Invasive Memory and W G Sebald’s The Emigrants

The purpose of this research paper is to critically investigate the invasive nature of memory in W. G. Sebald’s The Emigrants. Sebald chooses four Jews who experienced the terror of time characterized by the sinister anti-Semitism under Hitler. Dr Henry Selwyn, Paul Bereyter, Ambrose Adelwarth and M...

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Main Author: Chandan Kumar Panda
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Department of English, Bodoland University 2022-06-01
Series:Transcript: An e-Journal of Literary and Cultural Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://thetranscript.in/invasive-memory-and-w-g-sebalds-the-emigrants/
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author Chandan Kumar Panda
author_facet Chandan Kumar Panda
author_sort Chandan Kumar Panda
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description The purpose of this research paper is to critically investigate the invasive nature of memory in W. G. Sebald’s The Emigrants. Sebald chooses four Jews who experienced the terror of time characterized by the sinister anti-Semitism under Hitler. Dr Henry Selwyn, Paul Bereyter, Ambrose Adelwarth and Max Ferber escaped the Nazi terror but fell, unfortunately, prey to the reconstructive power of memory. Memory recreates the past. By recreating the past, it represences it. The represencing of the past for the aforementioned characters was to remind them of the events which disfigured their sense of self, belongingness, family, etc. It was difficult for them to live in the post-holocaust period in a different country as emigrants under the unending reconfiguring power of memory. The growing sense of fear and isolation as Jewish emigrants was further exacerbated by the tormenting reincarnation of the vicious past in the domain of memory. This recurrent reconfiguration of the most terrible historical reality, which embodied complete obliteration of Jewish existence, invited derangement to the sensitive survivors. This repetitive resurrection of the events of the past in the territory of memory is called invasive because it precipitated acute restlessness among the survivors and engaged them painfully with the past. Much of their growing isolation and their suicidal tendencies emanated from the unending experience of pain occasioned by the restorative re-emergence of the past occurring in the field of memory.
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spelling doaj.art-296cc54d37a442009aedbf0a8b696cb32023-12-05T16:49:57ZengDepartment of English, Bodoland UniversityTranscript: An e-Journal of Literary and Cultural Studies2582-98582022-06-01212043https://doi.org/10.53034/Transcript.2022.v02.n01.002Invasive Memory and W G Sebald’s The EmigrantsChandan Kumar Panda0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9000-830XRajiv Gandhi University, Arunachal Pradesh, IndiaThe purpose of this research paper is to critically investigate the invasive nature of memory in W. G. Sebald’s The Emigrants. Sebald chooses four Jews who experienced the terror of time characterized by the sinister anti-Semitism under Hitler. Dr Henry Selwyn, Paul Bereyter, Ambrose Adelwarth and Max Ferber escaped the Nazi terror but fell, unfortunately, prey to the reconstructive power of memory. Memory recreates the past. By recreating the past, it represences it. The represencing of the past for the aforementioned characters was to remind them of the events which disfigured their sense of self, belongingness, family, etc. It was difficult for them to live in the post-holocaust period in a different country as emigrants under the unending reconfiguring power of memory. The growing sense of fear and isolation as Jewish emigrants was further exacerbated by the tormenting reincarnation of the vicious past in the domain of memory. This recurrent reconfiguration of the most terrible historical reality, which embodied complete obliteration of Jewish existence, invited derangement to the sensitive survivors. This repetitive resurrection of the events of the past in the territory of memory is called invasive because it precipitated acute restlessness among the survivors and engaged them painfully with the past. Much of their growing isolation and their suicidal tendencies emanated from the unending experience of pain occasioned by the restorative re-emergence of the past occurring in the field of memory.https://thetranscript.in/invasive-memory-and-w-g-sebalds-the-emigrants/memoryemigrantsanti-semitismtraumasuicidehistoryholocaust
spellingShingle Chandan Kumar Panda
Invasive Memory and W G Sebald’s The Emigrants
Transcript: An e-Journal of Literary and Cultural Studies
memory
emigrants
anti-semitism
trauma
suicide
history
holocaust
title Invasive Memory and W G Sebald’s The Emigrants
title_full Invasive Memory and W G Sebald’s The Emigrants
title_fullStr Invasive Memory and W G Sebald’s The Emigrants
title_full_unstemmed Invasive Memory and W G Sebald’s The Emigrants
title_short Invasive Memory and W G Sebald’s The Emigrants
title_sort invasive memory and w g sebald s the emigrants
topic memory
emigrants
anti-semitism
trauma
suicide
history
holocaust
url https://thetranscript.in/invasive-memory-and-w-g-sebalds-the-emigrants/
work_keys_str_mv AT chandankumarpanda invasivememoryandwgsebaldstheemigrants