Not offered 2007-2008
ARTH 463 The Holocaust Visualized
This seminar will examine how memories of the Holocaust have been conveyed through visual means and consider what historical, cultural and political circumstances have caused
various nations to remember the Holocaust differently. We will discuss the issues prompted
by public memorials, exhibitions and, as one writer puts it, the "museumification" of concentration camps. How should we define the Holocaust? Whose memory should take precedence? What is lost or gained by the inclusion of texts with images? How might memory be
misrepresented by the exhibition of visual materials such as video testimony, photographs
and artifacts? In addition, we will study art about the Holocaust, including Art Spiegelman's
non-comic "comic book" Maus and non-fiction films such as Night and Fog, Shoah and
Schindler's List, to ask whether constructed or simulated images can convey the experience
of the Holocaust as well as documentary ones.
Requirements: active participation in class discussion and regular participation in a class
listserver discussion group, trip to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, one oral presentation, and one research paper; no exams.
No prerequisites. Enrollment limited. Not open to auditors or first-year students.
This course is part of the Jewish Studies concentration.
E. GRUDIN