展览失踪:1947年世界犹太人大会伦敦展览,“寻找散居者”

Christine Schmidt, Daniel P. Stone
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摘要

1947年6月,世界犹太人大会(WJC)在伦敦举办了一个名为“寻找散居犹太人”的展览。展览的部分资料是由联合国善后救济总署(UNRRA)的中央寻人局(CTB)借给世界赛会的,该机构是国际寻人服务处(ITS)的前身。展览详细介绍了CTB和WJC的重要工作。本文认为,基于现存的有限文献,“寻找散落的”展览是一个战后知识生产和跨国交流的场所,它有一个实际的目的:通过将参观者视为潜在的询问者来促进搜索,并再现寻找的物质文化,供参观者观看、阅读、处理和理解。就像在民主党营地张贴的名单一样,这次展览也可以被解读为名单情感力量的早期标志;用奥斯兰德(Leora Auslander)的话来说,这是“共同命运和共同悲剧”的纪念标志。“虽然追踪工作很少成为大屠杀史学的重点,但这次展览的举办表明,人们很早就认识到WJC和CTB追踪工作的重要性,并需要得到更广泛的认可,同时也表明了搜索本身的重建和修复性质。”
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Exhibiting the Missing: The World Jewish Congress’ London Exhibition of 1947, ‘Search for the Scattered’
ABSTRACT In June 1947, the World Jewish Congress (WJC) launched an exhibition in London titled ‘Search for the Scattered.’ Some of the materials on display were loaned to the WJC by the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration (UNRRA)’s Central Tracing Bureau (CTB), the predecessor to the International Tracing Service (ITS). The exhibition presented a detailed accounting of the vital work of both the CTB and the WJC. This paper argues, on the basis of the limited documentation that remains, that the ‘Search for the Scattered’ exhibition was a site of postwar knowledge production and transnational exchange that served a practical purpose: facilitating searching by addressing visitors as potential enquirers and reproducing the material culture of the search for visitors to view, read, handle, and understand. Like lists of names that were posted in DP camps, the exhibition can also be read as an early marker of the emotive power of name lists; in Leora Auslander’s words, commemorative markers of ‘a shared fate and common tragedy.’ Although tracing work has been infrequently a focus in the historiography of the Holocaust, the staging of this exhibition demonstrates early recognition of the significance of the WJC’s and CTB’s tracing work and the need for its wider acknowledgement, and suggests the reconstructive and restorative nature of the search itself.
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