Description
Devoted to the ways in which Holocaust literature and Gulag literature provide contexts for each other, Leona Toker's book shows how the prominent features of one shed light on the veiled features and methods of the other. Toker views these narratives and texts against the background of historical information about the Soviet and the Nazi regimes of repression. Writers at the center of this work include Varlam Shalamov, Primo Levi, Elie Wiesel, and Ka-Tzetnik, and others, including Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, Evgeniya Ginzburg, and Jorge Semprun, illuminate the discussion. Toker's twofold analysis concentrates on the narrative qualities of the works as well as on the ways in which each text documents the writer's experience and in which fictionalized narrative can double as historical testimony. References to events might have become obscure owing to the passage of time and the cultural diversity of readers; the book explains them and shows how they form new meaning in the text. Toker is well-known as a skillful interpreter of Gulag literature, and this text presents new thinking about how Gulag literature and Holocaust literature enable a better understanding about testimony in the face of evil.
About the Author
Leona Toker is Professor of English at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. She is author of Towards the Ethics of Form in Fiction: Narratives of Cultural Remission and Return from the Archipelago: Narratives of Gulag Survivors.
Reviews
This is a welcome new approach to camp testimony, and many such comparative accounts will surely follow.
* Times Higher Education *For many scholars already ensconced in the field of camp literature, Gulag Literature and the Literature of Nazi Camps may serve as a platform from which to reconsider stale assumptions and definitions. For a great many future scholars, it will be a launching pad.
-- Benjamin Paloff * Antisemitism Studies *Toker writes with erudition, nuance, and complexity that few other scholars could match on this topic.
-- Katherine R. Jolluck * The Russian Review *Toker expands our understanding of the atrocities committed during the Holocaust and Soviet Gulag with this expansive and engaging study.
-- Julie Draskoczy Zigoris * Slavic Review *Book Information
ISBN 9780253043535
Author Leona Toker
Format Paperback
Page Count 298
Imprint Indiana University Press
Publisher Indiana University Press