"Law, Literature, and History: A Fateful Rendezvous with the Shoah" by Richard H. Weisberg
 
Law, Literature, and History: A Fateful Rendezvous with the Shoah

Law, Literature, and History: A Fateful Rendezvous with the Shoah

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The author claims in this book that close readings of stories, from Bernhard Schlink's The Reader and Guenther Grass's The Tin Drum through Bernard Malamud The Fixer and Mary Ann Shaffer and Annie Barrows' The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society, uniquely situates us to understand the clash of religious values that led to genocide in World War II Europe (including Great Britain). Most of the stories respond directly to this enormity, but some involve writers such as Shakespeare and Herman Melville, who, avant la lettre, pointed to seismic conflicts in law and religion.

"Law and Literature" methods uniquely permit the author to justify this assertion. Just as his work of history, Vichy Law and the Holocaust in France, grew out of a deep interest in Albert Camus (who also plays an important role in this manuscript), and just as it proceeded to analyze as texts various authoritative statements that contradicted each other and lied about Jews, but that found their way into French law books and theological discourse during Vichy, so throughout this book series, once closely examined, open the door to fathoming the violence caused by religious differences. Inspired in particular by James Carroll's Constantine's Sword and Harold Bloom's Jesus and Yahweh, the book provokes its reader to seek answers to millennia of atrocities disguised as "Judeo-Christian" affinity and at the same time to re-engage with a series of superb stories.

The author is already seen as a pioneer of the modern "Law and Literature movement" and is associated with connecting stories to fraught questions about history. The book continues to impart actual data from the wartime period, innovated in Vichy Law and the Holocaust in France (NYU), but it is a work of law, literary criticism, and comparative religion. Weisberg has a PhD French and comparative literature from Cornell, taught those subjects on the graduate faculty of the University of Chicago, practiced and taught law at Cardozo Law School in NYC and in many venues around the world. He was awarded the French Legion of Honor for his work "on behalf of victims of the Vichy regime". His previous books have been translated and reviewed widely.

ISBN

978-90-04-52516-0

Publication Date

4-4-2025

Publisher

Brill Publishers

City

Leiden, Netherlands

Disciplines

Law

Comments

Series: International Studies in Law and Literature, Volume: 2

Law, Literature, and History: A Fateful Rendezvous with the Shoah

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