000 01725cam a2200169 4500500
005 20260405004707.0
041 _afre
042 _adc
100 1 0 _aScheepens, Alex
_eauthor
700 1 0 _aMartin, Lucille
_eauthor
245 0 0 _aPar-delà la violence sexuelle. femmes juives cachées aux Pays-Bas sous occupation nazie
260 _c2026.
500 _a6
520 _aThis article explores the everyday lives of Jewish women in hiding in the Nazi-occupied Netherlands. While Holocaust scholarship incorporating gender has grown steadily, much of it has focused on the threat of sexual violence, inadvertently reducing women’s experiences to episodes of abuse and to a single form of trauma, while neglecting the broader, everyday realities of survival.By drawing on diaries, letters, memoirs, family records, and oral testimonies in Dutch, English, Hebrew, and German, this study expands the gender analysis. It argues that women’s existence in hiding encompassed a wide spectrum of challenges that extended beyond sexual mistreatment, including new responsibilities, the trauma of separation, pregnancy and motherhood, and the constant fear of betrayal. Hiding, after all, reconfigured gender roles, undermined traditional family structures, and forced women to assume new responsibilities as mothers, daughters, and wives. In the process, this study reveals how gender influenced not only the challenges and risks Jews faced but also their survival strategies, emotional burdens, and daily routine.
786 0 _nRevue d’Histoire de la Shoah | 223 | 1 | 2026-03-11 | p. 95-118 | 2111-885X
856 4 1 _uhttps://shs.cairn.info/revue-revue-dhistoire-de-la-shoah-2026-1-page-95?lang=fr&redirect-ssocas=7080
999 _c2077611
_d2077611