Naming the criminal : Lithuanian Jews remember perpetrators

Collection:
Mokslo publikacijos / Scientific publications
Document Type:
Straipsnis / Article
Language:
Anglų kalba / English
Title:
Naming the criminal: Lithuanian Jews remember perpetrators
In the Journal:
Holocaust and genocide studies. 2016, vol. 30, no 3, p. 506-531
Keywords:
LT
20 amžius; Izraelis (Israel); Lietuva (Lithuania); Nusikalstama veika / Offence; Nusikaltimai žmogiškumui / Crime against humanity; Žydai / Jews.
Summary / Abstract:

LTReikšminiai žodžiai: Aukos; Holokaustas; Izraelis; Lietuviai; Lietuvos žydai; Liudijimai; Liudijimas; Nusikaltėliai; Smurtautojai; Subjektiškumas; Žydai; Holocaust; Israel; Jews; Lithuanian Jews; Lithuanians; Perpetrators; Subjectivity; Testimonies; Testimony; The Holocaust; Victims.

ENPsychoanalyst Dori Laub asserts that for camp inmates the Holocaust extinguished the possibility of “I-thou” interaction. Address and response, the basis of human subjectivity, became impossible for the prisoner to imagine. The author of this article uses victims’ descriptions of perpetrators to investigate this assertion. Do survivors at times conceive of a wartime assailant as “you” - as an addressable human agent? Comparing two clusters of testimony by Lithuanian Jews, the author finds that contemporary language and social context shape the victims’ stance toward Holocaust perpetration - that is, how they weigh human versus structural wrong. She also points out various ethical traps inherent in each of the two methods of remembering wartime aggressors. [From the publication]

DOI:
10.1093/hgs/dcw069
ISSN:
8756-6583; 1476-7937
Related Publications:
The Gaze of the implicated subject: non-Jewish testimony to communal violence during the German occupation of Lithuania / Violeta Davoliūtė. East European politics and societies and cultures 2023, 37, 2, p. 493-511.
Permalink:
https://www.lituanistika.lt/content/75355
Updated:
2020-04-18 07:31:00
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