We found a match
Your institution may have rights to this item. Sign in to continue.
- Title
Troubling Memories?: The German-American Heritage Museum of the U.S.A. and the Memory of the Holocaust.
- Authors
Lange, Julia
- Abstract
The recognition politics of German-American activists and their ethnic organizations have been marked by significant successes since the late 1980s. The opening of the German-American Heritage Museum of the U.S.A. (GAHM) in Washington, D.C. in 2010 is a symptom and continuation of these intensified visibility politics aimed at raising the symbolic capital of German-American ethnicity. By closely examining the representations of National Socialism and the Second World War in the GAHM's permanent exhibition and its wider cultural programs, including its temporary exhibitions, this paper sheds light on the museum's problematic memory politics which stand in direct competition with the one pursued by the nearby United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Whereas attempts at confronting the German National Socialist past have been intensified by the museum's leadership in more recent years, the existence of pro-Nazi German-American groups still remains silenced in the museum. German- American identity politics and the dynamics of Holocaust memory are intricately interrelated, I argue, with the latter not impeding but, paradoxically, rather catalyzing the former's strength.
- Subjects
MUSEUMS; WORLD War II; GERMAN Americans
- Publication
Journal of American Studies of Turkey (JAST), 2020, Issue 53, p7
- ISSN
1300-6606
- Publication type
Article