Jews and Other Others at the Holocaust Memorial in Berlin
Author(s)
Publication Name
Publication Date
Abstract
Is the Holocaust Memorial in Berlin a Jewish space? How are Jews presented there? What are the points of interest about Jews in the memorial from the perspective of the foundation that runs it as well as from various visitors' perspectives? This article focuses on interaction and performance at the memorial, an understudied topic in comparison to what the memorial presents in its installation and the debates that preceded its realisation. I argue that the memorial's form and location create interpretation strategies that are based on the dialectics of representation and non-representation, emotional experience versus knowledge about the Holocaust. This is differently manifested in the action of various groups visiting the memorial. Interpretation strategies rest on Jews being a category of memory. In substantiating this claim, I focus on the experience of German visitors, compared to that of Jewish visitors and claim that whereas Jews' experience of the site is directly linked to sharing intimate knowledge about the Holocaust, Germans tend to talk about the site metaphorically and in emotional terms, confirming the memorial's own ontology.
Topics
Genre
Geographic Coverage
Original Language
Volume/Issue
23(2)
Page Number / Article Number
71-84
DOI
Link
Link to article (paywalled), Jews and Other Others at the Holocaust Memorial in Berlin
PDF (via academia.edu), Jews and Other Others at the Holocaust Memorial in Berlin
PDF (via academia.edu), Jews and Other Others at the Holocaust Memorial in Berlin
Bibliographic Information
Jews and Other Others at the Holocaust Memorial in Berlin. 2014: 71-84. https://archive.jpr.org.uk/10.3167/ajec.2014.230206