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Rescue and Remembrance: Imagining the German Collective After Nazism

Contributor(s): Kabalek, Kobi (Author)

ISBN: 9780299350505

Publisher: University of Wisconsin Press

Hardcover
$79.95
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Pub Date: January 7, 2025

Dewey: 940.53180943

LCCN: 2024016403

Lexile Code: 0000

Features: Bibliography, Illustrated, Index, Price on Product

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 0.80" H x 9.10" L x 6.00" W ( 1.10 lbs) 272 pages

Series: George L. Mosse the History of European Culture, Sexuality, and Ideas

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description: In Rescue and Remembrance, Kobi Kabalek examines how the rescue of Jews during the Holocaust has been understood and represented in Germany from the Nazi period to the present. In many regions outside Germany, a small number of known Holocaust rescuers are often held up as exemplars of broad pro-Jewish sentiment among that country's population during World War II, thereby projecting an image of national moral virtue. Within Germany, by contrast, rescuers are often presented in both scholarship and public commemoration as a small minority; their examples condemn the majority by showing what Germans could have done but did not do.

Kabalek argues that such simplistic depictions of the majority versus minority obscure the complex motivations and situations that led people in Nazi Germany to help persecuted Jews. Against the view that the rescuers were "forgotten" after the war, he shows that portrayals and interpretations of helping Jews appeared in various media and social discourses in East, West, and unified Germany and were used to actively debate questions of collective morality. Rescue and Remembrance analyzes the varied and changing depictions of rescue in the distinct German politics from the Nazi period, examining how the very notions of "majority" and "collective" were articulated and reformulated.

Brief description: Kobi Kabalek is an assistant professor of Holocaust studies and visual studies in the Germanic and Slavic languages and literatures and Jewish studies departments at the Pennsylvania State University.

Review Quotes:

"The author's primary and secondary sources are deep and diverse, his endnotes copious and detailed. Kabalek's impressive foray into the Holocaust and memory should appeal to both Holocaust scholars and students of post-1945 Germany."

-- "Choice Reviews"

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