her early books and scholarly articles on the Aztecs and Maya of Mexico earned her a reputation as one of the world’s finest historians. Reading the Holocaust, Tiger’s Eye and Dancing with Strangers have been critically acclaimed and won a number of local and international awards.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgmentsix
1Beginnings1
2Impediments6
3Witnessing28
4Resisting56
5Inside the Grey Zone: The Auschwitz Sonderkommando62
6Leaders79
7The Men in the Green Tunics: The Order Police in Poland114
8The Auschwitz SS134
9Representing the Holocaust163
Notes185
Selected Bibliography213
Index225

What People are Saying About This

Clifford Geertz

As the Holocaust moves from living memory into the archival past, the responsibility for keeping its reality actual to our minds and its meaning uncorrupted passes from the hands of the chronicler and the memorialist into those of the historian. For such a telling, Inga Clendinnen, whose earlier works on the Spanish conquest of the Mayans and human sacrifice among the Aztecs have demonstrated her ability to investigate the extremities of cruelty without either exploiting their drama or explaining them away, is superbly equipped. Beautifully written and exactly felt, Reading the Holocaust is a major contribution to collective remembering and to the register of what happens.
— Author of After the Fact: Two Countries, Four Decades, One Anthropologist

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews