Abstract

Impact of the German-Jewish Experience on Western Culture held at the University of the Negev in Beersheva in March 1998, a conference at Cornell University in March 2001 on Narrative and the Holocaust, and, most directly, a seminar on Archives and the Production of Political Cultures at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor in November 2000 at which my husband Frank Mecklenburg, Research Director of the Leo Baeck Institute in New York, and I reflected, from quite different perspectives, on the origins, construction, and preservation of German-Jewish memory after 1945.1 In both cases, I took advantage of the prescribed themes to try out tentatively, with both abashed ambivalence and guilty pleasure what so

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