Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Rupture and Repair: Marking the Legacy of the Second Generation
- Part I The Legacy of Survival
- 1 “A Tale Repeated Over and Over Again”: Polyidentity and Narrative Paralysis in Thane Rosenbaum's Elijah Visible
- 2 “In Auschwitz We Didn't Wear Watches”: Marking Time in Art Spiegelman's Maus
- 3 “Because We Need Traces”: Robert Schindel's Gebürtig and the Crisis of the Second-Generation Witness
- 4 Documenting Absence in Patrick Modiano's Dora Bruder and Katja Behrens's “Arthur Mayer, or The Silence”
- Part II The Legacy of Perpetration
- Conclusion: The “Glass Wall”: Marked by an Invisible Divide
- Works Cited
- Index
3 - “Because We Need Traces”: Robert Schindel's Gebürtig and the Crisis of the Second-Generation Witness
from Part I - The Legacy of Survival
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 February 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Rupture and Repair: Marking the Legacy of the Second Generation
- Part I The Legacy of Survival
- 1 “A Tale Repeated Over and Over Again”: Polyidentity and Narrative Paralysis in Thane Rosenbaum's Elijah Visible
- 2 “In Auschwitz We Didn't Wear Watches”: Marking Time in Art Spiegelman's Maus
- 3 “Because We Need Traces”: Robert Schindel's Gebürtig and the Crisis of the Second-Generation Witness
- 4 Documenting Absence in Patrick Modiano's Dora Bruder and Katja Behrens's “Arthur Mayer, or The Silence”
- Part II The Legacy of Perpetration
- Conclusion: The “Glass Wall”: Marked by an Invisible Divide
- Works Cited
- Index
Summary
Memory implies identity, the self caught between its roles as subject and object of memory, the telling and the told.
— Paul Antze and Michael Lambek, Tense Past: Cultural Essays in Trauma and MemoryNarrative Counterparts
Gebürtig, Robert Schindel's novel about the lives of second-generation Austrians in the early 1980s, is marked by a radically heterogeneous narrativity and an almost obsessive concentration on problems of signification and referential representation. The novel's complex, multilayered, decentralized narrative structure, its overabundant significatory synapses, and its dense, often paradoxical poetic language contribute to an exercise in reading that, in its refusal to grant the reader clarity, closure, or narrative certainty, mirrors the confused and impotent struggle of its characters with the presence of the Holocaust past in an Austrian society that, in effect, abdicates responsibility for its perpetration of the Holocaust. The problematic role of the Holocaust in the contemporary relations between Austrian Jews and non-Jews is brought to the fore by the novel's three main narrative strands, two of which occur on the same main narrative level and are linked together by common characters. The first narrative, told largely from the perspective of the second-generation Jewish twin brothers Danny and Alexander (Sascha) Demant, depicts the love affairs and often adversarial relationships between various Jewish and non-Jewish members of the contemporary Viennese intellectual scene. The second strand narrates a crisis experienced by a member of “another second generation” (Alan L. Berger and Naomi Berger, 1), Konrad Sachs, the German son of a high-ranking Nazi. The third narrative functions as a novel within a novel, written by Emanuel Katz, an acquaintance of Danny's and the son of a Holocaust survivor.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Second-Generation Holocaust LiteratureLegacies of Survival and Perpetration, pp. 91 - 124Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2006