Title: TEACHING THE HOLOCAUST THROUGH FILM
1TEACHING THE HOLOCAUST THROUGH FILM
- Eleanor Andrews
- University of Wolverhampton
2Teaching about the Holocaust
- Advance knowledge about this unprecedented
destruction - Preserve the memory of those who suffered
- Encourage educators and students to reflect upon
the moral and spiritual questions raised by the
events of the Holocaust and as they apply in
todays world - ITF website
3Using Film
- Film gives us plenitude without specificity. Its
descriptive offerings are at once visually rich
and verbally impoverished. literary narrative
can be precise, but always within a narrow scope
- Chatman 1990 39-40, Original italics
4Facts and Figures
- To date 400 films on the Holocaust
- 40 are feature films
- 60 are cinema and television documentaries
5The Garden of the Finzi-Continis (Vittorio De
Sica, 1970)
6The Night Porter (Liliana Cavani, 1974)
7Schindlers List (Steven Spielberg, 1993)
8Propaganda
- Triumph of the Will
- Leni Riefenstahl, 1935
9Propaganda
- Jud Süß (Jew Süss) Veit Harlan, 1940
- Der ewige Jude (The Eternal Jew)
- Fritz Hippler, 1940
10Holocaust Films - Problems
- On the surface, realism is a reasonable
requirement for art that deals with history,
especially with an event as extreme as the
Holocaust. The imperative never to forget, made
more urgent by the growing problems of Holocaust
denial and Holocaust minimization, requires that
alterations to Holocaust art be carefully
scrutinized to ensure that they do not propagate
injurious ideas - Gefen Bar-on, 2005 180
11Holocaust Films - Problems
- If the purpose of Holocaust witness is dynamic
transmission the passing on of the testimony in
a way that invests its receivers with the moral
obligation to convey their knowledge to others
then the narrative must remain open to constant
elaboration, adaptation, and re-articulation in
ways that will recommend it to new generations of
listeners - Millicent Marcus, 2002 269
12Shoah Claude Lanzmann 1985
-
- Survivor
- Bystander
- Perpetrator
13Night and Fog Alain Resnais, 1955
14The Diary of Anne Frank (1959) George Stevens
15Nackt unter Wölfen - Naked Among Wolves (1963)
dir. Frank Beyer
16Hitlerjunge Salomon Europa Europa (1990) dir.
Agnieszka Holland
17Schindlers List (1993) Steven Spielberg
18Schindlers List (1993) Steven Spielberg
- It cant quite match the searing authenticity of
a true documentary like Shoah or Alain Resnaiss
Night and Fog, and it cant completely win us
over with its artistry, as Louis Malle does in
the lower-key Au Revoir les Enfants. But what it
can do, it does superlatively well. ... As a
contribution to popular culture, it can only do
good. Holocaust denial may or may not be a major
problem in future, but Holocaust ignorance,
Holocaust forgetfulness, and Holocaust
indifference are bound to be, and Schindlers
List is likely to do as much as any single work
can to dispel them. - John Gross (1994) The New York Review of Books
19Triumph of the Spirit (1989) Robert M. Young
20Bent (1997) Sean Mathias
21The Grey Zone (2001) Tim Blake Nelson
22The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas Mark Herman
(2008).
23Life is Beautiful (Roberto Benigni, 1997)
24Life is Beautiful (Roberto Benigni, 1997)
- What are the main themes of Life is Beautiful?
- Â
- How are the family / women / the Nazis
represented in La vita è bella? - Â
- How does Benigni succeed in dealing comically
with such a serious subject?
25Life is Beautiful (Roberto Benigni, 1997)
- Â How does he point out the fallacies of the
anti-Semitic regime? - Â
- Examine the function of the character Dr.
Lessing. - Â
- What is the purpose of the voice-over?
26Life is Beautiful (Roberto Benigni, 1997)
- How are the real horrors of the camp understood
by the audience? - Â
- Comment on Benignis use of language in the film.
- Â
- Comment on the use of patterns and repetitions in
this film. How do the jokes work?
27Life is Beautiful (Roberto Benigni, 1997)
- Where is the turning point of the film? How do
we see this? How does the first half of the film
differ visually from the second half? - Â
- Examine the relationship between Guido and
Giosuè. - Â
- How is life in the concentration camp portrayed?
- Â
- Is the tone of the film pessimistic or optimistic
and why do you think this?