The Golden Age Sparknotes

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In The Golden Age, the Gold family navigates two significant traumas: the horrors of the Holocaust and the challenges posed by polio. These experiences shape the Gold family's identities and relationships. While both of these distressing events inflict permanent scars on the family, they are distinct in their origins, manifestations and societal response. The Holocaust represents a systematic campaign of persecution and genocide inflicted upon the Jewish people by the Nazi regime during World War II. For the Gold family, it symbolises the loss of loved ones, displacement, and the rupture of cultural and familial ties. The trauma of the Holocaust is collective, inherited through generations, and carries with it a weight of historical injustice. The characters, particularly Meyer who is haunted by memories of his experiences in a concentration camp, struggle to reconcile the past with the present. Ida too is …show more content…

While Meyer and Ida struggle under the emotional and financial strain of their son's illness, it is primarily Frank who polio affects. Unlike the Holocaust, polio is of natural origin in the area, devoid of human agency, yet its impact is no less profound.The trauma of polio forces Frank to confront his mortality, physical limitations, and sense of self, drawing upon his courageousness, resilience and determination from the Holocaust. Isolated from his parents, adolescent Frank does not pine for them as he did in the war. Instead, in contracting polio, Frank locates a new sense of identity in a world that often overlooks or discriminates against the disabled. As a result of this mental freedom, he discovers his vocation, poetry. This aspiration, along with his deep connection with fellow patient Elsa, motivates him to recover. For at the Golden Age, the children are constantly reminded that in the end their success or failure in overcoming polio was up to them

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