家庭信件的宝库和大屠杀的史学:解释性的思考

Shirli Gilbert
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引用次数: 1

摘要

研究大屠杀的学者们早就认识到,普通人的叙述(从定义上看是主观的和个人的)可以加深我们对种族灭绝的经历和影响的理解。然而,私人信件的独特价值,特别是多个作者之间持续通信的合集,尚未在大屠杀史学中得到充分认识或探索。在过去十年左右的时间里,越来越多与大屠杀有关的个人信件被发掘出来。它们独特的形式和迅速增长的数量引发了人们对它们潜在的历史意义的疑问,以及如何在实践和分析方面最有效地处理它们。鲁道夫·施瓦布(Rudolf Schwab)是一名德国犹太难民,他最终来到了南非。基于我对他家书的长期研究,我在这篇文章中反思了一系列关于在大屠杀历史编纂中使用这些私人收藏的方法论问题。作为来源,它们与大屠杀历史学家已经在研究的许多证词、日记和其他自我文件有何不同?它们只是对这个已经庞大的档案的又一个补充吗?它们会在多大程度上丰富、复杂化甚至破坏我们的主流理解?它们能为学者们提供关于大屠杀、难民经历等方面的新视角吗?
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A Cache of Family Letters and the Historiography of the Holocaust: Interpretive Reflections
ABSTRACT Scholars of the Holocaust have long recognized that ordinary people’s accounts, by definition subjective and individual, can deepen our understanding of the experience and impact of the genocide. The distinctive value of personal letters, however, particularly collections of sustained correspondence among multiple writers, has not yet been fully appreciated or explored in Holocaust historiography. Over the past decade or so, more and more collections of personal correspondence relating to the Holocaust have been unearthed. Their distinctive form and burgeoning numbers stimulate questions about their potential historical significance and how, in both practical and analytical terms, they might most fruitfully be approached. Building on my longstanding work with the family letters of Rudolf Schwab, a German-Jewish refugee who eventually ended up in South Africa, I reflect in this essay on a series of methodological questions surrounding the use of such private collections in Holocaust historiography. How might they differ, as sources, from the many testimonies, diaries, and other ego-documents with which Holocaust historians already work? Are they simply another addition to this already vast archive? To what extent might they enrich, complicate, or even disrupt our prevailing understandings? What new perspectives might they offer scholars about the Holocaust, the experiences of refugees, and beyond?
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