收集和展示!展览作为战后大屠杀记忆的媒介

Rachel E. Perry, Agata Pietrasik
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引用次数: 0

摘要

过去40年来,大屠杀博物馆的激增引起了公众和批判性的关注,即展览如何反映和构建创伤历史的文化记忆。然而,大多数关于大屠杀展览的研究始于保罗·威廉姆斯(Paul Williams)在20世纪80年代末所描述的“全球纪念热潮”。《大屠杀研究杂志》的这一期特刊揭示了战后立即形成的展览实践的更长期和更广泛的谱系。事实上,在解放后的第一天,“博物馆化”的过程就已经开始了,在集中营和灭绝营组织了即兴的、特定地点的展览,令人印象深刻的大片,如“hitlsamriens”(1945),由欧洲各国政府部门和国际组织赞助。这些展览由盟军组织,作为大众传播媒介,传播纳粹罪行,以“去纳粹化”公共空间,防范未来的法西斯倾向,并与纽伦堡审判有关,这些展览具有多种功能:说服和定罪,提供信息和教育,但也塑造了社区和国家身份,并使政治世界观合法化。虽然学术界已经开始参与这些反法西斯展览,但那些由欧洲犹太人“幸存的残余”She ' erit Hapleita组织的展览,仍然处于学术界关注的边缘。犹太幸存者不仅“收集和记录”,他们还收集和展示。个人和集体都将展览作为记忆的“媒介”,以突出纳粹种族灭绝意识形态和政策造成的犹太人受害经历。通过通过图像、文本、物体和技术收集、呈现和传递信息,他们提供了经验和空间叙事,在艺术品、历史文献和物质文物之间建立了新的关系,从而产生了知识,并构建了个人记忆。有些与犹太历史委员会结盟;另一些则与美国犹太人联合分配委员会(AJDC)等国际犹太人援助组织或犹太复国主义组织合作。无论是在流离失所者(DP)营地的临时空间组织,还是
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Collect and Display! Exhibitions as a Medium of Holocaust Memory in the Immediate Postwar Period
The proliferation of Holocaust museums over the last 40 years has brought popular and critical attention to how exhibitions reflect and construct the cultural memory of traumatic histories. However, most studies of Holocaust exhibitions begin with what Paul Williams described as ‘the global rush to commemorate’ in the late 1980s. This special issue of the Journal of Holocaust Research reveals a longer and broader genealogy of exhibitionary practices, one that took shape immediately after the war. Indeed, already on the day after Liberation, the process of ‘museumification’ was initiated, as impromptu, site-specific exhibitions were organized in the concentration and extermination camps, and impressive blockbusters, like ‘Crimes hitlériens’ (1945), were sponsored by governmental ministries and international organizations across Europe. Organized by the Allies as a medium of mass communication to broadcast Nazi crimes in order to ‘denazify’ public spaces and ward against future fascist tendencies, and connected to the Nuremberg trials, these exhibitions served a variety of functions: to convince and convict, to inform and educate, but also to fashion communal and national identities and legitimize political worldviews. Although scholarship has begun to attend to these antifascist exhibitions, those mounted by the She’erit Hapleita, the ‘surviving remnant’ of Jews in Europe, remain on the margins of academic attention. Jewish survivors not only ‘collected and recorded,’ they also collected and exhibited. Both individuals and collectives used exhibitions as a ‘medium’ of memory to foreground the Jewish experience of victimization as a result of Nazi genocidal ideology and policy. By collecting, representing, and transmitting information through images, texts, objects and technologies, they offered experiential and spatial narratives that forged new relationships between artworks, historical documents, and material artifacts, thus producing knowledge as well as framing individual memories. Some were aligned with the Jewish Historical Commissions; others with international Jewish aid organizations like the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee (AJDC) or Zionist groups. Whether organized in makeshift spaces in the Displaced Persons (DP) camps, or
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