Crime and Anti-Semitism in Pre-World War Germany and Austria: Theories, Cases and Fictional Depictions
معرفی کتاب «Crime and Anti-Semitism in Pre-World War Germany and Austria: Theories, Cases and Fictional Depictions» نوشتهٔ T. S. Kord، منتشرشده توسط نشر McFarland & Company در سال 2018. این کتاب در 63 صفحه، فرمت pdf، زبان انگلیسی ارائه شده است.
In the years leading up to the World Wars, Germany and Austria saw an unprecedented increase in the study and depiction of the criminal. Science, journalism and crime fiction obsessed over delinquency while ignoring the social causes of crime. As criminologists measured criminals' heads and debated biological predestination, court reporters and crime writers wrote side-splitting or heart-rending stories featuring one of the most popular characters ever created--the hilarious or piteous crook. The author examines the figure of the crook and notions of "Jewish" criminality in a range of antisemitic writing, from Nazi propaganda to court reporting to forgotten classics of crime fiction. In the years leading up to the World Wars, Germany and Austria saw an unprecedented increase in the study and depiction of the criminal. Criminology, journalism and crime fiction obsessed about delinquents while ignoring crime and its social causes. As criminologists measured "criminal" crania and debated biological predestination, court reporters and crime writers wrote side-splitting or heart-rending stories featuring one of the most popular characters ever created: the hilarious or piteous crook. That crook, the object of adoration, compassion or mirth from the earliest crime stories until the present, is here seen, for the first time, in the context of antisemitic writing and notions of "Jewish" criminality. Kord's pursuit of the criminal in an antisemitic world considers a vast number of texts-from Nazi propaganda to court reporting and forgotten classics of crime fiction-and raises painful questions. Are there parallels between biological classifications of criminals and racial views of Jews? Can the lovable criminal ever be a Jew? Was he an accessory to the Nazi crime of mislabelling Jews as the world's "real" criminals? What does he tell us about ideas of German-ness, before and after the World Wars? And why do we still need him today? "In the years leading up to the World Wars, Germany and Austria saw an unprecedented increase in the study and depiction of the criminal. Science, journalism and crime fiction were obsessed with delinquents while ignoring the social causes of crime. As criminologists measured criminals' heads and debated biological predestination, court reporters and crime writers wrote side-splitting or heart-rending stories featuring one of the most popular characters ever created--the hilarious or piteous crook. The author examines the figure of the crook and notions of "Jewish" criminality in a range of antisemitic writing, from Nazi propaganda to court reporting to forgotten classics of crime fiction"--back cover
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