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The Politics of Memory in the Jüdische Museum Berlin, 1999-2004: Curatorial Strategies, Exhibition Spaces, and the German-Jewish Past

Miller, Brian J.
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Abstract

This thesis explores representations of the Holocaust in the Jewish Museum Berlin and the impact of commercialism on representational choices. Daniel Libeskind’s bold architectural design, which ultimately became the Jewish Museum Berlin, is in many ways a Holocaust memorial. By exploring curatorial strategies in regards to exhibition design and content, this thesis analyzes the debates within the Jewish Museum Berlin over the appropriate manner to represent the Holocaust to the museum-going public in contemporary Germany. This thesis argues that commercialism and the prospects of commercial viability played a significant role in curatorial decisions concerning exhibition narrative. Germany leads the world in acknowledging and exploring their past social crimes but, this thesis argues, an important opportunity for atonement was lost when the administration of the Jewish Museum Berlin privileged commercial success over the presentation of more difficult and uncomfortable, yet socially necessary, representations of the horror of the Holocaust.

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2005-05-12
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Keywords
Commemoration practices, Museological practices and pedagogy, Memory studies, Commercialism, Holocaust, Curatorial strategies, Jewish Museum Berlin, Visitor marketing research
Citation
Miller, Brian J.. "The Politics of Memory in the Jüdische Museum Berlin, 1999-2004: Curatorial Strategies, Exhibition Spaces, and the German-Jewish Past." Thesis. Georgia State University, 2005. https://doi.org/10.57709/1059608
Embargo Lift Date
2012-01-26
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