Checkmate: Chess Artifacts and Artworks Made and Played in Extremis

IF 0.4 3区 历史学 Q1 HISTORY HOLOCAUST AND GENOCIDE STUDIES Pub Date : 2023-03-01 DOI:10.1093/hgs/dcad013
Rachel Perry, Klara Jackl, Galina Lochekhina
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Abstract

Abstract A game of war, chess was played and pictured in a time of war by men and women, Jews and non-Jews in hiding, in the ghettos, and even behind the barbed wire of the transit, concentration, and extermination camps across Nazi-occupied Europe. Throughout the Second World War, instead of “throwing the game” and giving up, victims of National Socialism devised ingenious ways to improvise chess sets out of found materials and detritus—carved wood, folded paper, etched tin, and modeled bread. They also drew and painted chess games to document and allegorize their lives in extremis. Through a close reading of chess artifacts and artworks, this article reveals how access to materials and time, status within camp hierarchies, ethnic and national identities, and wartime experiences impacted the various ways these groups used the game of chess under difficult playing conditions. Insisting upon the central role of creativity and play, it argues that both material artifacts and artwork inform our knowledge of how individuals living under Nazi oppression thought and felt.
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将死:在极端情况下制作和播放的国际象棋工艺品和艺术品
国际象棋是一种战争游戏,在战争时期,男人和女人,犹太人和非犹太人,躲在犹太人区,甚至躲在纳粹占领的欧洲中转营、集中营和灭绝营的铁丝网后面,都在下棋和拍照。在整个第二次世界大战期间,国家社会主义的受害者没有“放弃游戏”和放弃,而是想出了巧妙的方法,用现成的材料和碎片——雕刻的木头、折叠的纸、蚀刻的锡和模型面包——即兴制作国际象棋。他们还绘制象棋游戏来记录和寓意他们在极端情况下的生活。通过对国际象棋工艺品和艺术品的仔细阅读,本文揭示了材料和时间的获取、营地等级制度中的地位、种族和国家身份以及战争经历如何影响这些群体在困难的比赛条件下使用国际象棋的各种方式。它坚持创造力和游戏的核心作用,认为物质文物和艺术品都告诉我们生活在纳粹压迫下的人们是如何思考和感受的。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.40
自引率
33.30%
发文量
63
期刊介绍: The major forum for scholarship on the Holocaust and other genocides, Holocaust and Genocide Studies is an international journal featuring research articles, interpretive essays, and book reviews in the social sciences and humanities. It is the principal publication to address the issue of how insights into the Holocaust apply to other genocides. Articles compel readers to confront many aspects of human behavior, to contemplate major moral issues, to consider the role of science and technology in human affairs, and to reconsider significant political and social factors.
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