Questions for the
Discussion
"The
Reader"
("Der Vorleser")
by Bernhard Schlink, New York: Vintage International, 1998
for Students in my First Year Seminar: From Holocaust to German
Unification
at McDaniel College, compiled
by Dr. Mohamed Esa
- Who? Where? When? What? Why?
- What is Hanna accused of?
- Is Hanna a perpetrator? Why?
- Why didn't Michael Berger help
Hanna?
- What was his dilemma? (2 images
of Hanna)
- Who is "coping with the past," how
and why?
- How is Michael coping with the
past? How is Hanna coping with the past?
- What does Hanna represent? What
does Michael represent?
- Does Hanna represent Germany: before,
during, and after the Holocaust?
- Does Michael represent "the victims":
Jews and Germans??
- Compare Michaels state of mind
as a young boy (before the trial = time of innocence) and as an adult
(after the trial = time of reasoning and realization (Erkenntnis)?
- Was Hanna a "cold blooded murderer," stubborn,
proud woman," or even an "ordinary German"?
- What is being said about "guilt" and "atonement",
collective and individual guilt" and "collective and individual atonement"?
- To flee is not only to run away.
It is also to arrive some where. How does Michael and/or Hanna flee
to arrive some where?
- Michael says that he was not able
to cry, not able to produce tears "I felt the tears again in my chest
and throat" (p. 206) not in his eyes. What does that mean? What do
tears symbolize? Why wasn't he ready for a "purification" a "catharsis"?
He was not ready for an inner liberation or catharsis. He became
a lawyer, a rationalist thinker and planer. He lost his ability to
be spontaneous -the ability to mourn??
- Why does Michael reveal his secret
that he loved Hanna to a Holocaust Survivor? Does he owe the victims
the truth? Does he want to set himself free and be at peace with
himself?
- He meets the Holocaust survivors
as a representative of the young generation that must deal with the
notion of "collective guilt".
- If someone loves/ sleeps with a
former Nazi guard or murderer (without knowing it). Do you have to
feel automatically guilty? How can/ cant' this be applied to Michael?
How did Michael feel about it?
- Did Michael forgive Hanna? How?
Would he free himself from his homesickness (or Hanna-sickness)?
- Why does Hanna take responsibility
for all what happened?
- "(And) was she vain enough, and
evil enough, to become a criminal simply to avoid exposure?" (p.
133)
- Was she too proud to admit her
weaknesses
- Wy didn't she have enough strength
to fight for her own cause?
- She was not able to run away
from her own shadow, her past.
- Was it a form of self punishment:
Die Schuld auf sich nehmen als form der Selbstbestrafung?
- How can a sadist become a masochist
- Question of guilt and atonement
- Deus ex machina
- Did Hanna (Germany) change after
her trial (Nuremberg Trial)? How?
- What did Hanna read while she was
in prison? Why?
- Hanna received recognition but
not absolution from the Jewish victims of the Holocaust. Explain
this.
- Explain how the process of writing
can help people set themselves free.
- Can the book be read as an attempt
by Schlink to revise German history ("revisionist approach")
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