The Witness and the Body in Auschwitz: Early Literary Accounts of the Camp Experience by Bożena Karwowska addresses representations of the body in early testimonies of Auschwitz survivors. She considers how the survivors speak about their own bodily experiences and those of others, examining the ways in which the physical and the social interact in the traumatic space of the camp.The most compelling aspect of the book is its focus on survivor testimonies written immediately after the war—or within a decade of liberation. Although its claim to authenticity relies on the fact that these are survivors’ voices rather than perpetrators’, it is also crucial to emphasize the power of the proximity to the actual events—a matter of time. Over a hundred thousand survivor testimonies now exist, but few of these were recorded immediately after the war.Most of the works discussed here were written in Polish and have remained unknown to English readers. In the immediate years after liberation, many survivors who wrote memoirs and diaries in Polish grappled with a language that lacked templates for describing the horrors they witnessed. Karwowska points out that survivors had to “crack” linguistic forms to provide glimpses into camp life, which later became generalized in more polished linguistic expressions. These early texts, free from dominant Western patriarchal and literary traditions, offer a raw and unique insight into the realities of the camp.Although it is not uncommon now to consider gender and the physical body as central to Holocaust narratives, these works clarify that it has always been a matter of discussion. Karwowska notes a tendency in Holocaust literature to intellectualize survivors’ experiences, to generalize rather than acknowledge individual trauma. Her book makes use of recent gender, race, and sexuality theory to counteract this tendency.Sexual violence is the primary theme in this book. The camps were spaces of exploitation of prisoner by prisoner in this regard, as well as by liberator; the human body was the prisoner's sole possession. This is most addressed in chapter 6, where Karwowska delves into issues of prostitution and sexual exploitation within the camps, drawing on feminist theories to analyze prisoners’ limited private space—their bodies. Prisoners’ accounts reveal gendered differences in how men and women viewed prostitution, with women's bodies often being central to their subjectivity in ways men's bodies were not. The process of bodily destruction in the camp stripped away sexual markers, and femininity became a symbolic construct. Despite the taboo surrounding such topics, she points out that scholars like Belinda Carpenter argue that women's bodies were critical to their sense of self, an observation that holds true even within the dehumanizing context of the camp.Karwowska also emphasizes the difficulty survivors faced when writing about sexuality, as modesty and shame often prevented them from describing their personal experiences. While memoirs often discuss prostitution in relation to women, they rarely address the direct experiences of male prisoners. The presence of women in the camp, Karwowska argues, shifted dynamics, allowing men to reassert power through their interactions with women. In recounting the experiences of women subjected to medical experiments or sexual violence, Karwowska draws on powerful accounts from authors like Stanisław Grzesiuk and Wiesław Kielar, who provide harrowing glimpses into the exploitation that took place within the confines of Auschwitz.This is an important book, particularly in its attention to the earliest narratives of women's experiences in the camps.
Dawn Skorczewski (Thu,) studied this question.