Helping students navigate a full range of texts, concepts and debates, this is a comprehensive introduction to the vast and emotionally charged field of Holocaust Literature from 1933 to the present. Holocaust Literature: An Introduction covers: - A wide range of genres, from diaries and memoirs to fiction, poetry, drama and film. - Key themes such as trauma, memory, translation, identity, authenticity and aesthetics. - Writers who experienced the Holocaust and those grappling with its legacy. - Debates over canonicity in Holocaust literature. - Advice on further reading for students embarking on additional research. Includes readings of work by such figures as: Anne Frank, Victor Klemperer, Charlotte Salomon, Elie Wiesel, Primo Levi, Jean Amery, Tadeusz Borowski, Imre Kertesz, Jakov Lind, Irene Nemirovsky, Paul Celan Miklos Radnoti, Nelly Sachs, Saul Bellow, W.G. Sebald, David Grossman, Georges Perec, Dan Pagis, Michael Chabon, Philip Roth, Art Spiegelman and Steven Spielberg.