The Generation of Postmemory: Marianne Hirsch
The Generation of Postmemory: Marianne Hirsch
Marianne Hirsch
Columbia University
Abstract Postmemory describes the relationship of the second generation to power-
ful, often traumatic, experiences that preceded their births but that were never-
theless transmitted to them so deeply as to seem to constitute memories in their
own right. Focusing on the remembrance of the Holocaust, this essay elucidates the
generation of postmemory and its reliance on photography as a primary medium
of transgenerational transmission of trauma. Identifying tropes that most potently
mobilize the work of postmemory, it examines the role of the family as a space of
transmission and the function of gender as an idiom of remembrance.
The guardianship of the Holocaust is being passed on to us. The second genera-
tion is the hinge generation in which received, transferred knowledge of events is
being transmuted into history, or into myth. It is also the generation in which we
can think about certain questions arising from the Shoah with a sense of living
connection.
Eva Hofman, After Such Knowledge
The Postgeneration
The hinge generation, the guardianship of the Holocaust, the ways
in which received, transferred knowledge of events is being transmuted
into history, or into myth (Hofman 2004: xv)these, indeed, have been
Poetics Today 29:1 (Spring 2008) 10.1215/03335372-2007-019
2008 by Porter Institute for Poetics and Semiotics
I am grateful to audiences at the Midwest Modern Language Association, Columbia, Leeds,
and Duke Universities, where I delivered earlier versions of this essay. Thanks as well to
Silke Horstkotte, Irene Kacandes, Alice Kessler-Harris, Nancy K. Miller, Nancy Pedri, Leo
Spitzer, Meir Sternberg, and Gary Weissman for invaluable questions and suggestions.
104 Poetics Today :
my preoccupations for the last decade and a half. I have been involved
in a series of conversations about how that sense of living connection
can be, and is being, maintained and perpetuated even as the generation
of survivors leaves our midst and how, at the very same time, it is being
eroded. For me, the conversations that have marked what Eva Hofman
(ibid.: 203) calls the era of memory have had some of the intellectual
excitement and the personal urgency, even some of the sense of commu-
nity and commonality of the feminist conversations of the late 1970s and
the 1980s. And they have been punctured as well by similar kinds of con-
troversies, disagreements, and painful divisions. At stake is precisely the
guardianship of a traumatic personal and generational past with which
some of us have a living connection and that pasts passing into history.
At stake is not only a personal/familial/generational sense of ownership
and protectiveness but also an evolving theoretical discussion about the
workings of trauma, memory, and intergenerational acts of transfer, a dis-
cussion actively taking place in numerous important contexts outside of
Holocaust studies. More urgently and passionately, those of us working on
memory and transmission have argued over the ethics and the aesthetics of
remembrance in the aftermath of catastrophe. How, in our present, do we
regard and recall what Susan Sontag (2003) has so powerfully described as
the pain of others? What do we owe the victims? How can we best carry
their stories forward without appropriating them, without unduly calling
attention to ourselves, and without, in turn, having our own stories dis-
placed by them? How are we implicated in the crimes? Can the memory of
genocide be transformed into action and resistance?
The multiplication of genocides and collective catastrophes at the end
of the twentieth century and the beginning of the twenty-frst, and their
cumulative efects, have made these questions ever more urgent. The
bodily, psychic, and afective impact of trauma and its aftermath, the ways
in which one trauma can recall, or reactivate, the efects of another, exceed
the bounds of traditional historical archives and methodologies. Late in
his career, for example, Raul Hilberg (1985), after combing through miles
of documents and writing his massive thirteen hundredpage book The
Destruction of the European Jewsand, indeed, after dismissing oral history
and testimony for its inaccuracies of factdeferred to storytelling as a
skill historians need to learn if they are to be able to tell the difcult his-
1. On the notion of generation, see especially Suleiman 2002 and Weigel 2002. Other con-
texts besides the Holocaust and the Second World War in which intergenerational transmis-
sion has become an important explanatory vehicle and object of study include American
slavery, the Vietnam War, the Dirty War in Argentina, South African apartheid, Soviet and
East European communist terror, and the Armenian and the Cambodian genocides.
Hirsch