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Visiting history, witnessing memory: A study of a Holocaust Exhibition in Paris in 2012

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Over the past 20 years, the number of memorial museums and memory exhibitions has increased exponentially and the commemoration of the Holocaust paved the way for this increase. This evolution has given rise to a significant amount of research. However, two questions remain largely unanswered: how are the protocols of memorial exhibitions planned and constructed in concrete terms? And then how do the visitors to these exhibitions use and appropriate this material? The search for the ‘visitor’s gaze’ which is at the heart of contemporary museum studies has only rarely been extended to memorial museums and exhibitions, even those dealing with Holocaust-related topics. This article aims to address this goal. It is thus situated at the crossroads of memory studies and museum studies. Based on extensive empirical material but within the limits of a case study, it focuses on the exhibition C’étaient des enfants. Déportation et sauvetage des enfants juifs à Paris, which was held at the Hotel de Ville in Paris, in 2012. In so doing, it aims to consider some of the underlying assumptions that often go unexamined in the scholarly work on Holocaust memory exhibitions and highlights the centrality of the witnessing memory mechanism as the main way of appropriating the exhibition.

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12(6)

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630–645

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Link to article (paywalled), Visiting history, witnessing memory: A study of a Holocaust Exhibition in Paris in 2012

Bibliographic Information

Gensburger, Sarah Visiting history, witnessing memory: A study of a Holocaust Exhibition in Paris in 2012. Memory Studies. 2019: 630–645.  https://archive.jpr.org.uk/10.1177/1750698017727804