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The Transformative Power Of Holocaust

Decent Essays

“The Transformative Power of Holocaust Education in Prison: A Teacher and Student Account,” is an article written by Anke Pinkert and the Co-Authors Michael Brawn, Jose Cabrales, and Gregory Donatelli. Anke Pinkert is a professor of undergraduate and graduate students at the University of Illinois. She has specialization on various topics such as memory studies, holocaust representation, and mass incarceration in films and media. In this article, Anke Pinkert shares the experience that introduces an artifact that is presented on the use of class readings and discussion on Holocaust in developing a critical engagement with the past and present imprisonment, and confinement discourses in the United States. It notes that this commitment challenges the stereotypes of incarcerated people as dimensional survivors, victims, convicts, or criminals. She begins building her credibility with the personal facts and reputable sources. Towards the end of the article, her attempts to appeal readers’ emotions strengthen her credibility and eventually, her argument. The purpose of Pinkert’s article is to inform the audience about how education can help the incarcerated men, and to teach society with her research, at the moment, on the subject; launching the exigence for her write to be related. Education will also provide them the ladder of knowledge and it will be much more effective for the community. Anyone interested in providing education to the inmates is likely to look into the

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