Auschwitz and After
OCLC 31290828 | |
Auschwitz and After (Auschwitz, et après) is a first person account of life and survival in Birkenau by Charlotte Delbo, translated into English by Rose C. Lamont.
Delbo, who had returned to
Summary
Auschwitz and After is a trilogy of separately published shorter works. None of Us Will Return (Aucun de nous ne reviendra) was completed in 1946 and published in 1965. Useless Knowledge (La connaissance inutile), written in 1946 and 1947, was published in 1970. The final volume, The Measure of Our Days (Mesure de nos jours) appeared in 1985.[1]
The first and last volumes deal with Auschwitz as lived and remembered, respectively, and do not entirely follow linear time. The middle volume concerns the surviving Frenchwomen's slow journey back to freedom after they were moved from Auschwitz to
Technique
Delbo's guiding principle was, as she regularly described it, Essayez de regarder. Essayez pour voir, or roughly translated when it occurs as a refrain in her work, "Try to look. Just try and see."
The end result has the effect of conveying the violence done to reason and orderly language by the horror of Auschwitz. "O You Who Know," ("Vous qui saviez") a poem early in the trilogy, challenges the reader with the inadequacy of what they already understand:
- O you who know
- Could you know that hunger makes the eyes sparkle?
- While thirst makes them dim?
- You who know
- Could you know that you can see your mother dead
- Without shedding a tear?
- You who know
- Could you know how in the morning you crave death
- Only to fear it by evening?
"Horror cannot be circumscribed," she concludes, and throughout the trilogy she regularly expresses doubt as to whether she can truly tell the reader what it was like, whether anyone can.
- You don't believe what we say
- because
- if what we say were true
- we wouldn't be here to say it.
- we'd have to explain
- the inexplicable
"I am not sure that what I wrote is true," she wrote in the epigraph to the first volume, "I am certain that it is truthful." Resolving those two statements makes reading Auschwitz and After an advanced reading experience that more are slowly discovering.
Editions
- (1995) Auschwitz and After. ISBN 0-300-06208-7
References
- ^ Langer, Lawrence B. (1995). "Introduction". In Delbo, Charlotte (ed.). Auschwitz and After. Translated by Lamont, Rose C. New Haven and London: Yale University Press. p. x.
- ^ Glowacka, Dorota. "FOREWORD" (PDF).