Browsing by Subject "Traumatic Memory"
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Item Historiography of the Holocaust: Traumatic Memory in Ellie Wiesel’s Night and Art Spiegelman’s Maus(Faculty of English, 2015) Thapa, Bishnu Bahadurhis dissertation explores the Holocaust literature from the perspective of traumatic memory of the victims. The memory of the survivors comes alive in diverse perspectives. The survivors and second generation of the Holocaust write in quite different ways. I have taken two different genres of literature: Autobiographical non-fiction and Memoir. It is normally considered that Autobiographical non-fiction alters facts changing names and genders of characters whereas memoirs are very true to facts using real names participants. But, Elie Wiesel’s Night, an autobiographical non-fiction, and Art Spiegelman’s Maus,a memoir, as the testimonies of the Holocaust.Night,by Elie Wiesel, is non-fiction from the perspective of the survivor who witnessed the harrowing Nazism. Similarly,Maus,by Art Spiegelman, is a graphic novel from the perspective of the second-generation of the Holocaust survivors. However, traumatic memory remains as the essence of the both literary works. InNight, Wiesel strives to show the Holocaust happenings and its psychological aftermath to the eye-witness. A youngnarrator tells the horrific story of deportation, burning people alive, and silence of the whole world at the cruel massacre of human being. InMaus, Spiegleman throws a flood of light on the psychology of the second generation. He also depicts that parent-child relation turns to be bitter when children of the Holocaust are deprived of the historical facts. While taking interview with his father, Vladek tells Artie not to include his story in the book, but Artie (Narrator/Writer) includes the story. It isnot a betrayal to his father but it depicts that Artie is sincere in the exploration the Holocaust. This dissertation presents the idea of how memory, history and trauma are the basic concerns of the Holocaust literature. The survivors of the Holocaust carry witness-testimony with them. Wiesel’s Nightis an example of survivors’ narrative. The survivor gives testimony to his traumatic memory. Not only the written-testimony, but the survivors’ unearthed experiences, which are to be disclosed, can be the real source for the study of the Holocaust. Spiegelman’sMauson the other hand, is an example of the transmission of traumatic memory into other generations. Artie, as the son of Vladek, interviews his father, gets Vladek’s traumatic memory and transfers itto readers. One thing that connects both these texts, at the thematic level, is the family-bond existing between the survivors and the second generation.Item Narrativizing memory to form identity: A Study of Gayl Jones’s Corregidora(Department of English, 2013) Karki, Deepak BahadurTrauma is one of the sources that haunts an individual’s present. It has its existence in the past which continue to occur in the form of memory. In Jones’s Corregidora, traumatic memory of the past has achieved the form of identity. The idea of formation of one’s recognition is associated with the fact that people cannot escape their past. This is the formation of memory which has become the source of family tradition in the Corregidora family. The female generation of the Corregidora wants to continue the historical fact that they are the incestuous product of a White Portuguese Master who impregnated the great-grandma and then, the grandma and hence the offspring in the Corregidora family. The formation of identity of the Corregidora is associated with the bitter historical fact; unalterable or changeable. Hence, it has remained with four generations of Corregidora as a part and partial of the tradition continued to this day. The Corregidora are one such family who is the victim of haunting past. Nevertheless, this bitter memory has become one of the sources of their identity.Item Traumatic memory in Jean Henry Dunant's A Memory of Solferino(Department of English, 2015) Mishra, RachanaA Memory of Solferino is a memoir, which is full of traumas with horrific war description of Solferino. The text takes the marginal side in wars' representation which is the reconstruction of a new war history that is very different from the canonical war histories. It presents the war history of marginalized warriors with the pictures of death, destruction, hunger, pain and exhaustion, which get central focus in the text. The text neatly shows that wars are waged regularly by the nations and emperors, where the fighters are only the means of the grand objective. Dunant, by focusing or the marginal sides in account of war, deconstructs the canonical war histories, which glorify the wars. So, this small war account is a new war history which makes a reconstruction in the canon of national war histories.