Spirit and Social Death: Hegel, Historical Life and Genocide

被引:1
|
作者
Bunyard, Tom [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Brighton, Humanities Programme, Brighton, E Sussex, England
关键词
Genocide; Hegel; Claudia Card; Robert Pippin; Gillian Rose; social death; Holocaust; modernity;
D O I
10.1080/17496535.2021.1970789
中图分类号
C916 [社会工作、社会管理、社会规划];
学科分类号
1204 ;
摘要
This essay proposes that the interpretations of Hegelian philosophy advanced by Gillian Rose and Robert Pippin may be relevant to the theorisation of genocide. This argument is presented via a discussion of Claudia Card's contention that genocide can be understood as a form of 'social death'. According to Card, genocide damages or eradicates what she calls 'social vitality': inter-generational social relations that animate, articulate and characterise social groups, and which give meaning and context to individual lives. The essay points out limitations in Card's claims and proposes that Pippin and Rose could help to respond to those problems. It argues that Pippin's reading can develop Card's ideas regarding the collective 'life' of groups, and that Rose's interpretation can remedy difficulties posed by Card's conception of evil. The essay suggests that, when taken together, this combination of ideas may point towards a means of thinking about Hegel that serves to foreground the pertinence of past disasters to any critical assessment of the present.
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页码:410 / 427
页数:18
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