Gender in the Archive: The Dialogic Potential of Public Memory in the Outtakes from Claude Lanzmann’s Shoah

Lisa A Costello 
Professor, Dept of English and Director of Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies, Statesboro Campus, Georgia Southern University, USA

Full-Text PDF Issue Access

Abstract

The original version of the film Shoah had an enormous impact on the revival of Holocaust memory. However, women appeared only a few times over the course of those nine long hours. Even though Lanzmann’s film achieved complexity in its representation of places, it failed to equally represent the experiences of both women and men, which is a disservice to all survivors. In 2016, the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum (USHMM) released over 220 hours of additional outtake footage from Shoah, never seen by the public. The outtakes reveal longer interviews with women, and these missing voices shed light on women’s experiences during the Holocaust in more detail.

I argue that the “outtakes” of this film can be used by audiences to deconstruct gender “neutralities” around testimony to reimagine public memory narratives and spaces about the Holocaust as highly gendered. In the “rhetorical process of gendering” in public memory, so-called “neutral” public memory narratives can be challenged by newly discovered artifacts like the outtakes. Though Shoah had elements of ambiguity, there was no way to challenge its strict binary in gender representation— until now. This active audience engagement with Holocaust artifacts, what I call performative memorialization, marks a kairotic force in Holocaust memorialization; the past collapses into the present to elicit a dialogic of active audience participation.

Keywords: Gender, performative, public memory, Shoah, kairos, Claude Lanzmnann.

Funding: No funding was received for this research and publication.
Conflicts of Interest: The author declared no conflicts of interest.
Article History: Received: July 22, 2024. Revised: October 12, 2024. Accepted: October 12, 2024. First published: October 13, 2024.
Copyright: © 2024 by the author/s.
License: Critical Gender Studies Network (CGSN), India. Distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Published by: Critical Gender Studies Network (CGSN)
Citation: Costello, L. A. (2024). Gender in the Archive: The Dialogic Potential of Public Memory in the Outtakes from Claude Lanzmann’s Shoah. Critical Gender Studies Journal. 1:2. DOI: https://doi.org/10.21659/cgsj.v1n2.02

Sustainable Development Goals SDG Gender Equality