- Variant Title
- Museum objects between the material and the immaterial
- Series
- The Holocaust and its contexts
Holocaust and its contexts.
- Format
- Book
- Author/Creator
- Paver, Chloe E. M., author.
- Published
- Cham, Switzerland : Palgrave Macmillan, [2018]
©2018
- Locale
- Germany
Austria
- Contents
-
1. Introduction
1.1. Objects in Focus
1.2. Exhibitionary Routine
1.3. Scope of the Study
1.4. Research Context
1.5. Structure of the Analysis
2. Between the Material and the Immaterial
2.1. Broken Glass
2.2. Objects as Signifiers and Fragments
2.3. Mentalities, Experiences, Emotions
and Objects
2.4. Object Life Cycles
3. Material Experiences, 1933
45
3.1. Jews and Heimat: Objects and Belonging
3.2. Mentalities and Materials
3.3. Hitler Busts and Nazi Symbols
3.4. Material Economies and Sign Systems of the Camps
3.5. Material Experiences of the Non-persecuted Majority in Wartime
4. Material Collapse, 1945
4.1. Sortie de Guerre: Objects Caught in Time
4.2. Vandalism, Disposal and Recycling
4.3. New Material Beginnings for the Victims
5. Material After-Lives Between the Attic and the Archive
5.1. Hitler in the Attic, in the Museum: How the Domestic Spaces of the Majority Culture Have Yielded Up Objects
5.2. Hiding in Plain Sight: Remnants of National Socialism in the Public Sphere
5.3. Resurfacing and Restitution: Victims' Objects After 1945
5.4. Survival Among Objects
5.5. Michael Kohlmeier's Story `Der Silberloffel': `Aryanized' Objects in the Liberal Imagination
5.6. Coming to Terms with the Coming to Terms
5.7. Life Goes on in the Museum: The Continuation of the Object Life Cycle
6. Conclusion.
- Notes
-
Includes bibliographical references (pages 279-294) and index.
1. Introduction -- 1.1. Objects in Focus -- 1.2. Exhibitionary Routine -- 1.3. Scope of the Study -- 1.4. Research Context -- 1.5. Structure of the Analysis -- 2. Between the Material and the Immaterial -- 2.1. Broken Glass -- 2.2. Objects as Signifiers and Fragments -- 2.3. Mentalities, Experiences, Emotions -- and Objects -- 2.4. Object Life Cycles -- 3. Material Experiences, 1933 -- 45 -- 3.1. Jews and Heimat: Objects and Belonging -- 3.2. Mentalities and Materials -- 3.3. Hitler Busts and Nazi Symbols -- 3.4. Material Economies and Sign Systems of the Camps -- 3.5. Material Experiences of the Non-persecuted Majority in Wartime -- 4. Material Collapse, 1945 -- 4.1. Sortie de Guerre: Objects Caught in Time -- 4.2. Vandalism, Disposal and Recycling -- 4.3. New Material Beginnings for the Victims -- 5. Material After-Lives Between the Attic and the Archive -- 5.1. Hitler in the Attic, in the Museum: How the Domestic Spaces of the Majority Culture Have Yielded Up Objects -- 5.2. Hiding in Plain Sight: Remnants of National Socialism in the Public Sphere -- 5.3. Resurfacing and Restitution: Victims' Objects After 1945 -- 5.4. Survival Among Objects -- 5.5. Michael Kohlmeier's Story `Der Silberloffel': `Aryanized' Objects in the Liberal Imagination -- 5.6. Coming to Terms with the Coming to Terms -- 5.7. Life Goes on in the Museum: The Continuation of the Object Life Cycle -- 6. Conclusion.