Manilaner’s Holocaust Meets Manileños’ Colonisation: Cross-Traumatic Affiliations and Postcolonial Considerations in Trauma Studies

After interrogating the (non-)referential status of the Holocaust for Asians, this essay examines Frank Ephraim’s Escape to Manila and Juergen Goldhagen’s Manila Memories. In particular, cross-traumatic affiliation is studied between two groups of people: the Manilaner and the Manileños: the former...

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Main Author: Jocelyn Martin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2015-11-01
Series:Humanities
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2076-0787/4/4/818
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spelling doaj-a8118da15bed485c8e990cc134f194042020-11-24T22:26:39ZengMDPI AGHumanities2076-07872015-11-014481883310.3390/h4040818h4040818Manilaner’s Holocaust Meets Manileños’ Colonisation: Cross-Traumatic Affiliations and Postcolonial Considerations in Trauma StudiesJocelyn Martin0Department of English, School of Humanities, Ateneo de Manila University, Katipunan Avenue, Loyola Heights, 1108 Quezon City, PhilippinesAfter interrogating the (non-)referential status of the Holocaust for Asians, this essay examines Frank Ephraim’s Escape to Manila and Juergen Goldhagen’s Manila Memories. In particular, cross-traumatic affiliation is studied between two groups of people: the Manilaner and the Manileños: the former were Europeans who fled Nazism and sought refuge in Manila; the latter were Filipino residents of Manila who, during the Second World War, found themselves under Japanese Occupation. A closer reading of the memoirs, however, also reveals latent orientalism in the portrayal of Filipinos. This essay thus echoes present postcolonial concerns in recent Trauma Studies research which ask the place of serial colonisations, martial law, climate catastrophes and the sacred in Trauma theory.http://www.mdpi.com/2076-0787/4/4/818ManilanerManileñosHolocaustQuezoncross-traumatic affiliationJapanese OccupationU.S. colonisationpostcolonial theoryTrauma StudiesPhilippines
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jocelyn Martin
spellingShingle Jocelyn Martin
Manilaner’s Holocaust Meets Manileños’ Colonisation: Cross-Traumatic Affiliations and Postcolonial Considerations in Trauma Studies
Humanities
Manilaner
Manileños
Holocaust
Quezon
cross-traumatic affiliation
Japanese Occupation
U.S. colonisation
postcolonial theory
Trauma Studies
Philippines
author_facet Jocelyn Martin
author_sort Jocelyn Martin
title Manilaner’s Holocaust Meets Manileños’ Colonisation: Cross-Traumatic Affiliations and Postcolonial Considerations in Trauma Studies
title_short Manilaner’s Holocaust Meets Manileños’ Colonisation: Cross-Traumatic Affiliations and Postcolonial Considerations in Trauma Studies
title_full Manilaner’s Holocaust Meets Manileños’ Colonisation: Cross-Traumatic Affiliations and Postcolonial Considerations in Trauma Studies
title_fullStr Manilaner’s Holocaust Meets Manileños’ Colonisation: Cross-Traumatic Affiliations and Postcolonial Considerations in Trauma Studies
title_full_unstemmed Manilaner’s Holocaust Meets Manileños’ Colonisation: Cross-Traumatic Affiliations and Postcolonial Considerations in Trauma Studies
title_sort manilaner’s holocaust meets manileños’ colonisation: cross-traumatic affiliations and postcolonial considerations in trauma studies
publisher MDPI AG
series Humanities
issn 2076-0787
publishDate 2015-11-01
description After interrogating the (non-)referential status of the Holocaust for Asians, this essay examines Frank Ephraim’s Escape to Manila and Juergen Goldhagen’s Manila Memories. In particular, cross-traumatic affiliation is studied between two groups of people: the Manilaner and the Manileños: the former were Europeans who fled Nazism and sought refuge in Manila; the latter were Filipino residents of Manila who, during the Second World War, found themselves under Japanese Occupation. A closer reading of the memoirs, however, also reveals latent orientalism in the portrayal of Filipinos. This essay thus echoes present postcolonial concerns in recent Trauma Studies research which ask the place of serial colonisations, martial law, climate catastrophes and the sacred in Trauma theory.
topic Manilaner
Manileños
Holocaust
Quezon
cross-traumatic affiliation
Japanese Occupation
U.S. colonisation
postcolonial theory
Trauma Studies
Philippines
url http://www.mdpi.com/2076-0787/4/4/818
work_keys_str_mv AT jocelynmartin manilanersholocaustmeetsmanilenoscolonisationcrosstraumaticaffiliationsandpostcolonialconsiderationsintraumastudies
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