双人肖像,1939年至1969年。苏联时期波兰犹太人的记忆

Q4 Arts and Humanities
Magdalena Ruta
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引用次数: 0

摘要

双重肖像,1939 - 1956:来自苏联的波兰犹太妇女回忆录在德国进攻波兰后的最初几个月里,犹太社区的一些成员设法偷偷溜到该国的东部边境,那里在1939年9月下半月被红军入侵和吞并。这些难民的悲惨经历,在此之前不知何故被大屠杀学者所忽视,最近却成为深刻学术反思的主题。关于来自波兰的犹太难民命运的知识来源之一是他们的回忆录。在这篇文章中,作者回顾了三篇由波兰犹太妇女撰写的自传体文本,这些女性是由于留在苏联而在大屠杀中幸存下来的女性难民,她们是奥拉·瓦托瓦、露丝·特克科夫·卡明斯卡和谢恩·米里亚姆·布罗德宗。他们每个人不仅经历了战争的暴行,而且最重要的是,经历了共产主义政权的残酷。他们三人都在不同的时间以不同的方式遭受了苏联当局的迫害。虽然Ola Watowa经验(在人,通过她的家人和朋友)的命运迫害和驱逐二战期间的苦味,Sheyne-Miriam Broderzon相对平静的生活住在那时期(1939 - 1945),和露丝Turkow Kaminska甚至享受奢华的生活方式保留特权的成员机构,直到年战争后,后者两个女人将面临真正的共产主义作为其受害者的形象。瓦茨一家在战争结束后不久就离开了苏联,而布罗德宗一家和土耳其人直到1956年斯大林去世后才返回波兰。玛丽·g·梅森认为,女性自传体写作的内在特征是通过对“他者”的同时认同来发现自己的身份。“正是由于一个人通过与某个选定的‘他者’的联系而确立了自己的身份,女性作家才能公开地描写自己。”这篇文章的目的是试图确定这一说法在多大程度上适用于这三位波兰犹太妇女的回忆录,她们除了分享上述历史环境外,还与杰出的艺术家(即作家亚历山大·瓦特和莫伊什·布罗德宗,以及爵士乐手Adi Rosner)都有过浪漫的关系,这不仅对她们的生活产生了巨大的影响,而且还特别注重其自传体叙事的创作和风格,赋予其自传体的双重肖像特征。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Portrety podwójne, 1939–1956. Wspomnienia polskich Żydówek z sowieckiej Rosji
Double Portraits, 1939–1956: Memoirs of Polish Jewish Women From Soviet Russia During the first months following Germany’s attack on Poland, some members of the Jewish community managed to sneak away to the eastern frontiers of the country which had been invaded and annexed by the Red Army in the second half of September 1939. The tragic experiences of these refugees, heretofore somehow neglected by Holocaust scholars, have recently become the subject of profound academic reflection. One of the sources of knowledge about the fate of Jewish refugees from Poland are their memoirs. In this article the author reflects on three autobiographical texts written by Polish Jewish women, female refugees who survived the Holocaust thanks to their stay in Soviet Russia, namely Ola Watowa, Ruth Turkow Kaminska, and Sheyne-Miriam Broderzon. Each of them experienced not only the atrocities of war, but also, most of all, the cruelty of the Communist regime. All three of them suffered persecution by the oppressive Soviet authorities in different ways and at different times. While Ola Watowa experienced (in person, as well as through the fate of her family and friends) the bitter taste of persecution and deportation during WWII, Sheyne-Miriam Broderzon lived a relatively peaceful life in that period (1939–1945), and Ruth Turkow Kaminska even enjoyed the luxurious lifestyle reserved for the privileged members of the establishment, and it was not until the years immediately after the war that the latter two women would face the true image of Communism as its victims. The Wats managed to leave the USSR shortly after the war, whereas for the Broderzons and the Turkows the war would not end until the death of Stalin and their subsequent return to Poland in 1956. According to Mary G. Mason, the immanent feature of women’s autobiographical writings is the self-discovery of one’s own identity through the simultaneous identification of some ‘other.’ It is thanks to the rootedness of one’s own identity through the connection with a certain chosen ‘other’ that women authors can openly write about themselves. The aim of the article is to attempt to determine to what extent this statement remains true for the memoirs of the three Polish Jewish women who, besides sharing the aforementioned historical circumstances, are also linked by the fact that all of them lived in romantic relationships with outstanding artistic individuals (i.e. writers Aleksander Wat and Moyshe Broderzon, and jazzman Adi Rosner), which had an enormous impact not only on their lives in general, but also specifically on the creation and style of their autobiographical narrative, giving it the character of a sui generis double portrait.
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来源期刊
Studia Judaica
Studia Judaica Arts and Humanities-History
CiteScore
0.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
7
期刊介绍: Studia Judaica, as an organ of the Polish Association for Jewish Studies, is open to its members and all other scholars interested in a wide area of Jewish studies, such as Jewish history, literature, linguistics, archeology, culture, religion, and more. We aim to publish articles and reviews illustrating current development in a wide area of Jewish studies as conducted by the members of the Association. Our periodical is open also to non-members on assumption the article deals with an aspect of Polish-Jewish studies. By this we hope to create a representative platform of Jewish studies in and on Poland.
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