“After All of it, She is Here”: Gender, Identity, and Empowerment in Women’s Ravensbrück Memoirs

Authors

  • Stephanie Brown

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.29173/cons24111

Abstract

This paper examines how gender and identity function in the personal memoirs of female Holocaust survivors. The memoirs of Nanda Herbermann and Sara Tuvel Bernstein, two survivors of Ravensbrück, the Nazis' concentration camp for women, are explored as case studies of how feminine gender identity influenced female inmates' experiences and recollections of life in Nazi concentration camps. The different backgrounds of these women, as a German Catholic and a Jew, respectively, also affected their lives as inmates, and influenced how they constructed their personal narratives and identities through memoirs. Thus, gender and other aspects of personal identity intertwined both during their time in Ravensbrück and in their writings of their experiences. Their memoirs, moreover, serve as means of personal empowerment as they rewrote themselves into history on their own terms. These memoirs, therefore, enhance our understanding of the gendered and the personal dimensions of the Nazi concentration camp systems and the Holocaust. 

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Published

2015-02-04

How to Cite

Brown, S. (2015). “After All of it, She is Here”: Gender, Identity, and Empowerment in Women’s Ravensbrück Memoirs. Constellations, 6(1). https://doi.org/10.29173/cons24111

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Section

Articles