Read more
Informationen zum Autor Elisa von Joedon-Forgey is Endowed Chair of Holocaust and Genocide Studies at Keene State College, USA. Klappentext The period covered by this volume, roughly 800-1400, considers genocidal massacres and actions within the context of the pre-modern state, a time when the term "genocide" did not yet exist. In considering rhetoric, discrimination, and political and legal marginalization that impacted the lives of particular peoples, the volume takes as its premise that genocidal practices and massacres can occur when social dynamism and political change challenges the identity of a community. The case studies analysed in the individual chapters implicitly or explicitly draw upon the frameworks of comparative genocide scholars to explore genocidal massacres in the Middle Ages as localized phenomenon, even if these isolated outbursts do not graph onto the modern definition of genocide perfectly. Each contribution considers genocide as caused by settling national, religious, and ethnic differences; genocide as designed to enforce or fulfil an ideology; and genocide as designed to colonize. Collectively the essays move beyond the number of people killed to consider the steps taken against a people to erase them from the social and cultural fabric of society. It is hoped that this volume encourages us to think both about the legal structures of genocide but also about how the term can be more inclusive and expansive. Vorwort The second volume in the comprehensive six-volume reference work which thematically covers the history of genocide from antiquity through to the present day Zusammenfassung The period covered by this volume, roughly 800-1400, considers genocidal massacres and actions within the context of the pre-modern state, a time when the term “genocide” did not yet exist. In considering rhetoric, discrimination, and political and legal marginalization that impacted the lives of particular peoples, the volume takes as its premise that genocidal practices and massacres can occur when social dynamism and political change challenges the identity of a community.The case studies analysed in the individual chapters implicitly or explicitly draw upon the frameworks of comparative genocide scholars to explore genocidal massacres in the Middle Ages as localized phenomenon, even if these isolated outbursts do not graph onto the modern definition of genocide perfectly. Each contribution considers genocide as caused by settling national, religious, and ethnic differences; genocide as designed to enforce or fulfil an ideology; and genocide as designed to colonize. Collectively the essays move beyond the number of people killed to consider the steps taken against a people to erase them from the social and cultural fabric of society. It is hoped that this volume encourages us to think both about the legal structures of genocide but also about how the term can be more inclusive and expansive. Inhaltsverzeichnis List of Illustrations General Editor's Preface, Paul R. Bartrop Introduction, Melodie H. Eichbauer 1. Causes, Jonathan Elukin 2. Motivations and Justifications, Edward M. Schoolman 3. Perpetrators, David Bachrach and Bernard S. Bachrach 4. Victims, Kenneth Stow 5. Responses, Anna Sapir Abulafia 6. Consequences, Alexander Mallett 7. Representations, Alan V. Murray 8. Memory, Piotr Górecki Notes Bibliography Contributors Index ...