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While America watchesWhile America watches

While America watches1999

Jeffrey Shandler

About this book

The Holocaust holds a unique place in American public culture, and, as Jeffrey Shandler demonstrates, television has played a strategic role in establishing the Holocaust as a powerful moral paradigm in the United States. And while much has been written about Holocaust literature and film, the medium that has brought the subject to most people - television - has been largely neglected. Now Shandler provides the first account of how television has enabled so many Americans to feel familiar with this remote and deeply disturbing subject. In America, where mediations have always provided most people with their primary encounter with the Holocaust, television has helped transform watching into the morally charged act of "witnessing" the Holocaust. By tracing the course of Holocaust television over the past half century, While America Watches reveals how Americans have come to embrace this subject as a model for responding to other moral crises, from domestic racial strife to "ethnic cleansing" operations in Bosnia.

Details

First published
1999
OL Work ID
OL1810355W

Subjects

Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945), on televisionTelevision broadcastingHolocaust, jewish (1939-1945)Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945), in television

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Book data from Open Library. Cover images courtesy of Open Library.