Metodo

International Studies in Phenomenology and Philosophy

Book | Chapter

184804

"Don't leave me, pal"

witnessing death in Semprun's Buchenwald narratives

Dorota Glowacka

pp. 91-106

Abstract

Considering the omnipresence of death in the Nazi camps, it is unsurprising that death and dying have become a predominant theme in survivors' memoirs. "Der Tode… ein Meister aus Deutschland" (Death … a master from Germany)1 takes the center stage in Jorge Semprún's inquiry into the nature of radical evil as it manifested itself in Buchenwald and, as the protagonist of his narratives is to discover, also in the parallel kingdom of Stalin's Gulags. What sets Semprún's reflection apart from a plethora of thanatographic accounts that emerged from the camps is that, for the narrators of his récits, death appears to be an intimate, even serene presence, a companion, a "pal" whom they approach with openness and compassion, rather than with fear and dread.2

Publication details

Published in:

Ferrán Ofelia, Herrmann Gina (2014) A critical companion to Jorge Semprún: Buchenwald, before and after. Dordrecht, Springer.

Pages: 91-106

DOI: 10.1057/9781137439710_5

Full citation:

Glowacka Dorota (2014) „"Don't leave me, pal": witnessing death in Semprun's Buchenwald narratives“, In: O. Ferrán & G. Herrmann (eds.), A critical companion to Jorge Semprún, Dordrecht, Springer, 91–106.