Available Formats
Claude Lanzmanns 'Shoah' Outtakes: Holocaust Rescue and Resistance
By (Author) Professor Sue Vice
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
15th July 2021
20th May 2021
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Documentary films
The Holocaust
Second World War
Modern warfare
791.4372
Hardback
256
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
572g
As we approach the end of the era of the witness, given the passing on of the generation of Holocaust survivors, Claude Lanzmanns archive of 220 hours of footage excluded from his ground-breaking documentary Shoah (1985) offers a remarkable opportunity to encounter previously unseen interviews with survivors and other witnesses, recorded in the late 1970s. Although the archive is all available freely to view online and includes extra footage of those who appear in Shoah, this book focuses on the interviews from which no extracts appear in the finished film or in any subsequent release. The material analysed features interviews with such significant figures as the former partisan Abba Kovner, wartime activist Hansi Brand, Kovno Ghetto leader Leib Garfunkel, rescuer Tadeusz Pankiewicz and members of Roosevelts War Refugee Board, and focuses throughout on the efforts at rescue and resistance by those within and outside occupied Europe. Sue Vice contends that watching and analysing this wholly excluded footage gives us new insights into the making of Shoah through what was left out. Moreover, she reveals that the near-impossibility of rescue and often suicidal implications of resistance emerge through these excluded interviews as inextricable from the process of genocide. She concludes by arguing that the outtakes show the potential for new filmic forms envisaged on Lanzmanns part in order to represent the crucial topics of attempted Holocaust rescue and resistance.
Claude Lanzmanns Shoah is notorious not only for its length but for the huge quantity of its outtakes. Vices book not only demonstrates that the daunting outtake material demands to be viewed, but also provides a model of how to read it. -- Dominic Williams, Northumbria University, UK
Sue Vice is Professor of English Literature at the University of Sheffield, UK. Her books include the BFI Film Classics volume on Shoah (2011), Representing Perpetrators in Holocaust Literature and Film (co-edited with Jenni Adams, 2013), Textual Deceptions: False Memoirs and Literary Hoaxes in the Contemporary Era (2014) and Barry Hines: Kes, Threads and Beyond (2017, with David Forrest).