Kathryn L. Brackney is an assistant professor of history at Leiden University. Her research explores how aesthetic norms have developed for remembering the Holocaust and other crimes against humanity.
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Description
List of Illustrations Acknowledgments Introduction Chapter 1. Beyond Bearing Witness: Early Art and Literature of Holocaust Remembrance Chapter 2. Remembering "Planet Auschwitz" during the Cold War Chapter 3. Testimony and Transformation Chapter 4. Claude Lanzmann's Shoah: Historicizing the Limits of Representation Chapter 5. The Holocaust in Natural History Conclusion. New Shapes of Holocaust Memory in the Anthropocene Notes Index
"An erudite, beautifully written book that journeys from the Yiddish poetry of Avrom Sutzkever to Donna Haraway's manifesto on the 'Chthulucene.' Brackney shows how artists have not always deemed the Holocaust 'unrepresentable.' Rather, through surrealist articulations including science fiction and abstraction, representations of the Shoah have been unapologetically produced from the very beginning."-Sheila Jelen, author of Salvage Poetics: Post-Holocaust American Jewish Folk Ethnographies