Suspect Survival: Matrophobia in Postmemory Generational Writing
Family and kinship carry special significance to Holocaust survivors and their descendants. In autobiographies and family memoirs, writers of what Marianne Hirsch terms the postmemory generation employ different narrative strategies for coming to terms with the ways in which the Holocaust has marked...
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Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.2478/abcsj-2019-0017 |
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doaj-6aaf48794dda4f5cbc485214e855804c2021-09-06T19:40:56ZengSciendoAmerican, British and Canadian Studies Journal1841-964X2019-12-013318911710.2478/abcsj-2019-0017abcsj-2019-0017Suspect Survival: Matrophobia in Postmemory Generational WritingKella Elizabeth0Södertörn University, SwedenFamily and kinship carry special significance to Holocaust survivors and their descendants. In autobiographies and family memoirs, writers of what Marianne Hirsch terms the postmemory generation employ different narrative strategies for coming to terms with the ways in which the Holocaust has marked their identities and family ties. This article focuses on women’s writing of the postmemory generation, examining three works in English by daughters of survivors in the UK, the US, and Canada, written during the 1990s. It investigates the narrative strategies used by Anne Karpf, Helen Fremont, and Lisa Appignanesi to represent maternal sexual agency and vulnerability in a survival context. It suggests that these representations are strongly influenced by matrophobia and matrophilia, defined as the conflicting dread of becoming and desire to be one’s mother, which are themselves strongly conditioned by Holocaust history, particularly the gendered history of vulnerability among women in open hiding during the war1.https://doi.org/10.2478/abcsj-2019-0017postmemorysecond generationmemoirautobiographymother-daughter relationslisa appignanesihelen fremontanne karpfholocaustsexuality |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Kella Elizabeth |
spellingShingle |
Kella Elizabeth Suspect Survival: Matrophobia in Postmemory Generational Writing American, British and Canadian Studies Journal postmemory second generation memoir autobiography mother-daughter relations lisa appignanesi helen fremont anne karpf holocaust sexuality |
author_facet |
Kella Elizabeth |
author_sort |
Kella Elizabeth |
title |
Suspect Survival: Matrophobia in Postmemory Generational Writing |
title_short |
Suspect Survival: Matrophobia in Postmemory Generational Writing |
title_full |
Suspect Survival: Matrophobia in Postmemory Generational Writing |
title_fullStr |
Suspect Survival: Matrophobia in Postmemory Generational Writing |
title_full_unstemmed |
Suspect Survival: Matrophobia in Postmemory Generational Writing |
title_sort |
suspect survival: matrophobia in postmemory generational writing |
publisher |
Sciendo |
series |
American, British and Canadian Studies Journal |
issn |
1841-964X |
publishDate |
2019-12-01 |
description |
Family and kinship carry special significance to Holocaust survivors and their descendants. In autobiographies and family memoirs, writers of what Marianne Hirsch terms the postmemory generation employ different narrative strategies for coming to terms with the ways in which the Holocaust has marked their identities and family ties. This article focuses on women’s writing of the postmemory generation, examining three works in English by daughters of survivors in the UK, the US, and Canada, written during the 1990s. It investigates the narrative strategies used by Anne Karpf, Helen Fremont, and Lisa Appignanesi to represent maternal sexual agency and vulnerability in a survival context. It suggests that these representations are strongly influenced by matrophobia and matrophilia, defined as the conflicting dread of becoming and desire to be one’s mother, which are themselves strongly conditioned by Holocaust history, particularly the gendered history of vulnerability among women in open hiding during the war1. |
topic |
postmemory second generation memoir autobiography mother-daughter relations lisa appignanesi helen fremont anne karpf holocaust sexuality |
url |
https://doi.org/10.2478/abcsj-2019-0017 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT kellaelizabeth suspectsurvivalmatrophobiainpostmemorygenerationalwriting |
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1717767414899277824 |