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Keith Jenkins, University of Chichester, UK
Pelekanidis's book has an impressive range and pertinence for currently debated issues. His comments on the work of other scholars are pointed and useful. He brings together postmodern historiography and the Holocaust in a manner that situates the latter as a crucial test case for the viability of the former. As he sees it, the Holocaust has been a constant challenge for postmodernism, and it remains a guide for the directions historiography should take. He sets the stage by offering a lengthy discussion of Hayden White. Then he moves on to other figures who have responded in various ways to White's work, at times taking it in diverse directions. Pelekanides also offers a suggestive, thought-provoking reading of Jonathan Littell's imposing novel The Kindly Ones that raises the question of the interaction between history and literature and insightfully supplements the discussion of historians and theorists.
Dominick LaCapra, Cornell University, USA