Anne Frank: The Book, the Life, the Afterlife

Is The Diary of Anne Frank a Jewish story about the Holocaust or a universal story about adolescence? Both, says Francine Prose in Anne Frank: The Book, the Life, the Afterlife. Even more, she argues, it is literature, a composed and edited text written by a gifted writer.

 

Since it was discovered on the attic floor, this manuscript has prompted debates. Prose walks us through Anne Frank's life before the war, her death in Bergen-Belsen, Otto Frank's attempts to publish his daughter's work, the saccharine play and movie adaptations, and the Foundation and curricula it generated (50 percent of American high school students are assigned the Diary). 

 

Prose points out that Frank revised her initial drafts, carefully establishing characters and scenes. She conceived it as a literary work, not private musings, and titled it  Het Achterhuis, ("the house behind" or "the annex"). Through diligent research and with gentle authority, Prose argues we should approach the book as "a novel in the form of a journal," not a dashed-off diary, giving it and its author the aesthetic attention they deserve. She concludes by advising we teach it through close reading, attending to "suspense, honesty, tone and style."

 

That would better some approaches ("True or False: The Holocaust could never happen again" ).  But Prose's case repels as much as it compels. Close reading perpetuates the apolitical universalism that Prose shows us make the play and movie adaptations problematic.  Without the specific context -- which Prose herself provides us in this worthy book -- we risk losing the historical particularity of Frank's book. 

 

 

May 22: The video game Pac-Man, featuring "the most iconic character from the golden age of arcade video games," was released on this day in 1980. Over the next decade, gamers spent over $2.5 billion in quarters…

Ethan Rutherford and Matt Burgess (Dogfight: A Love Story) on the writing of Rutherford's surreal and fiercely funny story collection The Peripatetic Coffin

advertisement
Books, CDs, DVDs to know about now
She Left Me the Gun

Emma Brockes' mother Paula escaped from South Africa with a smuggled pistol and a dark secret.  A daughter unravels her family's covert past -- and a suspenseful legal drama -- in this hard-boiled memoir of survival.

Intuition Pumps and Other Tools for Thinking

Expand your memory, puzzle-solving skills, and sense of metaphysical wonder with philosopher Daniel C. Dennett's tasting menu of user-friendly neuroscience and poetic lingual pursuits.

When the Devil Drives

Thespian-turned-P.I. Jasmine Sharp searches for a missing actress and veteran detective Catherine MacLeod tries to solve the case of a murdered one. Their paths intertwine amid the Scottish theater community with uproarious and gory results.