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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

[en] BUT THEN WHAT?: NARRATIVES AND MEMORIES OF GRANDDAUGHTERS AND GRANDCHILDREN OF HOLOCAUST SURVIVORS / [pt] MAS E DEPOIS?: NARRATIVAS E MEMÓRIAS DE NETAS E NETOS DE SOBREVIVENTES DO HOLOCAUSTO

BRUNO MORGADO BOTELHO 15 February 2022 (has links)
[pt] Mas e depois? Narrativas e memórias de netas e netos de sobreviventes do Holocausto, tem como tema central as narrativas de netas e netos de sobreviventes do Holocausto que nasceram e/ou residem na cidade do Rio de Janeiro. O estudo se debruçou sobre as narrativas de quatro netas e três netos de sobreviventes do Holocausto, pessoas que se encontram dentro da faixa etária aproximada de 35 a 40 anos e que conviveram com avós vítimas da perseguição e extermínio nazista. Escutá-los trouxe fragmentos de histórias do passado ressignificados no tempo presente. O objetivo central foi ouvir as narrativas de netas e netos de sobreviventes deste evento para compreender o que conhecem e falam sobre o Holocausto. Foram perguntas orientadoras da pesquisa: (a) netas e netos de sobreviventes ouviram histórias sobre o Holocausto? (b) por quais experiências, relacionadas ao Holocausto, passaram junto de seus avós? O que aprenderam com eles? (c) há relevância dessas narrativas para além da esfera familiar? A memória de um evento traumático contribui para a formação humana? (d) existem tensões entre a voz e o silêncio – falar e calar - diante da lembrança do Holocausto? (e) existem e, se existem, quais são os impactos dessas narrativas para uma educação que caminhe na dimensão contrária à barbárie? A pesquisa teve como estratégia metodológica entrevistas semiestruturadas, individuais. Em função da pandemia de COVID-19, as entrevistas foram todas realizadas no formato online, através da plataforma google meet, gravadas em áudio e transcritas em sua íntegra. Foi escrita em pandemia. Desafiador. Possui como central aporte teórico-metodológico Walter Benjamin (1892-1940) e Zygmunt Bauman (1925-2017), dois importantes pensadores que foram escolhidos em função da relevância de seus conceitos e obras para o tema. Muitos outros autores chegam no decorrer de toda a dissertação com amplas contribuições e interlocuções teóricas. As análises indicam que ser terceira geração de sobrevivente do Holocausto traz o sentido de ser parte direta dessa história; carrega segredos, mistérios e sentimentos entrecruzados de singularidade e coletividade histórica. Medo, coragem, decisão, sustentação, luta, são sentimentos que as pessoas entrevistadas nesta pesquisa trouxeram entrelaçadas às suas memórias do que ouviram de seus avós e às suas reflexões no tempo presente. Rememorar os avós como exemplo, força e resistência, foram dados que apareceram de forma recorrente nas narrativas. Os achados ainda dizem de avós que falavam e não falavam sobre as experiências vividas no Holocausto; que narrar fazia bem a alguns e não necessariamente a outros; e que sentirem-se próximos das experiências vividas por seus avós se correlaciona com lugares geográficos e museus visitados, filmes, palestras ouvidas, além do que ouviram de seus pais, membros da segunda geração, e outros familiares. / [en] But then what? Narratives and memories of granddaughters and grandchildren of Holocaust survivors, has as its central theme the narratives of granddaughters and grandchildren of Holocaust survivors who were born and/or reside in the city of Rio de Janeiro. The study focused on the narratives of four granddaughters and three grandchildren of Holocaust survivors, people within the approximate age range of 35 to 40 years old and who lived with grandparents who were victims of Nazi persecution and extermination. Listening to them brought fragments of past stories reinterpreted in the present time. The main objective was to listen to the narratives of the granddaughters and grandchildren of survivors of this event in order to understand what they know and say about the Holocaust. The research guiding questions were: (a) granddaughters and grandchildren of survivors heard stories about the Holocaust? (b) what experiences, related to the Holocaust, did you have with your grandparents? What did you learn from them? (c) are these narratives relevant beyond the family sphere? Does the memory of a traumatic event contribute to human formation? (d) are there tensions between voice and silence – speaking and being silent – in the face of the memory of the Holocaust? (e) are there and, if so, what are the impacts of these narratives for an education that walks in a dimension contrary to barbarism? The research had as a methodological strategy semi-structured individual interviews. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the interviews were all conducted online, through the google meet platform, recorded in audio and transcribed in their entirety. It was written in pandemic. Challenger. Its central theoretical-methodological contribution is Walter Benjamin (1892-1940) and Zygmunt Bauman (1925-2017), two important thinkers who were chosen due to the relevance of their concepts and works to the theme. Many other authors arrive throughout the dissertation with extensive contributions and theoretical dialogues. Analyzes indicate that being a third generation Holocaust survivor makes the sense of being a direct part of this story; it carries secrets, mysteries and intertwined feelings of uniqueness and historical collectivity. Fear, courage, decision, support, struggle, are feelings that the people interviewed in this research brought intertwined to their memories of what they heard from their grandparents and to their reflections in the present time. Remembering grandparents as an example, strength and resistance were data that appeared recurrently in the narratives. The findings also tell of grandparents who talked and did not talk about the experiences lived in the Holocaust; that narrating was good for some and not necessarily for others; and that feeling close to the experiences lived by their grandparents correlates with geographical places and museums visited, movies, listened to lectures, in addition to what they heard from their parents, members of the second generation, and other family members.

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