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Description
How was the Holocaust possible? What made "ordinary men" become mass murderers? The historical analysis of democratic decay can be a starting point for recognising the same dangers in today's societies. The debate about perpetration became effective a generation ago with Christopher Browning's "Ordinary Men". However, interpretive struggles around categories such as collaboration, space and gender were not a purely German topic and are more topical and contested in Western, Central and Eastern European countries than ever before.
Browning's impulse was not only focused on historical research, but also on social debates about responsibility and ethical consequences for future generations. The contributions deal with new approaches to Holocaust research, police perpetration under National Socialism, their current socio-political readings and contested historical consciousness-raising in multi-ethnic societies today.
Browning's impulse was not only focused on historical research, but also on social debates about responsibility and ethical consequences for future generations. The contributions deal with new approaches to Holocaust research, police perpetration under National Socialism, their current socio-political readings and contested historical consciousness-raising in multi-ethnic societies today.
- Group
- Books (first-hand)
- Author
- Köhler, Thomas/Matthäus, Jürgen/Kaplan, Thomas P./Römer, Peter
- Title
- Polizei und Holocaust. Eine Generation nach Christopher Brownings Ordinary Men
- Details
- 368 pp.
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