Bearing Witness. The importance of first-hand survival narrative as opposed to cinematic representation of the Holocaust


Essay, 2016

11 Pages, Grade: Undergrad


Abstract or Introduction

This essay argues that the best, most authentic way of educating future generations about the Holocaust is through personal narrative. Testimonies such as those made by Frances Flumenbaum, and the others on the Shoah Foundation site, and Vladek’s testimony through "Maus", are successful at informing and educating without any exploitation.

It is through these narratives that we learn the most. We see the faces of the survivors, we hear them choke back tears with shaky voices as they speak of heir parents and siblings and friends who were lost. Their survival forces society to always remember, and to learn from the past. It is the most important that the survivor testimonies are preserved forever. We could lose all of the films, the history books, and the fictional novels, but to lose the survivor testimony, that would genuinely be the greatest loss of all.

Details

Title
Bearing Witness. The importance of first-hand survival narrative as opposed to cinematic representation of the Holocaust
Course
Writing After the Holocaust
Grade
Undergrad
Author
Year
2016
Pages
11
Catalog Number
V318443
ISBN (eBook)
9783668177079
ISBN (Book)
9783668177086
File size
507 KB
Language
English
Keywords
bearing, witness, holocaust
Quote paper
Nicole Ryan (Author), 2016, Bearing Witness. The importance of first-hand survival narrative as opposed to cinematic representation of the Holocaust, Munich, GRIN Verlag, https://www.grin.com/document/318443

Comments

  • No comments yet.
Look inside the ebook
Title: Bearing Witness. The importance of first-hand survival narrative as opposed to cinematic representation of the Holocaust



Upload papers

Your term paper / thesis:

- Publication as eBook and book
- High royalties for the sales
- Completely free - with ISBN
- It only takes five minutes
- Every paper finds readers

Publish now - it's free