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Crimes of War

20.50

How do societies remember, or forget, the wartime atrocities their soldiers and citizens may have committed? In this volume, leading historians explore this difficult, troubling question, offering comparative insight. The book includes original essays on the United States in Vietnam and Korea, the Germans during World War II, and the Japanese in China. Citing recent admissions of the killing of unarmed Koreans by American troops at No Gun Ri, newly unearthed evidence of atrocities committed by German soldiers (who were not affiliated with the Nazi SS) on the Russian front, and a new spate of information on Japanese barbarity in China during World War II, the essays sketch a distinctive, repeated pattern from country to country, which typically includes a half-century of denial before a given society is prepared to confront these kinds of grizzly truths about the behaviour of its citizens and soldiers.

Artikelnummer: 19351 Categorie: Tag:
Subtitel: Guilt and Denial in the Twentieth Century
Auteur: Bartov, Omer & Atina Grossmann and Mary Nolan (eds.)
Jaar: 2003
ISBN: 1565848144
Pagina's: 344
Taal: English
Uitgever: The New Press
Uitgever stad: New York
Verschijningsdatum:
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