Holocaust Museums and Memorials

IF 0.1 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Holocaust memorials can be categorized according to the evolution of the genre. The first type of memorials are the historical sites of discrimination and destruction themselves, such as concentration and extermination camps, transit camps, ghettos, forced labor camps, and sites of mass executions, as well as sites where hiding, rescue, and other life-saving operations took place. The second category, which developed immediately after the war, includes plaques and monuments dedicated to the memory of Holocaust victims. In many cases, these monuments are erected in the places where the victims came from; the victims can be identified individually, with some personal details (e.g., age, occupation, etc.), or as part of a specific group (residents of a building, student body of a school, denizens of a town, etc.). These memorials, located all over Europe where the victims originated, follow traditional artistic patterns, such as plaques, allegorical sculptures, and rare figurative expressions. The third and more recent category comprises memorial museums, a complex combination of two institutions: a memorial, with its commemorative purpose, and a museum, with its collection, conservation, documentation, and educational missions. Such institutions are not necessarily located in cities where deportation and/or extermination took place, but may also be established where significant survivor populations settled after the war and took it upon themselves to commemorate the Holocaust: Israel, the United States, Canada, Australia, South Africa, Argentina. Most recent memorial museums are also architectural artworks that add an artistic interpretation to the historical content: broken lines, voids, grids, narrow spaces, and dead ends are some of the design traits that contribute to express the loss and destruction in more abstract ways. Scholarship about Holocaust memorials has appeared and evolved in parallel with the memorials themselves. First came the historical accounts and testimonials about specific sites of destruction, then guides to monuments, followed by monographs about types of memorials (geographical focus with studies about public memory in Germany, France, or Poland, or artistic focus with counter-monuments). Later came the studies of memorial museums, whether as monographs or in a comparative approach, sometimes in a global perspective. More recently, a number of scholars have examined Holocaust memorials in relation with other phenomena, such as commodification and tourism, space, religious practices, memory politics, and appropriation.
大屠杀博物馆和纪念馆
大屠杀纪念馆可以根据类型的演变进行分类。第一类是歧视和破坏本身的历史遗址,如集中营和灭绝营、过境营、隔都、强迫劳动营、大规模处决的地点,以及躲藏、救援和其他救生行动的地点。第二类是在战后立即发展起来的,包括纪念大屠杀受害者的牌匾和纪念碑。在许多情况下,这些纪念碑竖立在受害者的家乡;受害者可以通过一些个人细节(如年龄、职业等)单独确定,也可以作为特定群体的一部分(建筑物的居民、学校的学生团体、城镇的居民等)确定。这些纪念碑遍布受害者发源地的欧洲各地,遵循传统的艺术模式,如牌匾、寓言雕塑和罕见的具象表达。第三类也是最近的一类包括纪念博物馆,这是两种机构的复杂组合:具有纪念目的的纪念馆和具有收藏、保存、文献和教育使命的博物馆。这些机构不一定位于发生驱逐出境和(或)灭绝的城市,也可以设立在战后大量幸存者定居并自行纪念大屠杀的地方:以色列、美国、加拿大、澳大利亚、南非、阿根廷。大多数最近的纪念博物馆也是建筑艺术品,为历史内容添加了艺术解释:虚线,空洞,网格,狭窄的空间和死角是一些设计特征,有助于以更抽象的方式表达损失和破坏。关于大屠杀纪念馆的学术研究与纪念馆本身同时出现和发展。首先是关于具体破坏地点的历史记载和证言,然后是纪念碑指南,接着是关于纪念碑类型的专著(地理重点研究德国、法国或波兰的公共记忆,或艺术重点研究反纪念碑)。后来出现了对纪念博物馆的研究,无论是专著还是比较方法,有时是全球视角。最近,一些学者研究了大屠杀纪念馆与其他现象的关系,如商品化和旅游、空间、宗教习俗、记忆政治和挪用。
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来源期刊
Nordisk Judaistik-Scandinavian Jewish Studies
Nordisk Judaistik-Scandinavian Jewish Studies HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
9
审稿时长
20 weeks
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