Restoring the generations? – A preliminary literature review exploring the educational potential of the “Zeugen der Shoah” DVDs.
Abstract
This article is a preliminary literature review undertaken for a proposed research
project, surveying the field of research concerning the use of digitised videotestimonies
with Shoah survivors in German history classrooms. It is set against
the argument that up to now, the perpetration of Nazi atrocities has largely been
treated with silence at the family level, and that this has negative psychosocial
consequences. The literature review investigates to what extent educational DVDs
with Shoah survivors could present an opportunity to break this silence and thus to
restore generational relationships at the social level. These educational media allow
learners to not only receive first-hand audio-visual accounts of what the Shoah
witnesses experienced and thus to be emotionally and empathetically engaged with
history learning. Learners are also made aware of the constructed nature of historical
knowledge. As a result, they may begin to question how they know what they know,
and what validity and consequences this knowing has. Existing pilot studies based
on social-psychological analyses of learners’ responses to the topic of Nazism, as well
as a study about learners’ interaction with the DVD series in Germany has shown
that learners are interested in this topic, including the question of responsibility,
but that they defy external pressure to feel guilty. They tend to develop sophisticated
analytical competencies when their empathy is involved. The article could help
teachers in other contexts, where sensitive topics need to be taught, to gain fresh
perspectives on what to consider when teaching “difficult” content.