(June 2014)
Wednesday, 1 June 2016
'Landscapes of the Metropolis of Death' by Otto Dov Kulka
A child exposed to experiences of a kind and scale that
cannot be assimilated will create their own mythology to make life liveable.
Otto Dov Kulka was a child in Auschwitz, and went on to become a prominent
historian of the Holocaust. This book is remarkable as it deals specifically
with the internal aspects of surviving in an intolerable situation, young Otto’s
‘Metropolis of Death’. One of the tragedies of the Holocaust was the way in
which millions of people, each with their own personal narrative, were subsumed
by a single narrative (one which led to the gas chambers and crematoria). It is
unfortunate that even many of the most sympathetic portrayals and histories tend
to reinforce the single narrative, the erasure, and it is interesting to read
Kulka express his feelings of alienation when reading or watching accounts of
concentration camp experiences. One of Kulka’s achievements in this deeply
thoughtful book is to show how an individual can retain that individuality, and
even find a sort of beauty and meaning, even under the irresistible weight of a
subsuming narrative such as the ‘immutable law of the Great
Death’.
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Kulka (Otto Dov)
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