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Rescued twice: the French Kindertransport Differences from and similarities to the British Kindertransport
Published 2020-03-01Get full text
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The Dudley Refugee Committee and the Kindertransport, 1938–1945
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Introduction: Breadth and depth in the history of the Kindertransport and beyond
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Archives and the Kindertransport: new discoveries and their impact on research
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Memory of the Kindertransport in Britain and Germany, and the current refugee crisis
Published 2020-12-01Subjects: “…Kindertransport…”
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The Kindertransport Everyday: The Complexities of Domestic Space for Child Refugees
Published 2023-04-01Subjects: “…Kindertransport…”
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The resilience of the refugee: how Kindertransport memoirs complicate understandings of “resilience”
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Exploring the integration of child refugees in the United Kingdom: the case of the Kindertransport
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The emergence of the Kindertransport in Prague: the Barbican Mission to the Jews, a unique endeavour
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The Kindertransport from Vienna: the children who came and those left behind
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<b>Architectures of a fragmented memory: imprisonment and liberation in W. G. Sebald's <i>Austerlitz
Published 2015-07-01Subjects: Get full text
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A Stereometry of Non-Memory: Mapping a Lost Past in W.G. Sebald’s <i>Austerlitz</i>
Published 2023-02-01“…Particularly, the article will explore the eponymous protagonist’s sense that ‘time [does] not exist at all, only various spaces interlocking according to the rules of a higher form of stereometry,’ and will demonstrate how this subjective experience of time is a consequence of the absence of memory experienced by the protagonist in relation to his origins as a Kindertransport survivor of the Holocaust. Similarly, the article will explore how spaces—particularly buildings—and material artefacts come to act as an (insufficient) surrogate for memory within the text. …”
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