Perpetrator Studies Network

Books

Perpetration and Complicity under Nazism and Beyond: Compromised Identities?

Edited by Stephanie Bird, Mary Fulbrook, Stefanie Rauch, and Bastiaan Willems.

This edited collection analyses perpetration and complicity under National Socialism and beyond. Contributions reflect on self-understandings, representations and narratives of involvement in collective violence both at the time and later – a topic that remains highly relevant today.

Using the notion of ‘compromised identities’ to think about contentious questions relating to empathy and complicity, this inter-disciplinary collection addresses the complex relationships between people’s behaviours and self-understandings through and beyond periods of collective violence. Contributors explore the compromises that individuals, states and societies enter into both during and after such violence.

Case studies highlight patterns of complicity and involvement in perpetration, and analyse how people’s stories evolve under changing circumstances and through social interaction, using varying strategies of justification, denial and rationalisation. Each chapter also considers the ways in which contemporary responses and scholarly practices may be affected by engagement with perpetrator representations.

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