La ficción sobre el Holocaustosilencio, límites de representación y popularización en la novela Everything is Illuminated de Jonathan Safran Foer

  1. Munté, Rosa-Auria
Dirigida per:
  1. Ferran Sáez Mateu Director/a
  2. Alejandro Baer Director/a

Universitat de defensa: Universitat Ramon Llull

Fecha de defensa: 20 de d’abril de 2012

Tribunal:
  1. Marisa Siguán President/a
  2. Carles Torner Secretari/ària
  3. José Luis Arráez Llobregat Vocal

Tipus: Tesi

Teseo: 325855 DIALNET

Resum

The question of how the Holocaust should be represented is and has been a problematic and essential question in Holocaust Studies. Certain academics and intellectuals have denied the possibility of representation, and very specially, have denied the use of literary and cinematographic fiction. This thesis analyses the three stages of reception of the Holocaust and their predominant academic discourses. The initial silence and social invisibility of the genocide, in which the Adornian dictum is formulated on the unrepresentability of the genocide of European Jews. Later, the Holocaust is made socially visible, and the emergence of controversial works of fiction force us to consider the option of certain "limits of representation". And, recently, in which fiction about the Holocaust has become popularized and globalized, and become part of the entertainment and consumer mass media. In this context, in which fictional representations of the genocide of European Jews are now part of our culture, this case study focuses on the narratological analysis of the book, Everything is Illuminated (2002), by Jonathan Safran Foer, in order to present a fictional choice of the Holocaust.