Brown Bag Biography with Nathalie S茅geral

October 23, 12:00pm - 1:15pm
Mānoa Campus, Kuykendall 410

Being pregnant in the Nazi extermination camps was far from exceptional. Among the 120,000 women deported to Ravensbr眉ck, thousands are likely to have been expecting. In Bergen-Belsen, about 200 births were recorded. This presentation will focus on published and unpublished 鈥渄eferred testimonies鈥 (Horowitz 2022) of birth in the camps, both from the mother鈥檚 perspective and from the child鈥檚 standpoint. In their cathartic function, retrospective narratives often sublimate pregnancy into an act of resistance, whereby motherhood is rewritten into a successful story in keeping with established gender norms. Examining how silences and gaps are filled by an intertextuality with fiction and other survivors鈥 testimonies, I will highlight instances of embodied feminism, redressing the omission of women鈥檚 experiences as birthing mothers from French Holocaust studies.


Event Sponsor
Center for Biographical Research, Mānoa Campus

More Information
Laura M. Dunn, 808-956-3774, biograph@hawaii.edu

Share by email