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Sounds of Defiance: The Holocaust, Multilingualism, and the Problem of English »

Book cover image of Sounds of Defiance: The Holocaust, Multilingualism, and the Problem of English by Alan Rosen

Authors: Alan Rosen
ISBN-13: 9780803239623, ISBN-10: 0803239629
Format: Hardcover
Publisher: University of Nebraska Press
Date Published: September 2005
Edition: (Non-applicable)

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Author Biography: Alan Rosen

Alan Rosen is a 2004–2005 fellow at the Center for Advanced Judaic Studies at the University of Pennsylvania and the 2005 Sosland Fellow at the Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. He has published books and articles on Holocaust writing and is currently working on a book dealing with David Boder and Holocaust testimony.

Book Synopsis

Language has frequently been at the center of discussions about Holocaust writing. Yet English, a primary language of neither the persecutors nor the victims, has generally been viewed as marginal to the events of the Holocaust. Alan Rosen argues that this marginal status profoundly affects writing on the Holocaust in English and fundamentally shapes our understanding of the events. Sounds of Defiance chronicles the evolving status of English in writing about the Holocaust, from the period of the Second World War to the 1990s.

 

Each chapter highlights a representative work from a different genre—psychology, sociology, memoir, tales, fiction, and film—and examines the special position of English with regard to the Holocaust, supported by references to the role of other languages, including Hebrew, Yiddish, and German. This original approach provides a new perspective on such standard works as Eichmann in Jerusalem, The Shawl, and Maus, while drawing attention to others largely unknown. Rosen also links this analysis of English writing to developments in the postwar period: the escalating production of writing on the Holocaust in English; the increasing prestige of English as a global language; and paradoxically, within the contexts of neocolonial and multilingual studies, the increasingly uncertain position of English.

Shofar: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Jewish Studies

"Alan Rosen . . . engages the ideas of such thinkers as Dorothy Bilik, Shoshana Felman, Sander Gilman, Alan Mintz, and Hana Wirth-Nesher. Like many of these critics, he approaches the subject of Holocaust history, fiction, and film with an appreciation of spoken and written Polish, Yiddish, Hebrew, and German as well as English languages and traditions."

Table of Contents

Introduction : everything is all right, or the problem of English writing on the Holocaust1
1950 : English in the aftermath
1Evidence of trauma : English as perplexity in David Boder's Topical autobiographies21
2An entirely different culture : English as translation in John Hersey's The wall34
3What does he speak? : English as mastery in Ruth Chatterton's Homeward borne50
1960 : law's languages, Eichmann, and after
4Please speak English : babbling in Philip Roth's "Eli, the fanatic"65
5From law to outlaw : borrowed English in Edward Wallant's The pawnbroker78
6Law's languages : Hannah Arendt's mother and other tongues94
7Say "good boy" : legitimizing English in Sidney Lumet's The pawnbroker112
8Cracking her teeth : broken English in Cynthia Ozick's fiction and essays124
9The language of dollars : English as intruder in Yaffa Eliach's Hasidic tales of the Holocaust139
10The language of survival : English as metaphor in Art Spiegelman's Maus157
11Eaten away by silence : English as elegy in Anne Michaels's Fugitive pieces175
Conclusion : in the thick of the fray, or English as the third tongue187

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