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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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 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT ilanaelkadlehman teachingholocaustmemoryliteratureinhighereducationanautoethnographicview |
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