This section contains 20,184 words (approx. 68 pages at 300 words per page) |
SOURCE: Ezrahi, Sidra DeKoven. “History Imagined: The Holocaust in American Literature.” In By Words Alone: The Holocaust in Literature, pp. 176-216. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1980.
In the following excerpt, Ezrahi explores the responses of postwar American writers to the Holocaust, emphasizing a conflict many of them experienced between their creative imagination and obligation to historical truth.
When six millions are slaughtered, in effect twice or thrice that number are [killed]. For the Jews [on all the other continents] die with them. All those that have not yet [perished] are not dead simply because they do not know what has happened. … A cold shiver passes over me when I think of their remorse when they do get to know, after the War. … Oh, merciful and gracious God! If the circumstances had been reversed, we the Jews of the great European religious academies would have known what was...
This section contains 20,184 words (approx. 68 pages at 300 words per page) |