A Holocaust Controversy A Holocaust Controversy
The Tauber Institute Series for the Study of European Jewry

A Holocaust Controversy

The Treblinka Affair in Postwar France

    • $39.99
    • $39.99

Publisher Description

How has the world come to focus on the Holocaust and why has it invariably done so in the heat of controversy, scandal, and polemics about the past? These questions are at the heart of this unique investigation of the Treblinka affair that occurred in France in 1966 when Jean-Francois Steiner, a young Jewish journalist, published Treblinka: The Revolt of an Extermination Camp. A cross between a history and a novel, Steiner’s book narrated the 1943 revolt at one of the major Nazi death camps. Abetted by a scandalous interview he gave, as well as Simone de Beauvoir’s glowing preface, the book shot to the top of the Parisian bestseller list and prompted a wide-ranging controversy in which both the well-known and the obscure were embroiled. Few had heard of Treblinka, or other death camps, before the affair. The validity of the difference between those killing centers and the larger network of concentration camps making up the universe of Nazi crime had to be fought out in public. The affair also bore on the frequently raised question of the Jews’ response to their dire straits. Moyn delves into events surrounding the publication of Steiner’s book and the subsequent furor. In the process, he sheds light on a few forgotten but thought-provoking months in French cultural history. Reconstructing the affair in detail, Moyn studies it as a paradigm-shifting controversy that helped change perceptions of the Holocaust in the French public and among French Jews in particular. Then Moyn follows the controversy beyond French borders to the other countries—especially Israel and the United States—where it resonated powerfully. Based on a complete reconstruction of the debate in the press (including Yiddish dailies) and on archives on three continents, Moyn’s study concludes with the response of the survivors of Treblinka to the controversy and reflects on its place in the longer history of Holocaust memory. Finally, Moyn revisits, in the context of a detailed case study, some of the theoretical controversies the genocide has provoked, including whether it is appropriate to draw universalistic lessons from the victimhood of particular groups.

GENRE
Nonfiction
RELEASED
2005
August 22
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
248
Pages
PUBLISHER
Brandeis University Press
SELLER
Chicago Distribution Center
SIZE
5.2
MB
Revisiting Modernity and the Holocaust Revisiting Modernity and the Holocaust
2022
The Impossible Jew The Impossible Jew
2015
The Frankfurt School, Jewish Lives, and Antisemitism The Frankfurt School, Jewish Lives, and Antisemitism
2014
At Wit's End At Wit's End
2020
You Shall Tell Your Children You Shall Tell Your Children
2007
Narrative Constructs and Border Transgressions in Holocaust Literature Within the American Context. Narrative Constructs and Border Transgressions in Holocaust Literature Within the American Context.
2009
Treblinka Treblinka
2011
Liberalism against Itself Liberalism against Itself
2023
Human Rights and the Uses of History Human Rights and the Uses of History
2014
Not Enough Not Enough
2018
The Right to Have Rights The Right to Have Rights
2018
Global Intellectual History Global Intellectual History
2013
Glikl Glikl
2020
Chaim Weizmann Chaim Weizmann
2024
Canine Pioneer Canine Pioneer
2022
French and Germans, Germans and French French and Germans, Germans and French
2018
Inside the Antisemitic Mind Inside the Antisemitic Mind
2017
Feathers Feathers
2013