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The lesson : teaching the Holocaust to Germany's Gen Z / Open Citadel presents ; produced by Elena Horn & Alevtina Nepomniachtchikh ; directed by Elena Horn

Penn Library Web Available online

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Format:
Video
Contributor:
Horn, Elena, director, producer.
Nepomniachtchikh, Alevtina, producer.
Leonardi, Alessandro, director of photography, editor of moving image work.
Recchia, Marc, 1982- editor of moving image work.
Schaeffer, Mattis, composer (expression).
Video Project, publisher.
Language:
English
German
Subjects (All):
Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945)--Study and teaching--Germany.
Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945).
Study skills.
Germany.
Genre:
Internet videos
Documentary films
Documentary films.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (1 video file (60 min.)) : sound, color with black and white sequences
Other Title:
Teaching the Holocaust to Germany's Gen Z
Place of Publication:
[San Francisco, Calif.] : Video Project, [2020]
Language Note:
In English and German, with English subtitles for German dialogue
System Details:
digital
Summary:
"At age 14, every child attending school in Germany is brought face to face with their nation's past during World War II. For many, this means confronting the reality of the Holocaust for the very first time. The Lesson explores how new generations in Germany grapple with this tragic history, following a group of children coming of age in the rural town of Frö̮ndenberg. Filmed from 2014 to 2019, the film examines how, despite Germany's reputation for exemplary Holocaust education, its national curriculum is backfiring in rural areas where educators encourage middle school students to view the events of World War II from the Nazi perspective. Younger generations of Germans lack basic factual knowledge of the subject, and are unintentionally taught to empathize with the fascist point of view through immersion exercises that reap the net effect of desensitizing young people to their nation's dark history. Complicating matters, students hear conflicting ideas that contradict the formal curriculum and are exposed to far-right ideals that manifest in various forms, such as neo-Nazi football hooliganism. As their journey deepens, some students are shocked to discover direct familial links to Nazism. Caught between conflicting family histories, curricular narratives, and on-site learning at a concentration camp, each student struggles to form their own views. With a haunting overlay of rare archival footage, The Lesson sharply underscores the power of education as a military tool, laying out the architecture of the Nazi educational curriculum that was taught in public schools leading up to World War II. The film demonstrates how bystanders helped to enable the rise of Nazism in the 1930s, but also brings hope by focusing on every day German citizens who take a stand against the rise of the far-right. This affecting societal study shows how easily far-right movements can grip society, and how the ghosts of Germany's dark past continue to linger into the present day. Filmed against the backdrop of shifting political tides and the rise of the global right, The Lesson is essential viewing amidst the resurgence of xenophobia. Learning the history is the basis, but not enough. In order to create a change, we have to observe and identify, with mature honesty and self-awareness, how human evil exists in each and every one of us--here and now"--Video Project WWW site, viewed August 9, 2021
Credits:
Cinematography, Alessandro Leonardi ; music, Mattis Schaeffer ; editing, Marc Recchia, Alessandro Leonardi
Notes:
Description based on online resource; title from title screen (viewed on January 23, 2024).
Description based on videodisc (DVD) version record
Other Format:
Videodisc (DVD) version: Lesson.
OCLC:
1269268094

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