Holocaust literature for children and young adults reveals the ways we imagine, narrate, communicate, and alter the facts of war, genocide, and trauma. In order to understand the Holocaust and its representations, it is important not to overlook figurative tellings and retellings; this is uniquely apparent in literature for young people, in which such imaginative and metaphorical movements are essential. In Figures of Youth: Metaphor and Imagination in Children’s Holocaust Literature, Joanna Krongold explores the depth and breadth of Holocaust literature for young people, from wartime writings to present-day imaginings. Spanning chronological time periods, cultures, and genres, Figures of Youth examines the representational muzzles and creative possibilities of children’s and young adult Holocaust literature. The experimentation and inventiveness inherent in literature for young people make it fruitful ground for exploring the complexities of the Holocaust. Figures of Youth charts patterns of representation as time propels authors farther away from the event itself, demonstrating how and why children's literature makes important contributions to the field of Holocaust studies. By placing well-known texts like Anne Frank’s diary in conversation with those that have been excluded or ignored in scholarly discourse surrounding Holocaust literature, the author offers a new and innovative understanding of metaphor and figurative dynamics in the representation of genocide.
Joanna Krongold is an instructor and postdoctoral fellow at the University of Toronto, USA.
AcknowledgmentsIntroduction: When Facts Become Figures1. “A Bundle of Contradictions”: The Complexities of Wartime Writing for Young People2. Fractured Reflections: Creating the Genre of Postwar Children’s Holocaust Memoirs3. Opening Doors: The Actualization of the Figurative in the Work of Art Spiegelman and Jane Yolen4. Liminality and Magical Realism in Children's Holocaust Fiction of the Twenty-First Century5. Magic and Manipulation: The Use of the Holocaust in Contemporary Children’s Fantasy Series Coda: The Imaginable and the UnimaginableBibliography IndexAbout the Author