Introduction
Chapter 1: Selling the Holocaust in 21st Century France
Hilene Flanzbaum, Butler University
Chapter 2: Life is Beautiful, or Not: The Myth of the Good Italian
Shira Klein, Chapman University
Chapter 3: Not my Holocaust: MAUS and Memory in the Polish Classroom
Holli Levitsky, Loyola Marymount University
Chapter 4: Germans, Migration and Holocaust Memory in Contemporary Literature
Agnes Mueller, University of South Carolina
Chapter 5: The Burden of the Third Generation in Germany: Nora Krug’s Belonging: A German Reckons with History and Home
Victoria Aarons, Trinity University
Chapter 6: An Impossible Homecoming: Ruth Kluger’s Austria
Sarah Painitz, Butler University
Chapter 7: Fractures and Refraction in Argentina: Prosthetic Memory and Edgardo Cozarinsky’s Lejos de donde
Amy Kaminsky, University of Minnesota
Chapter 8: Anglicization and the Holocaust in Judith Kerr and Eva Tucker’s Fiction
Joshua Lander, University of Glasgow
Chapter 9: Collective Disengagement: Canada’s National Holocaust Memorial
Lizy Mostowski, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Chapter 10: Forgetting and Remembering: The Holocaust in Australian Fiction
Ira Nadel, University of British Columbia
Chapter 11: We Are the New Children: Shoah and Israeli Childhood in Nava Semel’s And the RatLaughed
Ranen Omer-Sherman, University of Louisville
Chapter 12: Representing the Holocaust and Jewishness in Contemporary Television: The Man inthe High Castle,Hunters and Juda
Marat Grinberg, Reed College
Index
About the Contributors