Reading Holocaust fiction at the end of the twentieth century: 'Jakob the liar' and 'Life is beautiful'
TitelReading Holocaust fiction at the end of the twentieth century: 'Jakob the liar' and 'Life is beautiful'
Verfasser
Call number940.5318072/0062
Inventarnummer08949i
ErscheinungsortNewark, Delaware, United States
Erscheinungsjahr
2014
Seitenpp161-174
MaterialArtikel
ISBN9780611490565
NotesArticle from the book 'National responses to the Holocaust: national identity and public memory' pp 161-174
Beschreibung
This essay explores the way that two twentieth century movie texts - 'Jakob the liar' and 'Life is beautiful' - have created narratives in which redemption and hope are understood to be the natural consequences of trauma, whereas earlier texts, such as East German Jurek Becker's novel 'Jakob the liar', stubbornly remind the reader time and again, that mass murder does not inspire optimism and hope in the survivors, In the novel there is also no redemptive hope for the dead.