And Yet I Still Have Dreams: A Story of a Certain Loneliness

Author:   Joanna Wiszniewicz ,  Regina Grol ,  Regina Grol
Publisher:   Northwestern University Press
ISBN:  

9780810118140


Pages:   176
Publication Date:   31 December 2004
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available.

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And Yet I Still Have Dreams: A Story of a Certain Loneliness


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Overview

And Yet I Still Have Dreams is a departure from many Holocaust memoirs. Angry, pugnacious, contemptuous of the stereotypes found in some survivor literature, and honest about the shortcomings of its characters, the book is based on interviews with """"Alex,"""" an anonymous survivor of the Warsaw Ghetto and three concentration camps, following his life from a childhood in a family of assimilated Jews to his coming to terms as an older man with his memories. The book spares neither the reader nor Alex's own family a connection to seldom-discussed, and unflattering, aspects of the Holocaust: the gulf between rich and poor Jews and how this translated into everyday survival; the refusal to see himself or Jews in general as heroes or victims; his own self-absorption as a teen in the ghetto; and his """"privileged"""" family's near-indifference to the suffering of those around them. But his consideration of his life and the issues raised are just as compelling - and far more rarely seen. Drawing on psychological, cultural, and historic insight, Alex paints a picture of a complex and diverse Jewish society in prewar Poland. Looking back on his experiences, he refuses to find a """"message"""" in the Holocaust. And, most remarkably, he frankly discusses his postwar guilt about his own behavior and the shame he felt for his people's humiliation by the Nazis, and reveals how, many years later, and despite his determination to leave it in the past, the burdens of memory - and the dreams - linger.

Full Product Details

Author:   Joanna Wiszniewicz ,  Regina Grol ,  Regina Grol
Publisher:   Northwestern University Press
Imprint:   Northwestern University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 14.20cm , Height: 1.10cm , Length: 22.10cm
Weight:   0.217kg
ISBN:  

9780810118140


ISBN 10:   0810118149
Pages:   176
Publication Date:   31 December 2004
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  General/trade ,  Undergraduate ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available.

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Reviews

""This book is a find! Alex's haunting memories, almost teased out of him by Wiszniewicz are an important part of the story Jewish life and of post-Holocaust survival."" --Madeline G. Levine, Kenan Professor of Slavic Literatures, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill ""And Yet I Still Have Dreams will hold a unique place among Holocaust memoirs for the candid portrayal that Alex offers of himself and his circumstances in a voice that compels readers to confront the particular nuances of the devastating events. . . .Regina Grol's elegant translation captures the narrator's rich idiom without sacrificing clarity. Alex's memories and reflections ring true, even if they are sometimes discomforting, and Grol's helpful explanations of pertinent linguistic, cultural, and historical matters greatly enhance Wiszniewicz's original text to the benefit of the English-speaking reader."" --Rosemary G. Feal, Executive Director, Modern Language Association ""This is a splendid book. Its hero, Alex, is not one frequently encountered in the vast post-Holocaust literature. Born in 1927, his family was an unlikely combination of Orthodox Jews, Zionists, and Polish patriots--that is, hihgly assimilated Jews, but Jews nevertheless. Alex describes his harrowing experiences during and after the war without any sentimentality or rancor, but with impressive candor. Wiszniewicz's book is that rare thing--noble, wise, and compulsively readable."" --Abraham Brumberg, author, critic, and editor of Poland: Genesis of a Revolution


This book is a find! Alex's haunting memories, almost teased out of him by Wiszniewicz are an important part of the story Jewish life and of post-Holocaust survival. --Madeline G. Levine, Kenan Professor of Slavic Literatures, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill


This book is a find! Alex's haunting memories, almost teased out of him by Wiszniewicz are an important part of the story Jewish life and of post-Holocaust survival. --Madeline G. Levine, Kenan Professor of Slavic Literatures, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill And Yet I Still Have Dreams will hold a unique place among Holocaust memoirs for the candid portrayal that Alex offers of himself and his circumstances in a voice that compels readers to confront the particular nuances of the devastating events. . . .Regina Grol's elegant translation captures the narrator's rich idiom without sacrificing clarity. Alex's memories and reflections ring true, even if they are sometimes discomforting, and Grol's helpful explanations of pertinent linguistic, cultural, and historical matters greatly enhance Wiszniewicz's original text to the benefit of the English-speaking reader. --Rosemary G. Feal, Executive Director, Modern Language Association This is a splendid book. Its hero, Alex, is not one frequently encountered in the vast post-Holocaust literature. Born in 1927, his family was an unlikely combination of Orthodox Jews, Zionists, and Polish patriots--that is, hihgly assimilated Jews, but Jews nevertheless. Alex describes his harrowing experiences during and after the war without any sentimentality or rancor, but with impressive candor. Wiszniewicz's book is that rare thing--noble, wise, and compulsively readable. --Abraham Brumberg, author, critic, and editor of Poland: Genesis of a Revolution And Yet I Still Have Dreams will hold a unique place among Holocaust memoirs for the candid portrayal that Alex offers of himself and his circumstances in a voice that compels readers to confront the particular nuances of the devastating events. . . .Regina Grol's elegant translation captures the narrator's rich idiom without sacrificing clarity. Alex's memories and reflections ring true, even if they are sometimes discomforting, and Grol's helpful explanations of pertinent linguistic, cultural, and historical matters greatly enhance Wiszniewicz's original text to the benefit of the English-speaking reader. --Rosemary G. Feal, Executive Director, Modern Language Association


Author Information

JOANNA WISZNIEWICZ is a writer and researcher at the Jewish Historical Institute in Warsaw, Poland. Her main field of interest is the identity formation among children of Holocaust survivors raised in Poland. She is currently at work on a book on this subject and has also previously written another book entitled From Poland to Israel: Interviews with the 1968 Generation (KARTA Publishing House, 1992). REGINA GROL is a professor of comparative literature at Empire State College, State University of New York and a specialist in Polish literature. She is the translator and editor of Ambers Aglow: An Anthology of Contemporary Polish Women's Poetry 1985-1995 (Host, 1997). """"ALEX"""" emigrated to the United States after World War II. He now lives on the East Coast where he works as a computer systems analyst.

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