by Ruth Barnett; Published by Purdue University Press (2004)
The article explores how Kindertransport refugees adapted to life in Britain and how their experiences are remembered and discussed across generations. It examines the emotional and cultural challenges the children faced as they adjusted to a new country, often without their parents, and how these experiences shaped their identities. Through intergenerational conversations, the article shows how memories of the Kindertransport are transmitted, reinterpreted, and sometimes contested within families, revealing both continuity and change in how this history is understood.