The Language of Nazi Genocide

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Edition: 1st
Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 2011-08-29
Publisher(s): Cambridge Univ Pr
List Price: $35.65

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Summary

In the Nazi genocide of European Jews, words preceded, accompanied, and made mass murder possible. Using a multilayered approach to connect official language to everyday life, historian Thomas Pegelow Kaplan analyzes the role of language in genocide. This study seeks to comprehend how the perpetrators constructed difference, race, and their perceived enemies; how Nazi agencies communicated to the public through the nation's press; and how Germans of Jewish ancestry received, contested, and struggled for survival and self against remarkable odds. The Language of Nazi Genocide covers the historical periods of the late Weimar Republic, the Nazi regime, and early postwar Germany. However, by addressing the architecture of conceptual separation between groups and the means by which social aggression is disseminated, this study offers a model for comparative studies of linguistic violence, hate speech, and genocide in the modern world.

Author Biography

Thomas Pegelow Kaplan is currently assistant professor of modern European history at Davidson College. He has also taught at Grinnell College and the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, where he received his PhD. He was awarded a Miles Lerman Center for the Study of Jewish Resistance Fellowship by the United States Holovcaust Memorial Museum and a Harry Frank Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship. His articles have appeared in Central European History, Contemporary European History, and Zeitgeschichte.

Table of Contents

Illustrationsp. viii
Acknowledgmentsp. ix
Abbreviationsp. xiii
Introductionp. 1
"We Are All Germans; Why Then Ask for Religion?": Cultural Identity, Language, and Weimar Pluralism, 1928-1932p. 15
"Racial and Social Boundaries between Germans and Jews Are to Be Strictly Drawn": Dictatorship Building and the Process of Nazifying Language, 1933p. 58
Toward the Eradication of the "Impossible, Untenable Category of 'German Jews'": Enforcing and Contesting Racial Difference, 1935-1938p. 102
"The Jewess" Attempted to "Stage a Case on Her Descent": Linguistic Violence as Part of Genocide, 1941-1945p. 160
"We Are Not Bad Jews, Because We Believe We Are Good and True Germans": Another Beginning and Persisting Difference, 1945-1948p. 219
Conclusionp. 272
Appendix: Frequency of Key Categories of Germanness and Jewishnessp. 281
Bibliographyp. 289
Bibliographical Essayp. 293
Indexp. 297
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved.

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