Representations of Anne Frank in American Literature

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A01=Rachael McLennan
adolescence in American fiction
American cultural identity
American culture
American Literary Representations
American literature
Anne Frank
Anne Frank House
Annexe Inhabitants
Antihomophobic Analysis
Author_Rachael McLennan
autobiography
Cantor's Texts
Cantor’s Texts
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Category=NHWR7
Clare's Life
Clare’s Life
coming of age themes
Competitive Memory
diary
eq_bestseller
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Exit Ghost
Frank Functions
Frank's Diary
Frank's Life
Frank’s Diary
Frank’s Life
gender
gender and trauma narratives
gender inequality
genocide
genre
Holocaust
Holocaust memory studies
Holocaust Piety
Holocaust representation in American fiction
Homesick Restaurant
Imperial Affliction
Jews
literary adaptation analysis
Multidirectional Memory
Narrative Prosthesis
Otto Frank
persecution
Prague Orgy
Prosthetic Culture
Rachael McLennan
representation
Roth's Work
Roth’s Work
transnational
victimisation
victimization in literature
Williams's Poem
Williams’s Poem
Young Adult Fiction
Young Man
Young Man's Comments
Young Man’s Comments

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367868727
  • Weight: 340g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 10 Dec 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This book explores portrayals of Anne Frank in American literature, where she is often invoked, if problematically, as a means of encouraging readers to think widely about persecution, genocide, and victimisation; often in relation to gender, ethnicity, and race. It shows how literary representations of Anne Frank in America over the past 50 years reflect the continued dominance of the American dramatic adaptations of Frank’s Diary in the 1950s, and argues that authors feel compelled to engage with the problematic elements of these adaptations and their iconic power. At the same time, though, literary representations of Frank are associated with the adaptations; critics often assume that these texts unquestioningly perpetuate the problems with the adaptations. This is not true. This book examines how American authors represent Frank in order to negotiate difficult questions relating to representation of the Holocaust in America, and in order to consider gender, coming of age, and forms of inequality in American culture in various historical moments; and of course, to consider the ways Frank herself is represented in America. This book argues that the most compelling representations of Frank in American literature are alert to their own limitations, and may caution against making Frank a universal symbol of goodness or setting up too easy identifications with her. It will be of great interest to researchers and students of Frank, the Holocaust in American fiction and culture, gender studies, life writing, young adult fiction, and ethics.

Rachael McLennan is Senior Lecturer in American Literature and Culture at the University of East Anglia, UK.

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