WOMEN’S RESISTANCE THROUGH TESTIMONY – A STUDY OF SURVIVORS’ TALES FROM THE HOLOCAUST
Abstract
This thesis analyses Jewish women Holocaust survivor’s testimonies. The purpose is to
investigate what events the women tell of, how they tell of the choice and act of giving
testimony, and to analyse whether resistance is manifest in their stories. I offer an
interpretation with a feminist and intersectional historical outlook through the use of oral
history as method and collective memory as an overarching framework. Common gender
essentialist readings of women’s survivor stories from the Holocaust are enhancements of the
"heroine" aspect of the characters that emerge in survivor testimonies, and the diminution of
character aspects that do not correspond with preconceived gender roles. By further
reinforcing epithets such as “heroine”, there is a risk of withholding complex readings. In
taking use of Avery Gordon’s concept of complex personhood and Joan W. Scott and Judith
Butlers understandings of gender as a useful category of historical analysis, I attempt to avoid
essentialism and further a feminist analysis of women’s testimonies from the Holocaust. I
argue that the actual acts the women tell of, in addition to the telling of the stories themselves
and how they speak of this, all serve as means of resistance. The result of the analysis is that
the women’s testimonies together create a powerful collective memory, a collective solidarity,
which seeks to make amends for, and thereby retroactively show resistance to what they
endured, while also hindering oppression in the contemporary.
Degree
Master's thesis
View/ Open
Date
2016-02-19Author
Tullia Von Sydow, Katarina
Keywords
the Holocaust
resistance
testimony
women
gender
oral history
collective memory
complex personhood
intersectionality
Series/Report no.
Master
Thesis