Genocide, War, and Human SurvivalCharles B. Strozier, Michael Flynn From the tragic workings of the Holocaust and Hiroshima to contemporary examples of genocide in Bosnia and Rwanda, this provocative collection of original essays examines the enduring impact of cataclysmic events on the modern human psyche. Inspired by the career of Robert Jay Lifton, the distinguished contributors use a wide range of disciplinary and methodological approaches to probe society, culture, and politics in the nuclear age and they explore the therapeutic value of artistic expression to witnesses and survivors of mass violence. The essays convey a message of hope by displaying the remarkable diversity of human responses to extreme adversity and by concluding that intellectuals and professionals have an abiding obligation to act responsibly in a world of violence and to provide healing images of transformation. Contributors: Paul Boyer, John M. Broughton, Harvey Cox, Wendy Doniger, Bonnie Dugger, Kai Erikson, Richard Falk, Michael Flynn, Eva Fogelman, John Fousek, Elinor Fuchs, Lane Gerber, Charles Green, Hillel Levine, John E. Mack, Karen Malpede, Eric Markusen, Saul Mendlovitz, Greg Mitchell, George L. Mosse, Ashis Nandy, Martin J. Sherwin, Victor W. Sidel, Bennett Simon, Charles B. Strozier, Steven M. Weine, Roger Williamson, Howard Zin |
Contents
Hiroshima and the Politics of History | 3 |
Hiroshima The First Response | 21 |
Hiroshima and the Silence of Poetry | 31 |
Life after Death in Life | 41 |
Genocide and Mass Violence | 49 |
On Pseudospeciation and Social Speciation | 51 |
To Prevent or to Stop Mass Murder | 59 |
Genocide and Warfare | 75 |
Physicians and Nuclear War | 193 |
Development and Violence | 207 |
Tolstois Revenge The Violence of Indian Nonviolence | 219 |
Witnessing | 229 |
Thoughts on a Theater of Witness and Excerpts from Two Plays of Witness Better People The Beekeepers Daughter | 231 |
Artists Witnessing Ethnic Cleansing | 243 |
Religion and Violence | 257 |
Back from the Abyss Symbolic Immortality Faith and Human Survival | 269 |
Victims Perpetrators Bystanders and Rescuers in the Face of Genocide and Its Aftermath | 87 |
In Pursuit of Sugihara The Banality of Good | 99 |
Genocide Victimization and Americas Inner Cities | 111 |
Meeting the Challenge of Genocide in Bosnia Reconciling Moral Imperatives with Political Constraints | 125 |
The Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide | 137 |
Saving Bosnia and Ourselves | 153 |
Manliness and the Great War | 165 |
US over Iraq High Technology and Low Culture in the Gulf Conflict | 177 |
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Admira American analyst atomic bomb atrocities become Black Bosnia called Center century citizens civil civilians committed conflict crime cultural death decision destruction Eduard Enola Gay essay ethnic cleansing experience feel geno Genocide Police Force global Gulf Gulf War Haila Hindus Hiroshima Hiroshima and Nagasaki historians Holocaust Human Survival idea ideology images individual intervention IPPNW issues Japan Japanese Jews John Broughton killing lives manliness masculinity mass murder means ment military modern moral movement Muslim Nagasaki Nazi non-violence nuclear weapons numbing patient peace pentecostals person physicians poetry political present President psychological refugees religion religious rescuers responsibility Robert Jay Lifton Robert Lifton Roger Williamson role Rwanda Serb social society Soviet speciation Stimson Strozier struggle Sugihara survivors Sybil threat tion Truman United Nations University Press victims Vietnam violence warfare witnessing imagination York