Literaturnachweis - Detailanzeige
Sonst. Personen | Misselwitz, Charlotte (Hrsg.); Siebeck, Cornelia (Hrsg.) |
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Titel | Dissonant memories - fragmented present. Exchanging young discourses between Israel and Germany. Gefälligkeitsübersetzung: Dissonante Erinnerungen - fragmentierte Gegenwart: Jugendliche Diskurse zwischen Israel und Deutschland. |
Quelle | Bielefeld: transcript Verl. (2009), 232 S. |
Reihe | Culture and Social Practice |
Zusatzinformation | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Sprache | englisch |
Dokumenttyp | gedruckt; Monographie |
ISBN | 978-3-8376-1273-8 |
Schlagwörter | Kollektives Gedächtnis; Erinnerung; Interkulturelle Kommunikation; Drittes Reich; Judenverfolgung; Genozid; Nationalsozialismus; Diskurs; Jugendlicher; Asien; Deutschland; Israel; Naher Osten |
Abstract | "How do young Israelis and Germans communicate about National Socialism and the Holocaust? In this collection of essays, authors from both societies elaborate on the past, their present and, respectively, their identity. They ponder various switches of track through German-Israeli exchange as well as social and political realities in both countries. By highlighting marginalised memories such as Palestinian and migrant ones, they challenge monolithic national memory discourses. Altogether, a trans-national memory discourse emerges - albeit a dissonant and highly subjective one, truthfully reflecting some of the fragmentations that actually exist in both societies." (author's abstract). List of Content: Introduction (11-13); Charlotte Misselwitz and Cornelia Siebeck: Exchanging The "Third Generation": Sami Khatib: "Talking 'bout My (Third) Generation" (17-23); Phil C. Langer: Why Do I Do What I Do. On Interdependencies of Biographical Experiences and Academic Work in the Third Generation (25-33); Roland Imhoff: Holocaust at the Table. Experiences from seven years of "German-Israeli Exchange" (35-43); Martin Schellenberg: On "Mourning" and "Friendship" in German-Israeli Youth Encounters. The Need to Address the Sensitive Issues (45-54); Nirit Bialer and Tanja Kersting: Different Approaches to Collective Identity and Mourning: Experiences from the Exchange Project "Beyond Memory" (55-63); Zohar Milchgrub and Yoav Sapir: Israelis in Berlin. Between History and Every Day Life (65-72); Revisiting National Memory Discourses: Cornelia Siebeck: Humanize the Discourse! Non-Academic Reflections of a Memory Researcher (75-84); Danna Bader: When "History" turns from a Fact into a Narrative. Different Historical Perspectives in Israeli-Palestinian Encounters (85-92); Hagit Keysar: Addressing the Ruins (A Postcard) (93-102); Alexander Brungs and David König: Wanderings (103-110); Sayed Kashua: "The Kashuas". A Palestinian Family Memory in Israel (111-115); Paul Grasse: No more Fascism - No more War! East German Reflections on Political Remembrance in Unified Germany (117- 125); Galia Aviani: A Historical Narrative as the Basis for Current Political Consciousness: The Mizrachi Alternative (127-132); Marc Bellinghausen: Colonialism and Holocaust Remembrance. Disguising the Continuity of European History (133-141); Travelogues: Ronen Eidelman: Plan B for Zionism "Medinat Weimar" (145-152); Massimo Perinelli: Meet the Migrants. A Migrant Policy of Remembrance as Political Intervention (153-161); Tomer Gardi: Tonguerilla (163-168); Moritz Reininghaus: Between Individual Origin and Alien Territory: On being a non-Jew working for a Jewish newspaper (169-176); Yael Berda: The Bureaucracy of the Occupation: A Love Letter to Hannah Arendt (177-183); Claudia Liebelt: On Filipina Caregivers and the Limits of Israeli Belonging, or: Sentimental Zionism and the Solace of Southern Tel Aviv (185-193); Uri Ellis: Radical Pedagogy under the Migration Regime (195-202); Elad Orian: From Both Sides, Now (203-208); Elazar Elhanan: A Yid iz in Goles. "For three Transgressions of Israel, yeah, for four, I will not reverse it" (209-216); Daniel Kahn: Gegenwartsbewältigung. Getting Drunk on the Past in Berlin and Sobering up in Yiddishland (217-225); Outlook: Charlotte Misselwitz: Easy-going Uneasiness (229-232). |
Erfasst von | GESIS - Leibniz-Institut für Sozialwissenschaften, Mannheim |
Update | 2011/1 |