Meditations of a Holocaust Traveler
Format:Paperback
Publisher:State University of New York Press
Published:23rd Aug '95
Should be back in stock very soon
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Travels across time, place, and subject to ponder the meaning of the Holocaust for contemporary cultures.
Markle grasps at the Holocaust, not only from the writings of survivors and academic specialists, but also from his experience as a "tourist" of the Holocaust. He challenges the way we typically think about the Holocaust: them versus us; then versus now; there versus here. He travels across time, place, and subject to ponder the meaning of the Holocaust for contemporary cultures.
"Markle selects and defines three basic issues of Holocaust studies and demonstrates how sociological and social-psychological scholarship illuminates these issues. The reader grasps the connection between these issues because of Markle's skillful transitions. His intermixing of his own personal experiences in approaching the Holocaust with the academic issues being debated makes the book unintimidating to the general reader who might otherwise shy from the topic (Holocaust) as well as the discipline (sociology)." — Christopher R. Browning, Pacific Lutheran University
"In a field dominated by positivist historians, Markle's constructivist approach is a breath of fresh air. His dialogue with Arendt, Bauman, Rubenstein, Milgram, et al. probes and clarifies the value, in its own right, of struggling with and against history as a scholar and a Jew in the post-Holocaust era. This is a courageous and honest work." — R. Ruth Linden, Stanford University
ISBN: 9780791426449
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 290g
200 pages