Mining Memory

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family story
forthcoming
history
Holocaust
Holocaust denial
Holocaust literature
Holocaust memoirs
inherited trauma
intergenerational survivor
lived experience
memoir
memorialization
memory studies
nationalism
pedagogy
post-Holocaust
psychological imprint
secondary trauma
survivorship
teaching
temporality
trauma studies
vicarious trauma

Product details

  • ISBN 9781626713475
  • Dimensions: 140 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Oct 2026
  • Publisher: Purdue Scholarly Publishing Services
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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In 2020, in the midst of COVID-19 lockdowns, Denise Handlarski learned of testimony given by her grandfather, a Holocaust survivor who she never knew. In his testimony, Jakub Handlarski accuses a Polish police officer of murdering his brother and sister prior to the Siedlce Ghetto liquidation. The author had never heard this story. She had no idea her grandfather had ever given this testimony. In fact, she knew very little about her grandparents' experience during the Holocaust.

Despite Jakub's testimony, the police officer was acquitted. Why? And why had no one in the author's family ever mentioned this story? What does it mean when family history intersects with one of the greatest travesties of human history? The author sets off on a search through family stories, archives, and Holocaust history to try to uncover the truth of what happened to Jakub and his family.

Mining Memory is as much about the search—the process of "doing" history and the people who do it, and what we can learn at the intersection of trauma, memory, and testimony—as it is about what the author found. This book aims to challenge the way historians write history and the way teachers teach it. Though scholarly, this is a deeply personal work that would have never happened without the chance discovery that led to so many questions. Handlarski confronts issues of objectivity in history, and her volume brings forth new interpretations of Holocaust history and testimony through the lens of the descendants of a survivor. Jakub's story may have been the prompt, but ultimately this book turns the lens on historians themselves as the subjects of historical research, not just history's arbiters.

Denise Handlarski, PhD, is an Associate Professor in the School of Education at Trent University. She teaches history curriculum and other courses in social justice education. She is also an ordained rabbi in the Secular Humanistic Jewish movement, the spiritual leader of the online community Secular Synagogue, and a Jewish doula (birthworker). She is the author of The A-Z of Intermarriage and is a frequent contributor to media publications including the Toronto Star, Kveller, Hey Alma, and many podcasts.

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