Innocent Culprits – Silent Communities. On the Europeanisation of the Memory of the Shoah in Austria

É. Kovács
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

Abstract The Shoah destroyed the substance of Austrian Jewishness. The emigration of the survivors after 1945 and the indignation of the Austrian society resulted in the dislocation of the memory of the Shoah itself. The Shoah provoked a massive social amnesia during the first two to three decades after World War II in Europe. The long silence was broken by the American television series Shoah in 1979 and by the Waldheim affair in 1986. Since the second half of the 1990s, a large‐scale restitution process and a new government program of commemoration have begun. Seemingly, Austria has successfully joined the mainstream of the European culture of memory. However, Austrian Jews as victims or survivors gradually came to be missing or played a minor role in the daily practice of the local and national politics of memory. One has the impression that the ‘local Jews’ have been overshadowed by the Europeanisation of the Shoah. The paper presents an Austrian case as a paradoxical example of ‘creative forgetting’ or ‘forgetting by remembering’.
无辜的罪犯——沉默的社区。论奥地利大屠杀记忆的欧洲化
大屠杀摧毁了奥地利犹太人的本质。1945年后幸存者的移民和奥地利社会的愤怒导致了对大屠杀本身记忆的错位。在第二次世界大战后的头二三十年里,大屠杀在欧洲引发了大规模的社会健忘症。1979年的美国电视剧《浩劫》和1986年的瓦尔德海姆事件打破了长期的沉默。自20世纪90年代下半叶以来,大规模的归还过程和新的政府纪念计划已经开始。看起来,奥地利已经成功地加入了欧洲记忆文化的主流。然而,奥地利犹太人作为受害者或幸存者逐渐消失,或在地方和国家记忆政治的日常实践中发挥次要作用。给人的印象是,“当地犹太人”被大屠杀的欧洲化所掩盖。这篇论文提出了一个奥地利的案例,作为“创造性遗忘”或“因记忆而遗忘”的矛盾例子。
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