Memory and forgetting in Lisa Appignanesi’s "The Memory Man"
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Adam Mickiewicz University
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Abstract
The aim of this paper is to look at Lisa Appignanesi’s novel The memory man ([2004]
2005), which won the 2005 Holocaust Literature Award, and examine the patterns of
remembering and forgetting as indispensable aspects conducive to the formation of
Jewish identity. The main character of the book, Bruno Lind, a Holocaust survivor and a
scientist dealing professionally with the complicated neurological issues of remembering
and losing memory, tries to recollect his war memories during a journey to the places
of his youth which are at the same time the sites of his and his family’s trauma. The
Holocaust, change of identities, the war memories and finally the stay at the DP camps
and escape to Canada return to Bruno Lind’s mind in order to be passed onto the next
generation and remembered. This article shows Appignanesi’s novel as an important
contribution to the discussion on the role of memory in Jewish identity.
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Studia Anglica Posnaniensia, vol. 47.4 (2012), pp. 163-175
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0081-6272