Undergraduate Honors Thesis

 

Ka-Tzetnik 135633: Historical Depersonalization and the Celebrity Witness 公开 Deposited

https://test-scholar.colorado.edu/concern/undergraduate_honors_theses/2801pg887
Abstract
  • “Ka-Tzetnik 135633: Historical Depersonalization and the Celebrity Witnessm” will concern early representations of the Holocaust written by Yehiel De-Nur, who wrote under the name Ka-Tzetnik 135633, which loosely translates to Concentration Camp Inmate 135633. This author, with his first book appearing in 1946, produced the sextet Salamanda: A Chronicle of a Jewish Family in the Twentieth Century. The books concern the author’s own experience of the Holocaust via a fictionalized persona, as well as the experiences that he believes his siblings endured after they were separated in the ghettoes. My project will use these highly controversial books as a launching point to breech subjects such as sexual violence during the Holocaust, survivor’s guilt, the narration of trauma, and the reception of De-Nur’s books in Israel. This essay addresses four central questions surrounding De-Nur’s work: the split of identity between the pre- and post-incarcerated self, localized at the site of the author’s imposed and chosen names; the way his books broke the silence among the children of survivors and how that impacted their understanding of the historical reality of the Holocaust; how his books have controversially represented the idea of Jewish complicity in the suffering of their fellows; in addition to the way his books have been politicized in modern Israel to support a burgeoning nationalist identity. This project attempts to look at these disparate angles in relation to each other, as well as place them in context with many canonical Holocaust works and critical theory to demonstrate why the books are controversial. Considering all of these angles, the project will ultimately argue for the viability of the human imagination as an instrument of mourning, accessing the past, and, preserving the individual against the genocidal efforts of the past. By studying Ka-Tzetnik (De-Nur) and the many questions his works raise, the essay demonstrates the tenuous line between testimony and fiction, and ultimately posits the hybrid forms of imaginative testimonies as another kind of historical knowledge.The exclusion of the personal, the subjective, from national emplotments of history risk that such widespread violence could occur again, in the sense that the reduction of the personal continues the way that violence has been justified by dehumanizing others. By acknowledging the individual traumas of the past, along with their philosophic implications, the human race acknowledges a global, nationless responsibility that everyone holds to ensure that genocide is never repeated.
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  • 2015-01-01
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最新修改
  • 2019-12-02
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