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The social history of Jews in the Holocaust: the necessity of interviewing survivors

Die Sozialgeschichte von Juden im Holocaust: die Notwendigkeit, Überlebende zu interviewen
[journal article]

Hochstadt, Steve

Abstract

Der Autor plädiert in seinem Aufsatz für eine stärkere Berücksichtigung der oral history bei der Erforschung des Holocaust und der Schicksalsgeschichte von Juden. Die Perspektive einer Geschichtsschreibung aus Sicht der Täter kann kein Ersatz sein für die Erklärung und das Verstehen von traumatische... view more

Der Autor plädiert in seinem Aufsatz für eine stärkere Berücksichtigung der oral history bei der Erforschung des Holocaust und der Schicksalsgeschichte von Juden. Die Perspektive einer Geschichtsschreibung aus Sicht der Täter kann kein Ersatz sein für die Erklärung und das Verstehen von traumatischen Erlebnissen. Nur die Form des Interviews erlaubt spontane Äußerungen, die eine sensiblere Interpretation ermöglichen. Es werden Beispiele aus Interviews mit jüdischen Flüchtlingen aus Schanghai vorgestellt und im Hinblick auf das Anliegen des Autors interpretiert. (pra)... view less


"This essay urges the importance of collecting the oral history of survivors in order to create a richer and more accurate social history of Jews during the Holocaust. The special circumstances of the Holocaust have resulted in a documentary history which has been told from the perspective of the Na... view more

"This essay urges the importance of collecting the oral history of survivors in order to create a richer and more accurate social history of Jews during the Holocaust. The special circumstances of the Holocaust have resulted in a documentary history which has been told from the perspective of the Nazi perpetrators. Only oral testimony can enable us to understand the actions and reactions of Jews faced with harassment, expropiation, exile, and murder. The practice of oral history was not originally designed for eliciting memories of traumatic events. Holocaust oral history requires the historian to reject the positivist conception of the objective and distanced interviewer, in favor of a position as compassionate listener to painful personal experiences. Interviews can produce less mediated, more spontaneous versions of memory, which require sensitive interpretations. The oral histories of Jewish refugees to Shanghai are examined to demonstrate how careful reading and listening can elucidate the social memories, and thus the social history, of Jews in the Holocaust. The process of interviewing also helps the historian bridge the experimential gap with survivors, enabling a better understanding of their experiences." (author's abstract)... view less

Keywords
genocide; interview; oral history; social history; Jew; persecution of Jews; Third Reich

Classification
Social History, Historical Social Research

Method
development of methods; historical; basic research

Document language
English

Publication Year
1997

Page/Pages
p. 254-274

Journal
Historical Social Research, 22 (1997) 3/4

DOI
https://doi.org/10.12759/hsr.22.1997.3/4.254-274

ISSN
0172-6404

Status
Published Version; peer reviewed

Licence
Creative Commons - Attribution 4.0


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© 2007 - 2025 Social Science Open Access Repository (SSOAR).
Based on DSpace, Copyright (c) 2002-2022, DuraSpace. All rights reserved.