Description

Book Synopsis

Biography and Memory discusses the return of Jews to their places of birth in Poland. A biographical urge to come full circle often leads to symbolic journeys to one’s roots, but in the case of Shoah survivors, such journeys are unexpected, defying the generational definition of their biography, which mostly draws a demarcation line between wartime trauma and a new post-Holocaust life. Analyzed biographical stories collected from Israeli survivors indicate that such returns may be considered the last chapters of their wartime experiences. Survivors’ biographies are examined in the context of both Jewish and Polish memory. This book will be of interest to sociologists, historians, and to general readers.



Trade Review
The author has faced quite a task: of bringing together and, simultaneously, meeting the requirements of many various perspectives characteristic of sociology, psychology/social psychology, anthropology, narratology and generally discourse theories, and–on the other hand–history, in its inevitable entanglement in the perspectives of other social and cultural studies, transcending today’s traditional historiography, which tries to answer the question, “how was it?” I am convinced that this book will generate a keen interest among researchers from various fields; it has the makings of resonating with a wider, non-academic audience as well. -- Prof. Andrzej Piotrowski * Professor of Sociology, University of Lodz *
This amazingly well-written book, whose author makes use of the methodology of social qualitative analysis, takes up many issues vital to Polish people. To name but a few: 1. Consequences of the recent transformations in Eastern and Central Europe for many other societies and their members, 2. Our disparate perception of “Polish returns” to the Eastern Borderlands and the Jewish and German returns to Poland, 3. The separation of fates, concerning various national or religious groups living together. -- Prof. Janusz Mucha * Professor of Sociology, AGH University of Science and Technology *
Professor Kaja Kazmierska's book deals with Polish-Jewish relations before, during, and after the Holocaust. It significantly contributes to our understanding of the sociology of memory and of the continuity/disruption in human identities, focusing primarily on the consequences of Holocaust trauma. The return of survivors to the sites of their childhood and youth constitutes, according to the author, the last phase of their wartime experiences. The description and the analysis of those returns point to the enormous complexity and variety of Jewish fates. Prof. Kazmierska's book is not only a result of professional commitment to the subject of her research, it also shows intellectual courage, honesty, and insight, as well as a deep personal sensitivity of a Polish sociologist in respect to the touchy and explosive issue of Polish-Jewish relations. -- Shimon Redlich * Ben-Gurion University, Israel *

Biography and Memory: The Generational Experience

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    A Hardback by Kaja Kazmierska

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      Publisher: Academic Studies Press
      Publication Date: 17/05/2012
      ISBN13: 9781936235780, 978-1936235780
      ISBN10: 1936235781

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Biography and Memory discusses the return of Jews to their places of birth in Poland. A biographical urge to come full circle often leads to symbolic journeys to one’s roots, but in the case of Shoah survivors, such journeys are unexpected, defying the generational definition of their biography, which mostly draws a demarcation line between wartime trauma and a new post-Holocaust life. Analyzed biographical stories collected from Israeli survivors indicate that such returns may be considered the last chapters of their wartime experiences. Survivors’ biographies are examined in the context of both Jewish and Polish memory. This book will be of interest to sociologists, historians, and to general readers.



      Trade Review
      The author has faced quite a task: of bringing together and, simultaneously, meeting the requirements of many various perspectives characteristic of sociology, psychology/social psychology, anthropology, narratology and generally discourse theories, and–on the other hand–history, in its inevitable entanglement in the perspectives of other social and cultural studies, transcending today’s traditional historiography, which tries to answer the question, “how was it?” I am convinced that this book will generate a keen interest among researchers from various fields; it has the makings of resonating with a wider, non-academic audience as well. -- Prof. Andrzej Piotrowski * Professor of Sociology, University of Lodz *
      This amazingly well-written book, whose author makes use of the methodology of social qualitative analysis, takes up many issues vital to Polish people. To name but a few: 1. Consequences of the recent transformations in Eastern and Central Europe for many other societies and their members, 2. Our disparate perception of “Polish returns” to the Eastern Borderlands and the Jewish and German returns to Poland, 3. The separation of fates, concerning various national or religious groups living together. -- Prof. Janusz Mucha * Professor of Sociology, AGH University of Science and Technology *
      Professor Kaja Kazmierska's book deals with Polish-Jewish relations before, during, and after the Holocaust. It significantly contributes to our understanding of the sociology of memory and of the continuity/disruption in human identities, focusing primarily on the consequences of Holocaust trauma. The return of survivors to the sites of their childhood and youth constitutes, according to the author, the last phase of their wartime experiences. The description and the analysis of those returns point to the enormous complexity and variety of Jewish fates. Prof. Kazmierska's book is not only a result of professional commitment to the subject of her research, it also shows intellectual courage, honesty, and insight, as well as a deep personal sensitivity of a Polish sociologist in respect to the touchy and explosive issue of Polish-Jewish relations. -- Shimon Redlich * Ben-Gurion University, Israel *

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