Teaching Holocaust Memory Literature in Higher Education: An Autoethnographic View

In this article, I present my personal story as a teacher-educator who participated in a binational (Israeli-German) teaching project that investigated the reading processes of students belonging to the second and third post-Holocaust generations. The students read literary works in Hebrew, German,...

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Main Author: Ilana Elkad-Lehman
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: FQS 2018-05-01
Series:Forum: Qualitative Social Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.qualitative-research.net/index.php/fqs/article/view/2973
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spelling doaj-5583f56acf2a456dbdcf943da7bb2b322020-11-24T22:33:40ZdeuFQS Forum: Qualitative Social Research1438-56272018-05-0119210.17169/fqs-19.2.29731922Teaching Holocaust Memory Literature in Higher Education: An Autoethnographic ViewIlana Elkad-Lehman0Levinsky College of EducationIn this article, I present my personal story as a teacher-educator who participated in a binational (Israeli-German) teaching project that investigated the reading processes of students belonging to the second and third post-Holocaust generations. The students read literary works in Hebrew, German, and other languages written by members of the second and third post-Holocaust generations. My involvement in the project triggered the question of how to represent their experience of reading the literary works, of the teaching processes, and of what I learned from the process. This led to the writing of an autoethnography that accompanied my work as a teacher-educator in this project. The autoethnographic writing process was significant for my comprehension of the issue of Holocaust memory due to the fact that I am a second-generation Holocaust survivor. While the experience described is important in understanding the processes that are probably undergone by teachers who are second- and third-generation Holocaust survivors, the manner in which the Holocaust ethos is perceived in Israel precludes discussing them.http://www.qualitative-research.net/index.php/fqs/article/view/2973autoethnographyculture of memoryHolocaustteaching Holocaust memory literaturedialogue between Israelis and Germanstransgenerational transfer
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ilana Elkad-Lehman
spellingShingle Ilana Elkad-Lehman
Teaching Holocaust Memory Literature in Higher Education: An Autoethnographic View
Forum: Qualitative Social Research
autoethnography
culture of memory
Holocaust
teaching Holocaust memory literature
dialogue between Israelis and Germans
transgenerational transfer
author_facet Ilana Elkad-Lehman
author_sort Ilana Elkad-Lehman
title Teaching Holocaust Memory Literature in Higher Education: An Autoethnographic View
title_short Teaching Holocaust Memory Literature in Higher Education: An Autoethnographic View
title_full Teaching Holocaust Memory Literature in Higher Education: An Autoethnographic View
title_fullStr Teaching Holocaust Memory Literature in Higher Education: An Autoethnographic View
title_full_unstemmed Teaching Holocaust Memory Literature in Higher Education: An Autoethnographic View
title_sort teaching holocaust memory literature in higher education: an autoethnographic view
publisher FQS
series Forum: Qualitative Social Research
issn 1438-5627
publishDate 2018-05-01
description In this article, I present my personal story as a teacher-educator who participated in a binational (Israeli-German) teaching project that investigated the reading processes of students belonging to the second and third post-Holocaust generations. The students read literary works in Hebrew, German, and other languages written by members of the second and third post-Holocaust generations. My involvement in the project triggered the question of how to represent their experience of reading the literary works, of the teaching processes, and of what I learned from the process. This led to the writing of an autoethnography that accompanied my work as a teacher-educator in this project. The autoethnographic writing process was significant for my comprehension of the issue of Holocaust memory due to the fact that I am a second-generation Holocaust survivor. While the experience described is important in understanding the processes that are probably undergone by teachers who are second- and third-generation Holocaust survivors, the manner in which the Holocaust ethos is perceived in Israel precludes discussing them.
topic autoethnography
culture of memory
Holocaust
teaching Holocaust memory literature
dialogue between Israelis and Germans
transgenerational transfer
url http://www.qualitative-research.net/index.php/fqs/article/view/2973
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