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The Genocidal Gaze - From German Southwest Africa to the Third Reich (Hardcover)
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The Genocidal Gaze - From German Southwest Africa to the Third Reich (Hardcover)
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Examines literature and art to reveal the German genocidal gaze in
Africa and the Holocaust. The first genocide of the twentieth
century, though not well known, was committed by Germans between
1904-1907 in the country we know today as Namibia, where they
exterminated thousands of Herero and Nama people and subjected the
surviving indigenous men, women, and children to forced labor. The
perception of Africans as subhuman-lacking any kind of
civilization, history, or meaningful religion-and theresulting
justification for the violence against them is what author
Elizabeth R. Baer refers to as the "genocidal gaze," an attitude
that was later perpetuated by the Nazis. In The Genocidal Gaze:
From German Southwest Africa to the Third Reich, Baer uses the
trope of the gaze to trace linkages between the genocide of the
Herero and Nama and that of the victims of the Holocaust. Baer also
considers the African gaze of resistance returned by the indigenous
people and their leaders upon the German imperialists. Baer
explores the threads of shared ideology in the Herero and Nama
genocide and the Holocaust-concepts such as racial hierarchies,
lebensraum (living space), rassenschande (racial shame), and
endloesung (final solution) that were deployed by German
authorities in 1904 and again in the 1930s and 1940s to justify
genocide. She also notes the use of shared
methodology-concentration camps, death camps, intentional
starvation, rape, indiscriminate killing of women and children-in
both instances. While previous scholars have made these links
between the Herero and Nama genocide and that of the Holocaust,
Baer's book is the first to examine literary texts that demonstrate
this connection. Texts under consideration include the archive of
Nama revolutionary Hendrik Witbooi; a colonial novel by German
Gustav Frenssen (1906), in which the genocidal gaze conveyed an
acceptance of racial annihilation; and three post-Holocaust texts
that critique the genocidal gaze. Baer posits that writing and
reading about the gaze is an act of mediation, a power dynamic that
calls those who commit genocide to account for their crimes and
discloses their malignant convictions. Her transnational analysis
provides the groundwork for future studies of links between
imperialism and genocide, links among genocides, and the
devastating impact of the genocidal gaze.
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