Against the Unspeakable: Complicity, the Holocaust,
and Slavery in America |
| |
| Naomi Mandel |
| 304 pages, 6 x 9 |
| 3 b&w illustrations |
| Cloth 978-0-8139-2580-6 $59.50 |
| Paper 978-0-8139-2581-3 $22.50 |
| Cultural
Frames, Framing Culture |
 |
In the wake of World War II, the Nazi genocide of European Jews
has come to stand for "the unspeakable," posing crucial
challenges to the representation of suffering, the articulation
of identity, and the practice of ethics in an increasingly multinational
and multicultural world. In this book, Naomi Mandel argues against
the "unspeakable" as any kind of inherent quality of
such an event, insisting that the term is a rhetorical tactic
strategically employed to further specific cultural and political
agendas. While claiming to preserve the uniqueness, sanctity,
and inviolability of human suffering, the author writes, the assumption
that suffering is unspeakable works to silence and negate the
suffering human body and finally enables us to forget our own
vulnerability to suffering.
Discussing a variety of texts such as Toni Morrison's Beloved,
Steven Spielberg's Schindler's List, and William Styron's
Confessions of Nat Turner, Mandel asks: What does the evocation
of the limits of language enable writers, authors, and critics
to do? With the goal of reconciling language and corporeality
and integrating experience into the economy of language, community,
identity, and ethics, she shows how, when, and why the term "unspeakable"
is used. Mandel draws on critical theory, literary analysis, and
film studies to offer a paradigm of reading that will enable the
crucial work on comparative atrocities and the representation
of suffering to move beyond the impasse of "unspeakability."
Her book will appeal to scholars in the study of trauma and genocide,
anti-Semitism and racism, as well as in literary, cultural, and
comparative ethnic studies.
Naomi Mandel, Associate Professor of English
at the University of Rhode Island, is coeditor with Alain-Philippe
Durand of Novels of the Contemporary Extreme.