ABSTRACT

Enacting History is a practical guide for educators that provides methodologies and resources for teaching the Holocaust through a variety of theatrical means, including scripted texts, verbatim testimony, devised theater techniques and process-oriented creative exercises.

A close collaboration with the USC Shoah Foundation I Witness program and the National Jewish Theater Foundation Holocaust Theater International Initiative at the University of Miami Miller Center for Contemporary Judaic Studies resulted in the ground-breaking work within this volume. The material facilitates teaching the Holocaust in a way that directly connects students to individual people and historical events through the art of theater. Each section is designed to help middle and high school educators meet curricular goals, objectives and standards and to integrate other educational disciplines based upon best practices. Students will gain both intellectual and emotional understanding by speaking the words of survivors, as well as young characters in scripted scenes, and developing their own performances based on historical primary sources.

This book is an innovative and invaluable resource for teachers and students of the Holocaust; it is an exemplary account of how the power of theater can be harnessed within the classroom setting to encourage a deeper understanding of this defining event in history.

chapter Chapter 2|14 pages

Perpetrators, collaborators and bystanders

chapter Chapter 3|18 pages

Ghettos

chapter Chapter 4|25 pages

Concentration and extermination camps

chapter Chapter 5|20 pages

Fleeing and hiding

chapter Chapter 6|15 pages

Resistance

chapter Chapter 7|19 pages

Liberation

chapter Chapter 8|19 pages

Nazi war crimes and judgment

chapter Chapter 9|18 pages

Survivors and subsequent generations

chapter Chapter 10|12 pages

Deniers and denial