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  • Supraregional  (3)
  • Sachsen
  • English  (3)
  • Diner, Dan
  • Graetz, Heinrich
  • Wallstein-Verlag
  • Holocaust (Jewish theology)  (3)
  • 1
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2007
    Titel der Quelle: Naharaim
    Angaben zur Quelle: 1,2 (2007) 195-213
    Keywords: Holocaust (Jewish theology) ; Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) History
    Abstract: Reflects on the Holocaust as a unique event and on the difficulties of understanding it. Attempts to explain the Holocaust have led to two opposing perspectives: the particularist one, that of "why", which focuses on the victimized Jewish people, and the universalist one, that of "how", which focuses on the perpetration of the crime and on the Jewish individuals who were its victims. The latter perspective leads to the incrimination of modernity and of its inherent potentiality for violence and destruction. The concept of "rupture in civilization" epistemically reconciles these perspectives and represents the Holocaust as an aporetic event. It resists attempts to conceptualize the Holocaust, i.e. to find some logic in it. Illustrates this by two cases in which Jewish leaders failed to act properly because they tried to rationalize the Nazi genocide. In 1942-45, the Executive Committee of the Jewish Agency, in full knowledge of the mass murders, misconceived what was going on and failed to act. In 1940-43, the Jewish Councils throughout Poland also failed to make correct decisions because they attributed logic to the actions of the perpetrators. Dwells on the postwar views of some leading Jewish intellectuals (Horkheimer, Adorno, and Arendt) on the Holocaust as an event which went against the spirit of Enlightenment and against principles on which Western civilization is based.
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  • 2
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 1996
    Titel der Quelle: Babylon; Beiträge zur jüdischen Gegenwart
    Angaben zur Quelle: 16-17 (1996) 94-107
    Keywords: Arendt, Hannah, ; Holocaust (Jewish theology) ; Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) Historiography
    Abstract: Examines the ambivalence between radical universalism and equally radical Jewish nationalism in "Eichmann in Jerusalem". Comments that Arendt's concept of the "banality" of Nazi crime is closer to the experience of the perpetrators than to that of the victims, for whom the crimes were monstrous. With this concept, Arendt laid one of the foundations for the functionalist school of Holocaust historiography. Attributes her nationalism to her own realistic reaction to the Holocaust, while her universalism is due partly to her German-Jewish assimilationist heritage and partly to the influence of her husband, Heinrich Blücher, and of Karl Jaspers.
    Note: Appeared also in "Hannah Arendt Revisited" (2000) and in English in "New German Critique" 71 (1997).
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  • 3
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 1986
    Titel der Quelle: Babylon; Beiträge zur jüdischen Gegenwart
    Angaben zur Quelle: 1 (1986) 9-20
    Keywords: Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) Influence ; Holocaust (Jewish theology)
    Abstract: Agrees with Gershom Scholem that a German-Jewish symbiosis never existed. Since the Holocaust there has only been a negative symbiosis, like that between the executioner and his victim. With the passage of time, and the advance of historical research, more details become known and the "forgetfulness" of the Germans arouses Jewish anger. Claims that Germans' comparison of the Lebanon War with Nazi atrocities is an attempt to erase their guilt for the Holocaust. Young Germans evince ambiguous feelings towards their parents as well as towards the victims.
    Note: Appeared also in "Jüdisches Leben in Deutschland seit 1945", 1986; "Ist der Nationalsozialismus Geschichte?", 1987; and in English in "Reworking the Past", 1990. , Appeared in Hungarian as "A negatív szimbiózis (Németek és zsidók Auschwitz után) in "Múlt és Jövő" 4 (2015) 58-68.
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