Created in the Image?

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A01=Or Rogovin
Aharon Appelfeld
Amir Gutfreund
Author_Or Rogovin
Category=DSBH
Category=DSK
Category=JBSR
characterization
David Grossman
Empathy
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
evil
Hanna Schmitz
Hebrew
House Dolls
Jonathan Littell
KaTzetnik
Kindly Ones
Mani
Mila18
mind
Narrative Ethics
Nazis
Perpetrator
Piepel
reader
Representation
Salamandra
Schlink
Second Generation
See Under Love
Shoah
Sophies Choice
Styron
Yehoshua

Product details

  • ISBN 9780228022107
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Aug 2024
  • Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
  • Publication City/Country: CA
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The turn of the twenty-first century saw the rise of a brand of fiction that centres the experience and perspective of the perpetrator, thereby humanizing this character and granting it the capability to evoke our empathy. The vast scholarship published on this phenomenon, however, fails to consider Israeli writing, and with it some of the most complex characterizations of Holocaust perpetrators, imagined from the unparalleled position of a nation that was shaped from its very birth by the legacy of Holocaust victimhood and survival.

In Created in the Image? Or Rogovin situates Israeli literary responses to the Holocaust in the canon of perpetrator fiction for the first time. Since the state's establishment in 1948, perpetrator characterization in Israeli fiction has demonstrated a remarkable development that corresponds to changing circumstances, from the Eichmann trial to the First Intifada. While early examples depicted perpetrators stereotypically and minimally - as seen in Ka-Tzetnik's demonic and bestial Nazis in Salamandra and in the amorphous persecutor figures in Aharon Appelfeld's stories - since the mid-1980s these characters have been created in the human image, as nuanced and multidimensional individuals. The turning point came with Herr Neigel, the sensitive and self-contradictory commandant in David Grossman's See Under: Love (1986), followed by likewise multifaceted and humanized perpetrators in fiction by A.B. Yehoshua, Savyon Liebrecht, and Amir Gutfreund.

Anchored in theoretical and comparative perspectives, Created in the Image? presents a groundbreaking analysis of the poetic mechanisms, moral implications, and historical contexts of this paradigm shift in the Israeli literary response to the Shoah.

Or Rogovin is Silbermann Family Associate Professor in Modern Hebrew Language and Literature at Bucknell University.

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