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Emotions and Mass Atrocity: Philosophical and Theoretical Explorations
Cambridge University Press, 3/22/2018
EAN 9781107127739, ISBN10: 1107127734
Hardcover, 316 pages, 23.6 x 16.2 x 2.2 cm
Language: English
The study of genocide and mass atrocity abounds with references to emotions: fear, anger, horror, shame and hatred. Yet we don't understand enough about how 'ordinary' emotions behave in such extreme contexts. Emotions are not merely subjective and interpersonal phenomena; they are also powerful social and political forces, deeply involved in the history of mass violence. Drawing on recent insights from philosophy, psychology, history, and the social sciences, this volume examines the emotions of perpetrators, victims, and bystanders. Editors Thomas Brudholm and Johannes Lang have brought together an interdisciplinary group of prominent scholars to provide an in-depth analysis of the nature, value, and role of emotions as they relate to the causes and dynamics of mass atrocities. The result is a new perspective on the social, political, and moral dimensions of emotions in the history of collective violence and its aftermath.
1. Introduction – emotions and mass atrocity Thomas Brudholm and Johannes Lang
Part I. Causes and Dynamics
2. Mass exterminations and the history of emotions – the view from classical antiquity David Konstan
3. Fear, hope, and the formation of specific intention in genocide Neta C. Crawford
4. The proud executioner – pride and the psychology of genocide Johannes Lang
5. Pondering hatred Thomas Brudholm and Birgitte S. Johansen
6. Social science and the study of perpetrators Arne Johan Vetlesen
Part II. Emotional Responses
7. 'Destroy your sight with a new gorgon' – mass atrocity and the phenomenology of horror Adriana Cavarero
8. Perpetrator disgust
a morally destructive emotion Ditte Marie Munch-Jurisic
9. Unravelling the meaning of survivor shame Alba Montes Sánchez and Dan Zahavi
10. Beyond empathy and compassion
genocide and the emotional complexities of humanitarian politics Andrew A. G. Ross
Part III. Repair and Commemoration
11. Hope(s) after genocide Margaret Urban Walker
12. Traumatic emotions Jeffrey Blustein
13. Embarrassment and political repair Nir Eisikovits.