All Stories

  1. Patrick Modiano’s Obsessive Imagination: Reconfiguring the German Occupation of France 1940–1944
  2. Polyphonic Narrative in “Un village français” (A French Village): Revisiting French History during the German Occupation
  3. Remembering Occupied France, Vichy Collaboration, and France’s Role in the Holocaust
  4. How Cinema Responded to the Rise of Nazism and the Holocaust
  5. Visualizing the Inexpressible (III): the Imaginative Tradition in French Occupation and Holocaust Films from 1980
  6. Preliminary Material
  7. The First Wave of Imaginative French Films on the German Occupation and the Holocaust
  8. Introduction: France Awakens from Historical Amnesia
  9. Visualizing the Inexpressible: the Documentary Tradition
  10. Visualizing the Inexpressible (II): the Imaginative Tradition in French Occupation and Holocaust Films to 1980
  11. The Importance of W. G. Sebald’s Austerlitz (2001) as a French Holocaust Text: Personal Trauma and Narrative Resistance
  12. Conclusion: “Who Will Tell [the] Story?” History as Fiction, Fiction as History