ABSTRACT
In 1945, the American Jewish author Zelda Popkin visited displaced persons camps in Europe and encountered Jewish survivors. For the rest of her life, in letters, novels, articles, and her autobiography, she repeatedly recast these encounters in ways that both reflect the changing American view of the Holocaust and the unique perspective of an American Jewish woman on the subject.
Copyright © 2018 by The Pennsylvania State University. All rights reserved. No copies may be made without the written permission of the publisher.
2018
The Pennsylvania State University
Issue Section:
ARTICLES
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