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| Subjects: Media Studies, Cultural Studies, American Studies |
| Part of the Critical Cultural Communication Series |
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Visualizing Atrocity takes Hannah Arendt’s provocative and polarizing account of the 1961 trial of Nazi official Adolf Eichmann as its point of departure for reassessing some of the serviceable myths that have come to shape and limit our understanding both of the Nazi genocide and totalitarianism’s broader, constitutive, and recurrent features. These myths are inextricably tied to and reinforced viscerally by the atrocity imagery that emerged with the liberation of the concentration camps at the war’s end and played an especially important, evidentiary role in the postwar trials of perpetrators. At the 1945 Nuremberg Tribunal, particular practices of looking and seeing were first established with respect to these images that were later reinforced and institutionalized through Eichmann’s trial in Jerusalem as simply part of the fabric of historical fact. They have come to constitute a certain visual rhetoric that now circumscribes the moral and political fields and powerfully assists in contemporary mythmaking about how we know genocide and what is permitted to count as such. In contrast, Arendt’s claims about the “banality of evil” work to disrupt this visual rhetoric. More significantly still, they direct our attention well beyond the figure of Eichmann to a world organized now as then by practices and processes that while designed to sustain and even enhance life work as well to efface it. |
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Valerie Hartouni
is Professor of Communication at the University
of California, San
Diego, and author of Cultural Conceptions: On Reproductive Technologies and the Remaking of
Life. View all books by Valerie Hartouni |
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| | “A compelling and broad-reaching manuscript that will be of
great interest not only to scholars of Arendt and Eichmann, but to those who
want to think more generally about the interrelationship of political judgment
and visual culture.” | | -Judith Butler, University of California, Berkeley |
| | “A
beautifully written and brilliantly argued intervention into the project of
intellectual history that breaks new ground in its complex reframing of the key
questions of morality and justice in our times.” | | -Marita Sturken, NYU |
| | "By relating the visual to the criminal and political issues of the Nazi genocide, Eichmann, and Arendt, Hartouni poses critical questions on justice and morality that resonant in other genocides and in our time." | | -Lia Deromedi, Dialogues on Historical Justice and Memory |
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