"这就是你的结局":作为战争纪念品的大屠杀诗歌

Genealogy Pub Date : 2024-05-10 DOI:10.3390/genealogy8020053
Yael S. Hacohen
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在大屠杀期间,诗人不惜一切代价写诗和传诗。在那段岁月里写下的诗歌往往被埋在地下、缝在衣服里、偷运出监狱或涂鸦在墙上。这些实物文献所承载的不仅仅是这些事件的事实,还承载着经历这些事件时的感受。本研究探讨了四位大屠杀诗人瓦迪斯瓦夫-施伦格尔(Władysław Szlengel)、塞尔玛-迈尔鲍姆-艾辛格(Selma Meerbaum-Eisinger)、汉娜-塞内斯(Hannah Szenes)和阿布拉梅克-科普洛维奇(Abrahk Koplowicz)的遗诗,不仅研究了这些诗歌,还研究了它们的对象性及其转移故事。这些诗就像紧急明信片一样,向家庭、社区和世界传递信息。它们在问--写一首诗作为遗愿和遗嘱意味着什么?
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
“This Is How/You’ll End”: Holocaust Poems as War Ephemera
During the Holocaust, poets went to extraordinary lengths to write their poems and transmit them. Poems that were written during those years were often buried in the ground, stitched into clothing, smuggled out of prisons, or graffitied onto walls. These object documents carried more than facts about these events; they carried the feeling of living through these events. This research explores the last poems of four Holocaust poets, Władysław Szlengel, Selma Meerbaum-Eisinger, Hannah Szenes, and Abramek Koplowicz, investigating not only the poems but their object-ness and their stories of transference. These poems, like urgent postcards, deliver messages to a family, to a community, to the world. They ask―what does it mean to write a poem as a last will and testament?
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