@article{oai:oiu.repo.nii.ac.jp:00000032, author = {柴嵜, 雅子 and シバサ, キマサコ and Shibasaki, Masako}, issue = {1}, journal = {国際研究論叢 : 大阪国際大学紀要, OIU journal of international studies}, month = {Oct}, note = {P(論文), In 1995 Benjamin Wilkomirski published Bruchstücke( Fragments), a memoir of his childhood shattered by the Holocaust. In 1999, however, the highly acclaimed and award winning book was debunked as a work of fiction written by a Swiss who had visited the concentration camps only as a tourist. This scandal is usually cited as a typical case of someone pretending to be a Jewish victim in a bid to draw public attention and sympathy. To achieve a better understanding of his actions, this paper focuses on three points. First, as studies of cognitive psychology have demonstrated, our memory is far more unreliable than we usually assume. Second, the emotional trauma that the young Wilkomirski had to suffer is often underestimated. Third, it is too simplistic to believe that each and every Holocaust survivor experienced a much worse ordeal than victims of unrecognized crimes.}, pages = {43--56}, title = {ヴイルコミルスキー事件再考}, volume = {25}, year = {2011}, yomi = {シバサキ, マサコ} }