Join Books.org — it's free

Poland - History, Jewish History - Eastern Europe, European Theater - World War II - Resistance, Holocaust - General & Miscellaneous, European Jews - Biography
Constructing a collective memory of the Holocaust by Ronald J. Berger β€” book cover

Constructing a collective memory of the Holocaust

by Ronald J. Berger
Write a review
Log in to track your reading progress.

Overview

Michael Berger, the author's father, was interned at an SS military camp at Moderowka, a concentration camp at Szebnie, and the Auschwitz camps at Birkenau and Buna-Monowitz. Shlomo Berger, the author's uncle, escaped the camps passing as a Christian with a Polish construction crew and as a member of the Polish Partisans and the Soviet Army. This compelling story is one of success through luck, daring, and skill in the face of tremendous adversity. Ronald Berger uses the life history method to bring the brothers' experiences to life and to explore a central problem of general social theory: the relationship between human agency and social structure. His approach offers a distinctly sociological alternative to a body of literature that has been dominated by psychological theorizing and that has often characterized Jews in overly negative or heroic terms. Berger addresses the influences of prewar conditions as a factor in wartime adjustment and offers some observations on memories of suffering and the implications for contemporary victimization politics and postmodern social thought. This book will be an important supplement for college and university courses on Holocaust and genocide studies, Jewish studies, race and ethnic relations, historical sociology, and social problems.

Reviews

There are no reviews yet. Log in to write one.

Editorials

Booknews

Berger uses his father's and uncle's life histories as the basis for this cross-generational study combining personal narrative and sociological analysis. While Michael Berger was interned at SS camps in Poland, his brother Shlomo escaped the camps by passing as a Christian with a Polish construction crew and as a member of the Polish Partisans and the Soviet Army. The brothers' stories of success through luck, daring, and skill help explore a central problem of social theory: the relationship between human agency and social structure. Berger addresses the influences of prewar conditions on wartime adjustment and offers observations on memories of suffering and the implications for contemporary victimization politics and postmodern social thought. Portions appeared first in The Sociology Quarterly (v.36, no.1). Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

Book Details

Published
September 1, 1995
Publisher
Niwot, Colo. : University Press of Colorado, c1995.
Pages
149
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780870813689

More by Ronald J. Berger

Similar books