Visual Culture and the HolocaustBarbie Zelizer How does one represent the Holocaust? What does it mean to visualize it? Despite Theodor Adorno's famous injunction that there can be no poetry after the Holocaust, the past half century has produced repeated attempts to impart that which has been considered beyond the limits of representation. From Steven Spielberg's Schindler's List, Claude Lanzmann's epic documentary project Shoah, to Art Spiegelman's Maus, the visual domain has emerged as a fruitful venue for representing those horrible times. |
Contents
On Visualizing the Holocaust | 1 |
In Plain Sight | 13 |
Reading Spiegelman with Adorno | 28 |
FILM | 38 |
Boltanskis Intervention in Holocaust Historiography | 45 |
Clement Greenberg Anselm Kiefer | 74 |
TeleSuffering and Testimony in the Dot Com Era | 111 |
Second Commandment | 127 |
Holocaust Photographs and the Work of Postmemory | 215 |
Women in Holocaust Photographs | 247 |
THE BODY | 264 |
Icons of Atrocity at Nuremberg | 275 |
The Tattooed Jew | 300 |
The Virtual Holocaust Home | 323 |
Vera Frenkels Body Missing | 340 |
Contributors 351 | 349 |
SecondGeneration Israelis Screen the Holocaust | 152 |
The Holocaust Clandestine Immigration | 198 |