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Literary Criticism - General & Miscellaneous, Holocaust - General & Miscellaneous, Jewish Historiography, German History - 1933 - 1945 (The Third Reich), Holocaust - Study & Teaching
Admitting the Holocaust: Collected Essays by Lawrence L. Langer — book cover

Admitting the Holocaust: Collected Essays

by Lawrence L. Langer
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Overview

In the face of the Holocaust, writes Lawrence L. Langer, our age clings to the stable relics of faded eras, as if ideas like natural innocence, innate dignity, the inviolable spirit, and the triumph of art over reality were immured in some kind of immortal shrine, immune to the ravages of history and time. But these ideas have been ravaged, and in Admitting the Holocaust. Langer presents a series of essays that represent his effort, over nearly a decade, to wrestle with this rupture in human values—and to see the Holocaust as it really was. His vision is necessarily dark, but he does not see the Holocaust as a warrant for futility, or as a witness to the death of hope. It is a summons to reconsider our values and rethink what it means to be a human being.
These penetrating and often gripping essays cover a wide range of issues, from the Holocaust's relation to time and memory, to its portrayal in literature, to its use and abuse by culture, to its role in reshaping our sense of history's legacy. In many, Langer examines the ways in which accounts of the Holocaust—in history, literature, film, and theology—have extended, and sometimes limited, our insight into an event that is often said to defy understanding itself. He singles out Cynthia Ozick as one of the few American writers who can meet the challenge of imagining mass murder without flinching and who can distinguish between myth and truth. On the other hand, he finds Bernard Malamud's literary treatment of the Holocaust never entirely successful (it seems to have been a threat to Malamud's vision of man's basic dignity) and he argues that William Styron's portrayal of the commandant of Auschwitz in Sophie's Choice pushed Nazi violence to the periphery of the novel, where it disturbed neither the author nor his readers. He is especially acute in his discussion of the language used to describe the Holocaust, arguing that much of it is used to console rather than to confront. He notes that when we speak of the survivor instead of the victim, of martyrdom instead of murder, regard being gassed as dying with dignity, or evoke the redemptive rather than grevious power of memory, we draw on an arsenal of words that tends to build verbal fences between what we are mentally willing—or able—to face and the harrowing reality of the camps and ghettos.
A respected Holocaust scholar and author of Holocaust Testimonies: The Ruins of Memory, winner of the 1991 National Book Critics Circle Award for criticism, Langer offers a view of this catastrophe that is candid and disturbing, and yet hopeful in its belief that the testimony of witnesses—in diaries, journals, memoirs, and on videotape—and the unflinching imagination of literary artists can still offer us access to one of the darkest episodes in the twentieth century.

These penetrating and often gripping essays cover a wide range of issues, from the Holocaust's relation to time and memory to its portrayal in literature to its use and abuse by culture to its role in reshaping our sense of history's legacy. Includes writings by Cynthia Ozick, Bernard Malamud, and William Styron.

About the Author, Lawrence L. Langer

About the Author:
Lawrence L. Langer is Professor of English at Simmons College in Boston. The winner of a National Book Critics Circle Award for Holocaust Testimonies, he has also written Versions of Survival, The Age of Atrocity, and The Holocaust and the Literary Imagination.

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Editorials

Aaron Cohen

In a statement that boldly indicates his approach to the Holocaust, Langer says, "Despite its candid representation of the ordeal of Jews during World War II, even a blunt film like "Schindler's List" decides to leave us with memories of a healing wound rather than a throbbing scar." According to Langer, too many historical and cultural representations of the Nazis' murders try, by portraying the Jewish victims as dignified martyrs, to introduce the notion of spiritual redemption into accounts of atrocities that need to be confronted without moral oversimplification. In his assessments, Langer analyzes many of the novels about the death camps, tellingly criticizing William Styron and Bernard Malamud and praising Cynthia Ozick as well as Polish author Tadeusz Borowski for their depictions of the era. Describing historical studies of the Holocaust, Langer objects to the use of "abstract formulas like `the murder of 6 million'" and says accounts of the destruction of European Jewry should be told in graphic detail to present and future generations. A horribly bleak, undeniably important book.

Book Details

Published
January 1, 1996
Publisher
Oxford University Press
ISBN
9780198025399

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