Thwarting the Tyranny of Fathers: Women in Nicole Krauss’s <i>Great House</i> and the Creative Transmission of Traumatic Memory

With <i>Great House</i> (2010), Nicole Krauss offers a choral novel that interweaves the lives of several characters loosely connected by a huge, wooden desk that one of them relentlessly chases around the world. A possible symbol of the memory of the Second World War Jewish genocide tra...

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Main Author: Sophie Vallas
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2024-10-01
Series:Literature
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Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2410-9789/4/4/17
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author Sophie Vallas
author_facet Sophie Vallas
author_sort Sophie Vallas
collection DOAJ
description With <i>Great House</i> (2010), Nicole Krauss offers a choral novel that interweaves the lives of several characters loosely connected by a huge, wooden desk that one of them relentlessly chases around the world. A possible symbol of the memory of the Second World War Jewish genocide transmitted to younger generations, the desk powerfully materializes transmission in its potentially traumatic, obsessional, and violent dimensions. This essay deals with the way first- and second-generation women, in the novel, develop ingenious, creative but also uncompromising responses to the inescapable duty of remembrance. While the dominating male characters freeze memory in timeless, petrified representations, these female writers expose its terrible necessity while hiding nothing of the damages memory causes to witnesses and descendants. They claim a right of inventory and use the desk as an echo-chamber reflecting both the suffering voices of children and the dark presence of defaulting fathers and failing mothers, thus allowing for a new generation to be born with a more bearable heritage.
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spelling doaj-art-344ce69c786e424bb3b34d2dc916a4132025-08-20T02:53:30ZengMDPI AGLiterature2410-97892024-10-014423424610.3390/literature4040017Thwarting the Tyranny of Fathers: Women in Nicole Krauss’s <i>Great House</i> and the Creative Transmission of Traumatic MemorySophie Vallas0LERMA, Laboratory for Studies and Research on the English-Speaking World, Aix-Marseille University, 13007 Marseille, FranceWith <i>Great House</i> (2010), Nicole Krauss offers a choral novel that interweaves the lives of several characters loosely connected by a huge, wooden desk that one of them relentlessly chases around the world. A possible symbol of the memory of the Second World War Jewish genocide transmitted to younger generations, the desk powerfully materializes transmission in its potentially traumatic, obsessional, and violent dimensions. This essay deals with the way first- and second-generation women, in the novel, develop ingenious, creative but also uncompromising responses to the inescapable duty of remembrance. While the dominating male characters freeze memory in timeless, petrified representations, these female writers expose its terrible necessity while hiding nothing of the damages memory causes to witnesses and descendants. They claim a right of inventory and use the desk as an echo-chamber reflecting both the suffering voices of children and the dark presence of defaulting fathers and failing mothers, thus allowing for a new generation to be born with a more bearable heritage.https://www.mdpi.com/2410-9789/4/4/17Nicole Krauss<i>Great House</i>Holocaust studiestrauma studiesfemale characterscreative responses
spellingShingle Sophie Vallas
Thwarting the Tyranny of Fathers: Women in Nicole Krauss’s <i>Great House</i> and the Creative Transmission of Traumatic Memory
Literature
Nicole Krauss
<i>Great House</i>
Holocaust studies
trauma studies
female characters
creative responses
title Thwarting the Tyranny of Fathers: Women in Nicole Krauss’s <i>Great House</i> and the Creative Transmission of Traumatic Memory
title_full Thwarting the Tyranny of Fathers: Women in Nicole Krauss’s <i>Great House</i> and the Creative Transmission of Traumatic Memory
title_fullStr Thwarting the Tyranny of Fathers: Women in Nicole Krauss’s <i>Great House</i> and the Creative Transmission of Traumatic Memory
title_full_unstemmed Thwarting the Tyranny of Fathers: Women in Nicole Krauss’s <i>Great House</i> and the Creative Transmission of Traumatic Memory
title_short Thwarting the Tyranny of Fathers: Women in Nicole Krauss’s <i>Great House</i> and the Creative Transmission of Traumatic Memory
title_sort thwarting the tyranny of fathers women in nicole krauss s i great house i and the creative transmission of traumatic memory
topic Nicole Krauss
<i>Great House</i>
Holocaust studies
trauma studies
female characters
creative responses
url https://www.mdpi.com/2410-9789/4/4/17
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