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“Bonfire in summer camp”: Defamiliarization and the Holocaust
- Partial Answers: Journal of Literature and the History of Ideas
- Johns Hopkins University Press
- Volume 14, Number 1, January 2016
- pp. 99-114
- 10.1353/pan.2016.0010
- Article
- Additional Information
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While scholars have offered independent readings of Philip Roth’s and Saul Bellow’s provocative representations of the Holocaust camp, I put Roth’s and other writers’ (Anthony Hecht’s, Carl Friedman’s, and Nathan Englander’s) handling of this topos in tension with Bellow in their search of ways to approach traumatic history. Without taking sides, I contend that the crisis in representation brought on by the age of genocide comes into focus more vividly through the defamiliarizing trope of the Holocaust camp as seen in more recent fiction than in Bellow’s more poetic, alienating novel.