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Etched in Flesh and Soul

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A series of numbers was tattooed on prisoners’ forearms only at one location - the Auschwitz concentration camp complex. Children, parents, grandparents, mostly Jews but also a significant number o...
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  • 20 December 2021
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A series of numbers was tattooed on prisoners’ forearms only at one location - the Auschwitz concentration camp complex. Children, parents, grandparents, mostly Jews but also a significant number of non-Jews scarred for life. Indelibly etched with a number into their flesh and souls, constantly reminding them of the horrors of the Holocaust.

References to the Auschwitz number appear in artworks from the Holocaust period and onwards, by survivors and non-survivor artists, and Jewish and non-Jewish artists. These artists refer to the number from Auschwitz to portray the Holocaust and its meaning. This book analyzes the place that the image of the Auschwitz number occupies in the artist’s consciousness and how it is grasped in the collective perception of different societies. It discusses how the Auschwitz number is used in public and private Holocaust commemoration. Additionally, the book describes the use of the Auschwitz number as a Holocaust icon to protest, warn, and fight against Holocaust denial.

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Price: $126.99
Pages: 219
Publisher: De Gruyter
Imprint: De Gruyter
Publication Date: 20 December 2021
ISBN: 9783110739916
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: ART015000 ART / History / General, ART015100 ART / History / Modern (late 19th Century to 1945), ART015110 ART / History / Contemporary (1945-), ART037000 ART / Art & Politics, HIS022000 HISTORY / Jewish, HIS043000 HISTORY / Holocaust
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Batya Brutin, Kunsthistorikerin und Kuratorin, Israel.

Batya Brutin, art historian and curator, researcher of Holocaust monuments and Holocaust visual arts, Israel.