Edited by Martin Ira Glassner and Robert Krell
Sponsored by the Holocaust Child Survivors of Connecticut
Paper - 9780814331736
Price: $29.95s
Subjects: Children's Studies
Series: Landscapes of Childhood Series
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Published by Wayne State University Press
Martin Ira Glassner is a retired professor of geography and political science and a former foreign service officer. He is currently a lecturer and consultant living in Connecticut.
Robert Krell is professor emeritus of psychiatry at the University of British Columbia and a researcher and therapist specializing in child survivors, of which he is one.
“In the canon of first-person Holocaust narratives, this is a book that will not soon be forgotten.”
— Rivka Schiller, Journal for Genocide Research
“In the canon of first-person Holocaust narratives, this is a book that will not soon be forgotten.”
— Journal of Genocide Research
“A rare and most important contribution to the field of Holocaust studies. This remarkable compilation of autobiographies of those who survived genocidal persecution as children is a living testimony to resilience and generativity under the most unspeakable conditions. Robert Krell, Martin Glassner, and the Holocaust Child Survivors of Connecticut remind us that the legacy of the youngest survivors of the Shoah is the triumph over Hitler's 'final solution.'”
— Ira Brenner, Jefferson Medical College, co-author of The Last Witness: The Child Survivor of the Holocaust
“Gripping memoirs of lost childhoods spent in hiding. Stories of fear, panic, rage, self-blame, of bonding and loss many times over. Inspiring accounts of the human resiliency that triumphed over denial and grief, and led to productive post-war lives.”
— Jacques Kornberg, professor Emeritus, University of Toronto, author of Theodor Herzl: From Assimilation to Zionism
“The importance of personal testimony has become an established principle across cultures and academic disciplines as well as in the field of mental health. But adult memories of traumatic childhoods continue to constitute a controversial issue. This collection, compiled by Martin Glassner, of memoirs of Holocaust child survivors covers a wide range of countries (including prewar Jewish life in Greece and Italy), and commentary by child psychiatrist and child survivor Robert Krell makes it an unusual addition to both the Holocaust and trauma literature.”
— Helen Epstein, author of Where She Came From: A Daughter's Search for her Mother's History