Revenge, argues award-winning author Laura Jockusch, was ubiquitous among European Jews during the Holocaust. It manifested as acts of violence against Nazi perpetrators and their collaborators as well as revenge fantasies expressed in diaries, letters, last wills, wall inscriptions, songs, and poems. Jockusch reveals how Holocaust survivors continued this multifaceted engagement with revenge long after their liberation from Nazi rule, though survivors often claimed that revenge was absent among Jews in the decades that followed. Jewish Revenge and the Holocaust examines the complexities of Jewish revenge during and after the Holocaust. It shows that, since revenge is a universal human response to atrocity and injustice, neither the claim that Jews were particularly vengeful (as Nazi perpetrators commonly held) nor the idea that Jews did not engage in revenge, are accurate. Rather, revenge had many expressions and it fulfilled various functions for the victims and survivors of the Holocaust: a last resort act in face of death; or a coping strategy in utter powerlessness and despair; or a means to confront and commemorate the traumatic past and to go on living after destruction and loss. Jockusch convincingly contends that, even if most survivors chose to forgo violent revenge for ethical reasons, they nevertheless engaged with the possibility of vengeance. This book analyses that engagement and integrates revenge into the spectrum of Jewish responses to the Holocaust, placing it in the wider context of postwar retribution for Nazi crimes in the process.
Produktinformation
- Utgivningsdatum2026-02-19
- Mått156 x 234 x undefined mm
- FormatHäftad
- SpråkEngelska
- SeriePerspectives on the Holocaust
- Antal sidor328
- FörlagBloomsbury Publishing PLC
- ISBN9781350449251