Description

Book Synopsis
Two of the most destructive moments of state violence in the 20th century occurred in Europe between 1933 and 1945 and in China between 1959 and 1961, the Great Leap famine. This is the first book to bring the two histories together in order to examine their differences and to understand if there are any similar processes of transmission at work.

Trade Review

"This is a remarkably creative work of scholarship. The stories told in it are at once personal and analytical, local and transnational, empirical and imaginative; the horizon of comparison these stories cover is both unusual and original. The result is a creative combination of intimate historical knowledge and comparative historical narratives, acute observations of historical forces and moving accounts of victims of historical injustice – there is simply nothing like this in the existing literature." · Heonik Kwon, London School of Economics

"This work is eloquently and unpretentiously written. It is based on solid scholarship and interesting, intelligent, and sometimes very moving interpretation." · Michael Lambek, University of Toronto



Table of Contents

Chapter 1. Introduction: Transmitting loss

Chapter 2. Comparing the incomparable: the Third Reich and the Great Leap famine
Chapter 3. ‘Communism’ in Mainland China and Taiwan

PART I: THE GREAT LEAP FAMINE

Chapter 4. Moral and political dilemmas from the Great Leap Famine
Chapter 5. Implicit transmission: the generation gap after the Great Leap famine

PART II: THE LUKU INCIDENT OF THE WHITE TERROR

Chapter 6. Disruption, commemoration and family repair in Taiwan
Chapter 7. Gesture and monument in a tourist landscape: the generation gap in Taiwan

PART III: THE THIRD REICH

Chapter 8. Acknowledgement of the Third Reich in post-war Germany
Chapter 9. Disruption, commemoration and family repair: some Jewish German families
Chapter 10. Recalling the Third Reich and the Holocaust after two generations: some German German families

CONCLUSION

Chapter 11. Beyond bad death

References

After the Event The Transmission of Grevious Loss

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    A Hardback by Stephan Feuchtwang

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      View other formats and editions of After the Event The Transmission of Grevious Loss by Stephan Feuchtwang

      Publisher: Berghahn Books
      Publication Date: 4/1/2011 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780857450869, 978-0857450869
      ISBN10: 0857450867

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Two of the most destructive moments of state violence in the 20th century occurred in Europe between 1933 and 1945 and in China between 1959 and 1961, the Great Leap famine. This is the first book to bring the two histories together in order to examine their differences and to understand if there are any similar processes of transmission at work.

      Trade Review

      "This is a remarkably creative work of scholarship. The stories told in it are at once personal and analytical, local and transnational, empirical and imaginative; the horizon of comparison these stories cover is both unusual and original. The result is a creative combination of intimate historical knowledge and comparative historical narratives, acute observations of historical forces and moving accounts of victims of historical injustice – there is simply nothing like this in the existing literature." · Heonik Kwon, London School of Economics

      "This work is eloquently and unpretentiously written. It is based on solid scholarship and interesting, intelligent, and sometimes very moving interpretation." · Michael Lambek, University of Toronto



      Table of Contents

      Chapter 1. Introduction: Transmitting loss

      Chapter 2. Comparing the incomparable: the Third Reich and the Great Leap famine
      Chapter 3. ‘Communism’ in Mainland China and Taiwan

      PART I: THE GREAT LEAP FAMINE

      Chapter 4. Moral and political dilemmas from the Great Leap Famine
      Chapter 5. Implicit transmission: the generation gap after the Great Leap famine

      PART II: THE LUKU INCIDENT OF THE WHITE TERROR

      Chapter 6. Disruption, commemoration and family repair in Taiwan
      Chapter 7. Gesture and monument in a tourist landscape: the generation gap in Taiwan

      PART III: THE THIRD REICH

      Chapter 8. Acknowledgement of the Third Reich in post-war Germany
      Chapter 9. Disruption, commemoration and family repair: some Jewish German families
      Chapter 10. Recalling the Third Reich and the Holocaust after two generations: some German German families

      CONCLUSION

      Chapter 11. Beyond bad death

      References

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