My Mother's Voice: Children, Literature, and the Holocaust

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Broadview Press, 2002 - Literary Criticism - 384 pages

Named Honor Book of the Year by the Children’s Literature Association

Winner: 2003 Canadian Jewish Book Award for scholarship on a Jewish subject

Finalist: 2003 Alberta Book Awards Scholarly Book of the Year

How do children’s books represent the Holocaust? How do such books negotiate the tension between the desire to protect children, and the commitment to tell children the truth about the world? If Holocaust representations in children’s books respect the narrative conventions of hope and happy endings, how do they differ, if at all, from popular representations intended for adult audiences? And where does innocence lie, if the children’s fable of Roberto Benigni’s Life is Beautiful is marketed for adults, and far more troubling survivor memoirs such as Anita Lobel’s No Pretty Pictures: A Child of War are marketed for children? How should Holocaust Studies integrate discourse about children’s literature into its discussions? In approaching these and other questions, Kertzer uses the lens of children’s literature to problematize the ways in which various adult discourses represent the Holocaust, and continually challenges the conventional belief that children’s literature is the place for easy answers and optimistic lessons.

From inside the book

Contents

List of Illustrations
9
Telling Children
21
Do You Know What Auschwitz Means?
47
Copyright

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About the author (2002)

Adrienne Kertzer is Professor and former Chair of the Department of English at The University of Calgary.

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