🎉   Please check out our new website over at books-etc.com.

Seller
Your price
£19.99
Out of Stock

Aversion and Erasure

The Fate of the Victim after the Holocaust

By (author) Carolyn J. Dean
Format: Paperback / softback
Publisher: Cornell University Press, Ithaca, United States
Published: 15th Jan 2017
Dimensions: w 146mm h 226mm d 12mm
Weight: 325g
ISBN-10: 1501705636
ISBN-13: 9781501705632
Barcode No: 9781501705632
Trade or Institutional customer? Contact us about large order quotes.
Synopsis
In Aversion and Erasure, Carolyn J. Dean offers a bold account of how the Holocaust's status as humanity's most terrible example of evil has shaped contemporary discourses about victims in the West. Popular and scholarly attention to the Holocaust has led some observers to conclude that a "surfeit of Jewish memory" is obscuring the suffering of other peoples. Dean explores the pervasive idea that suffering and trauma in the United States and Western Europe have become central to identity, with victims competing for recognition by displaying their collective wounds. She argues that this notion has never been examined systematically even though it now possesses the force of self-evidence. It developed in nascent form after World War II, when the near-annihilation of European Jewry began to transform patriotic mourning into a slogan of "Never Again": as the Holocaust demonstrated, all people might become victims because of their ethnicity, race, gender, or sexuality-because of who they are. The recent concept that suffering is central to identity and that Jewish suffering under Nazism is iconic of modern evil has dominated public discourse since the 1980s. Dean argues that we believe that the rational contestation of grievances in democratic societies is being replaced by the proclamation of injury and the desire to be a victim. Such dramatic and yet culturally powerful assertions, however, cast suspicion on victims and define their credibility in new ways that require analysis. Dean's latest book summons anyone concerned with human rights to recognize the impact of cultural ideals of "deserving" and "undeserving" victims on those who have suffered.

New & Used

Seller Information Condition Price
-New
Out of Stock

What Reviewers Are Saying

Submit your review
Newspapers & Magazines
The pervasive discourse on suffering and identity in French and American debates about Jewish victims in the Holocaust is the starting point for Carolyn J. Dean's thoughtful, provocative, and original study of the victim in post-Holocaust theory and historiography. * The American Historical Review * More important than Dean's judgment concerning the success or failure of any given historian she discusses is her belief that the present state of writing on victims of the Holocaust... has for the most part neglected important analytic questions concerning how our affective relations to victims are mobilized and institutionalized in the first place.... The underlying ethical impulse that drives the work of Dean and others not to accept normalization is one that commands respect and attention, even if we have yet to discover how to meet its representational requirements. * History and Theory * Dean's insightful study of the ongoing historical refashioning of Western cultural attitudes to victims is not about questions of Holocaust representation and memory, but about ideological hypocrisy, moral blind spots, and the limitations of historical and theoretical methods in confronting the affective dimension of institutionalized violence, and its impact on victims' experience and on how victims choose to testify to their suffering. * French Studies * This is a thoughtful scholarly work-clearly written, accessible and stimulating for a wide audience. * Reference & Research Book News *