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Numbered Days
Alexandra Garbarini

Numbered Days

Diaries and the Holocaust

Yale University Press (Oct 18, 2006)
9780300112528
| Hardcover
288 pages | 160 x 234 mm | English
$ 50.00 | Value: $ 50.00
Dewey 940.5318072
LC Classification D804.348 .G37 2006
LC Control No. 2006003339

Subject

  • Diaries
  • Diaries - History And Criticism
  • Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) - Historiography
  • Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) - History And Criticism
  • Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945), In Literature

Plot

As the Nazis swept across Europe during World War II, Jewish victims wrote diaries in which they grappled with the terror unfolding around them. Some wrote simply to process the contradictory bits of news they received; some wrote so that their children, already safe in another country, might one day understand what had happened to their parents; and some wrote to furnish unknown readers in the outside world with evidence against the Nazi regime.Were these diarists resisters, or did the process of writing make the ravages of the Holocaust even more difficult to bear? Drawing on an astonishing array of unpublished and published diaries from all over German-occupied Europe, historian Alexandra Garbarini explores the multiple roles that diary writing played in the lives of these ordinary women and men. A story of hope and hopelessness, Numbered Days offers a powerful examination of the complex interplay of writing and mourning. And in these heartbreaking diaries, we see the first glimpses of a question that would haunt the twentieth century: Can such unimaginable horror be represented at all?