2 - To Remember is to Act: From a Bundle of Notebooks to a Worldwide Publication
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 January 2021
Summary
Abstract
This article deals with the publication history of Etty Hillesum's written legacy. The story charts Hillesum's path from the close link to the author's parental home, through the author's own work, to getting her various editions translated and published, and ending with Hillesum's worldwide renown. Though the publication history of Etty Hillesum's diaries and letters is rather complicated, it is elucidated here with great clarity.
Keywords: literary legacy, publication history, reception, international reception, Etty Hillesum Research Centre, Etty Hillesum, Klaas Smelik Senior
It is quiet in the room. I am crouching in front of my father's desk. Carefully, I open the door to the left-hand cabinet. With the shy gesture of a ten year old who knows he should not be there, I pick up a pile of old notebooks. They do not all look the same. Some have rings, others are like the notebooks we use at school. I open one, ever so quietly, feeling as if, at any moment, someone of the living, or even the dead, might chance upon me here in the midst of my mischievous curiosity. I look at the first book, but, to my disappointment, I cannot decipher a single word of the closely written pages. All I can make out is one letter: a capital S with a dot after it. Would that be an abbreviation of my father's last name, our family name? The dotted S returns throughout the pages of the notebook. Is it possible Etty wrote so much about my father? Quickly, I close the notebook and, gently, I put the pile back in its place. I think for a moment before I stand up. These are Etty Hillesum's journals and she expressed her wish to my father that they be published. But he has had little success in getting it done and his failure begins to feel like my failure.
Stories
My parents are sitting at the table with my half-sister Johanna. Later, I will read in the diaries that Etty Hillesum called Johanna Jopie. Our housekeeper Rosa is at the table with us, as is my aunt Cato, and my uncle Jaap. Uncle Jaap is a disabled veteran, who had been maltreated by the Germans in a POW camp in France and never recovered. He can barely speak, but he can react to what others are saying.
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- Information
- Reading Etty Hillesum in ContextWritings, Life, and Influences of a Visionary Author, pp. 33 - 50Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2018