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Interpreting at the First Frankfurt Auschwitz Trial
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Interpreting at the First Frankfurt Auschwitz Trial : How is a Witness Heard?

Book Details

Format Hardback or Cased Book
ISBN-10 1350469645
ISBN-13 9781350469648
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Imprint Bloomsbury Academic
Country of Manufacture GB
Country of Publication GB
Publication Date Jun 12th, 2025
Print length 312 Pages
Weight 620 grams
Dimensions 23.80 x 16.20 x 2.40 cms
Ksh 18,600.00
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Explores the work of interpreters and translators at the First Frankfurt Auschwitz Trial.

This book explores the work of interpreters and translators at the First Frankfurt Auschwitz Trial of 22 former SS Auschwitz personnel in the mid-1960s, when the voices of dozens of witnesses, speaking 10 different languages, had a profound impact on public understanding of the Holocaust in Germany and beyond.
The book asks vital questions about how victims of genocide can make their voices heard in legal systems, and the processes by which the testimony of Holocaust survivors has entered the public record. The author discusses interpreters’ professional practice and ethical self-understanding in the unequal linguistic and institutional structures of the courtroom, and shows how translation and interpreting affected the way victims’ voices were heard.

The survivors came from many different national, linguistic and cultural backgrounds, and their testimonies are often multilingual or hybrid, providing illuminating insights into the significance of the language(s) in which testimony is given, but presenting interpreters with linguistic and ethical challenges.

The preserved audio recordings of courtroom testimony show that interpreters and translators played a key role not only in attaining justice but also in helping to shape the ways in which victim testimony was given, heard, understood and valued within and beyond the courtroom. The author considers how trust is established, developed, challenged and lost, and how this affects the ability of Auschwitz survivors to give testimony in a complex and emotionally demanding situation. In doing so, he also explores the contribution of interpreting and translation to the developing memory of the Holocaust in the 1960s and to the public image of the survivor-witness.


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