Background
Mole, Gary Gershom David was born on September 20, 1964 in Birmingham, England. Arrived in Israel, 1995. Son of Edward John Mole and Margaret Rose Loach.
(In this first critical study of the French-language poetr...)
In this first critical study of the French-language poetry written in Nazi prisons, transit camps, and concentration camps, Gary D. Mole demonstrates how this poetry cannot simply be treated with reverence or as incidental historical documentation. Situating the poetry within the wider context of «concentration camp culture,» Mole engages in aesthetic and moral issues, offers extensive thematic readings - both of the reality transcribed by the poets and of spiritual and religious resistance to dehumanization - and submits the poetry to a stylistic and linguistic analysis under the joint rubric of memory and innovation. Lucidly written, this interdisciplinary book makes accessible to the specialist and nonspecialist reader an unjustly neglected corpus and argues persuasively for its reinsertion into the continuing process of the memorialization of the Nazi deportation from France.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/082046208X/?tag=2022091-20
French language and literature educator
Mole, Gary Gershom David was born on September 20, 1964 in Birmingham, England. Arrived in Israel, 1995. Son of Edward John Mole and Margaret Rose Loach.
Bachelor with honors in French and German, Cambridge University, 1987. Master of Arts, Cambridge University, 1990. Doctor of Philosophy, Cambridge University, 1992.
Official fellow and college lectr.in French Pembroke College, Cambridge University, 1990—1995. Lecturer faculty of modern and medieval language Cambridge University, 1991—1995. Director studies in modern language Pembroke College, Cambridge University, 1992—1993, admissions tutor for arts and social science, 1993—1994.
Department French Bar-Ilan University, Israel, 1995—2001, senior lecturer, 2001, head department French, since 2002.
(In this first critical study of the French-language poetr...)
Member of Modern Language Association, Society for French Studies, Group for War and Cultural Studies United Kingdom.
Married Nicole Nécha Naomie Hochner, March 16, 1997. Children: Rakefet Shulamit, Pin'has Moshe, Havatselet HaSharon.