At Memory's Edge: After-images of the Holocaust in Contemporary Art and Architecture

Couverture
Yale University Press, 1 janv. 2000 - 248 pages
How should Germany commemorate the mass murder of Jews once committed in its name? In 1997, James E. Young was invited to join a German commission appointed to find an appropriate design for a national memorial in Berlin to the European Jews killed in World War II. As the only foreigner and only Jew on the panel, Young gained a unique perspective on Germany's fraught efforts to memorialize the Holocaust. In this book, he tells for the first time the inside story of Germany's national Holocaust memorial and his own role in it.

In exploring Germany's memorial crisis, Young also asks the more general question of how a generation of contemporary artists can remember an event like the Holocaust, which it never knew directly. Young examines the works of a number of vanguard artists in America and Europe--including Art Spiegelman, Shimon Attie, David Levinthal, and Rachel Whiteread--all born after the Holocaust but indelibly shaped by its memory as passed down through memoirs, film, photographs, and museums. In the context of the moral and aesthetic questions raised by these avant-garde projects, Young offers fascinating insights into the controversy surrounding Berlin's newly opened Jewish museum, designed by Daniel Libeskind, as well as Germany's soon-to-be-built national Holocaust memorial, designed by Peter Eisenman.

Illustrated with striking images in color and black-and-white, At Memory's Edge is the first book in any language to chronicle these projects and to show how we remember the Holocaust in the after-images of its history.

 

Pages sélectionnées

Table des matières

Acknowledgments
INTRODUCTION
1
Art Spiegelmans Maus and the AfterImages of History
12
David Levinthals Mein Kampf History Toys and the Play of Memory
42
Sites Unseen Shimon Atties Acts of Remembrance 19911996
62
Memory Countermemory and the End of the Monument Horst Hoheisel Micha Ullman Rachel Whiteread and Renata Stih and Frieder Schnock
90
Memory Against Itself in Germany Today Jochen Gerzs Countermonuments
120
Daniel Libeskinds Jewish Museum in Berlin The Uncanny Arts of Memorial Architecture
152
Germanys Holocaust Memorial Problem and Mine
184
Notes
224
Bibliography
233
Illustration Credits
243
Index
244
Droits d'auteur

Expressions et termes fréquents

À propos de l'auteur (2000)

James E. Young, professor of English and Judaic studies at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, is also the author of The Texture of Memory, published by Yale University Press, which won the National Jewish Book Award.

Informations bibliographiques