The Shame of Survival
Working Through a Nazi Childhood
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی
February 2, 2009
A former German and women's studies professor at UC–Santa Barbara, Mahlendorf grew up in a small town in Silesia and was a squad leader in the Hitler Youth who embraced Hitler as a father substitute after the death of her own father, a former SS member, in 1935 and also in rebellion against her mother who disapproved of the Nazis. Her escape from a group suicide pact in the wake of Hitler's suicide was a first step in her denazification and eventual acceptance of her culpability in the Holocaust, an open-ended process that gained a feminist twist as she realized how politics were personal under Nazism. An eye-opening, honest and absorbing account of how evil takes root and flourishes among ordinary people. Illus.
February 15, 2009
Inducted into the Hitler Youth at age 10, Ursula Mahlendorf witnesses the pogrom of Krystallnacht in her small German town and becomes an ardent follower, exhilarated by news of German victories. Now a retired professor of German literature and womens studies at the University of California, she is still torn with guilt, mortified that I felt edified by such trash. As a young teen, she was a bystander; if she had been old enough, would she have been a perpetrator? It is that dual perspective that gives this memoir its power: the immediacy of her memories; the shame, remorse, and uncertainty of remembering. There is sometimes too much personal detail, especially about her academic career that led to a Fulbright scholarship to the U.S. But the personal experience is haunting about then and now: how you can develop a shell of toughness and numbness and not know what is happening at Bergen-Belsen, only 50 miles away from where you live.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2009, American Library Association.)
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