Tales of affect, 'Thick' and 'Thin': on distantiation in Holocaust historiography
TitreTales of affect, 'Thick' and 'Thin': on distantiation in Holocaust historiography
Auteur
Call number940.5318071/0002
N° d'objet04956j
Lieu de publicationLondon, England
EditeurVallentine Mitchell
Année de publication
2016
Paginationpp161-196
MatérielArticle
ISBN9781910383056
NotesArticle from the book 'Personal engagement and the study of the Holocaust.'pp161-196
Description
Holocaust historians and trauma scholars have opened up a range of inquiries that focus on the differing motivations for non-Jewish populations to intervene, stand by, or participate in the atrocities against the Jews. A bystander's failure to step in if someone is attacked might be driven by self-preservation, or hostility towards the victim. To understand the dynamics of thick and thin is to recognise that one individual's or group's thin affect might marginalise and exacerbate another's precarity. Citations of massacres in Ukraine and Poland expose the functionalist approach that antisemitism was a powerful motivation for sadism against the Jews