In Spite of All (Malgré tout)
Abstract
The locution malgré tout, ‘in spite of all’ or ‘despite everything’, is first and foremost associated with the vexed debate stirred by the exhibition Mémoire des camps, which was organized in Paris in 2001, and the violent reactions provoked by Didi-Huberman’s catalogue essay, “l’images malgré tout”, subsequently expanded into the eponymously titled book in response to the fierce criticisms. Didi-Huberman’s conception of the four photographs taken by a member of the Sonderkommando, the ‘special units’ of Jewish prisoners whose task it was to dispose of the corpses at Birkenau in August 1944, as acts of resistance, as visual testimonies, and as “survivors” (ISA, p.46), was first attacked by Claude Lanzmann, in an interview in Le Monde (2001), and soon followed by Gérard Wajcman in Les temps modernes (2001; see also Pagnoux, 2001). In his article, Wajcman accused Didi-Huberman not only of corroborating the logic of Holocaust deniers, who demand that the event is yet to be proved, but, primarily, of Christianizing the Shoah by means of images.
Publisher
Edinburgh University PressCitation
Gustafsson H: In Spite of All (Malgré tout). In: Zolkos. The Didi-Huberman Dictionary, 2023. Edinburgh University Press p. 122-125Metadata
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