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Roger Frie - Not in My Family: German Memory and Responsibility After the Holocaust

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Roger Frie Not in My Family: German Memory and Responsibility After the Holocaust
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Advance praise for Not in My Family: German Memory and Responsibility After the Holocaust

Searingly honest, multi-textured, and beautifully written. Roger Fries riveting exploration of intergenerational war memory and submerged guilt will be read as an instant classic.

Erna Paris, author ofLong Shadows: Truth, Lies, and History

Not in My Family is a book of outstanding importance. Roger Frie blends personal memoir, psychoanalytic insight and deep historical scholarship, and draws out the complex web of emotions that surround German identities in the wake of the Holocaust. This profound, moving and beautifully written work looks unblinkingly at the hidden and denied effects of Nazism on German society and shows how facing responsibility for historical crimes is at once a social, family and personal responsibility. This is a book both for scholars and for everyone who cares about the shadows cast on the present by the horrors of the past.

Stephen Frosh, Professor and Pro-Vice Master, Department of Psychosocial Studies, Birkbeck College, University of London

This book is so remarkable because it accomplishes the nearly impossible: acknowledging German pain, while keeping in constant focus the unimaginable suffering and pain Germany inflicted. Frie ardently and generously opens his own mental processes for the reader to examine and to know. He reaches into the deepest recesses he can access, in a continuous process of self-search and self-reflection. It is a search for a lived historical truth in himself, the truth of his beloved maternal grandfather, a member of the Nazi party, and the latters complicity in the crimes committed by the Nazi regime.

Dori Laub MD, Yale University School of Medicine and Co-Founder of the Fortunoff Video Archive for Holocaust Testimonies

Remembering and forgetting are not only about cognition and neurology but also about emotions and moral engagement, about taking a stance. Roger Frie makes clear that when autobiographical and social memories of the Holocaust are passed on to the next generations they are never pure memories but inextricably caught in a cultural web of narrative, history, and moral interpretation. From the unique perspective of a cultural psychoanalyst-philosopher, this book gives us a compelling picture of the intricacy of this web.

Jens Brockmeier, Professor of Psychology, The American University of Paris

Not in My Family brings the personal and the academic into conversation with one another in a productive, human, and moving way. This book not only demonstrates the power that history exerts over human beings, but also reveals how we can process that history in a way that is both personal and transcends the individual, that combines emotional and intellectual work. Roger Frie works through the impact of the Holocaust on his family and on himself as a way to consider its effects on humanity, includingspecifically--on the readers of this gripping and important book.

Thomas Kohut, Sue and Edgar Wachenheim III Professor of History, Williams College

This book breaks the spell of the past and points the way to a future that preserves our shared humanity. Fries painstaking and frank narrative relates the personal to collective memory and shows how the effects of Nazi history must concern us all to this day. His comprehensive, thought-provoking account of the past is deeply honest, future-oriented and inspiring.

Alexandra Senfft, author ofThe Long Shadow of Perpetrators: Descendants Face Their Nazi Family History

Bringing the unspoken into words, the breaking of taboo and, in the process, exposing ones vulnerability, is not easy work or for the faint of heart. Reading this book kindled many memories of my own history growing up, where there was rampant anti-Semitism, in a neighborhood where there were very few Jews. I grew up with an ever-present sense of fear, inherited from my familys history, and frequently heard derogatory remarks that often kept me from disclosing my Jewish identity. This is one of the powers of Not in My Family. Reading Roger Fries story compels us all to remember our own. Moreover, it helps us in learning how to situate and inform our memories and understandings within the broad context of history, moral responsibility, and the current world. This is a remarkable work.

Jeff Sugarman, Professor of Education, Simon Fraser University

Not in My Family illustrates the work that is required if we are to honor our responsibility to remember. As the author, psychoanalyst Roger Frie, explores what discovering his grandfathers Nazi affiliation meant to him, this book emerges as a gem for examining the transmission of memories related to the Holocaust and the moral obligations of memory. Anyone interested in the impact the collective memory of historic events can have on individuals should read this moving story.

Vamk D. Volkan MD, Emeritus Professor of Psychiatry and author ofA Nazi Legacy: Depositing, Transgenerational Transmission, Dissociation, and Remembering through Action

This masterful and emotional book needs to be widely read. Finding the Nazi past in his own family, Frie calls on Germans, as well as others, to feel the responsibility to remember the collective crimes of the past. He bravely shares his personal story and in so doing invites all of us to recognize how the traces of atrocity remain within us.

Yecheskiel Cohen, Israel Psychoanalytic Society and Tel Aviv University

Both a soul-searcher and an interdisciplinary scholar, Roger Frie asks us to face the unavoidable: how are we responsible for what we only half know, and may not have personally lived? His determined confrontation with the dark times into whose shadows and crimes he was born challenges the reader emotionally, intellectually and ethically.

Donna Orange, New York University Postdoctoral Program in Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis

Not in My Family
Explorations in Narrative Psychology

Mark Freeman

Series Editor

Books in the Series

Speaking of Violence

Sara Cobb

Narrative Imagination and Everyday Life

Molly Andrews

Narratives of Positive Aging: Seaside Stories

Amia Lieblich

Beyond the Archive: Memory, Narrative, and the Autobiographical Process

Jens Brockmeier

The Narrative Complexity of Ordinary Life: Tales from the Coffee Shop

William L. Randall

Rethinking Thought: Inside the Minds of Creative Scientists and Artists

Laura Otis

Life and Narrative: The Risks and Responsibilities of Storying Experience

Edited by Brian Schiff, Sylvie Patron, and A. Elizabeth McKim

Not in My Family: German Memory and Responsibility

After the Holocaust

Roger Frie

Not in My Family German Memory and Responsibility After the Holocaust - image 1

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Published in the United States of America by Oxford University Press

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Oxford University Press 2017

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, without the prior permission in writing of Oxford University Press, or as expressly permitted by law, by license, or under terms agreed with the appropriate reproduction rights organization. Inquiries concerning reproduction outside the scope of the above should be sent to the Rights Department, Oxford University Press, at the address above.

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