Witnessing Positions
Description
Highly visible, majority-led public discussions over Holocaust memory, antisemitism, and migration in Germany are often about minorities, whose actual social presence, perspectives, and voices remain missing. Majority society often delineates the terms of minority inclusion, assigning these groups narrowly defined social roles without their input. Witnessing Positions addresses this omission, and examines these debates as sites in which belonging is negotiated and contested.
In two parts, author Irit Dekel analyzes how Jews and other minoritized groups respond to such positioning by forging forms of social presence through acts of witnessing--both to one another and to the majority society in which they live. First, Dekel investigates Germany's memory culture and its tendency to separate Jews from other minority groups, revealing how majority society stages memory work as a self-reflective project centered on its Others. She then turns to minority-led interventions, examining spaces of appearance in which Jews, migrants and other otherss engage in memory work themselves, observing majority society and one another as equal co-witnesses.
Witnessing Positions offers a new framework for analyzing minority voices, performance, and appearance, and in doing so, it contributes to renewed debates on witnessing after the Holocaust while advancing broader discussions of belonging, memory, and public agency.
More details
Person
Irit Dekel is Assistant Professor of Germanic Studies and the Borns Jewish Studies Program and director of the Olamot Center at Indiana University. She is author of Mediation at the Holocaust Memorial in Berlin. She lives in Bloomington, IN.
Content
Acknowledgments
Introduction: On Witnessing, Social Positions, and Perspective
Part I: Majority Witnessing as Othering
1. Witnessing Antisemitism, Performing Philosemitism
2. Before and After the Witnesses
3. Witnessing Jews as Others
Part II: Witnessing Others
4. Witnessing as Recognition and Empowerment
5. Witnessing as Activism
6. Solidarity Witnessing
Conclusion: Witnessing for a Plural Democracy
Notes
Bibliography
Index