Rhetorical Vectors of Memory in National And International Holocaust Trials (Rhetoric and Public Affairs Series) | 
| Author: Marouf A., Jr. Hasian Publisher: Michigan State University Press Category: Book
List Price: $59.95 Buy New: $27.66 You Save: $32.29 (54%)
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Media: Hardcover Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 236 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1 Dimensions (in): 9.2 x 6.3 x 0.9
ISBN: 0870137840 Dewey Decimal Number: 341.69 EAN: 9780870137846 ASIN: 0870137840
Publication Date: November 30, 2006 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Holocaust trials in creating concept of the Holocaust and memory of it January 3, 2007 Hasian develops his innovative, soundly-based conception that most trials--i. e., prosecutions--relating to the genocide of Jews by Nazi Germany--Judeocide--were not strictly exercises in making criminal accusations, presenting evidence, and seeking a verdict. As Hasian convincingly demonstrates and expounds, these trials had a major role in making widely known the systematic atrocities against Jews throughout Europe in World War II and from this, the formation of the subject of the Holocaust. The Nuremberg trials conducted by the victorious United States and its allies closely following WWII only randomly and sketchily broached the genocide against the Jews. It wasn't until decades after the War that particular individuals such as Adolf Eichmann and John Demjanjuk were tried for their connection to what came to be known as the Holocaust. As an Israeli journalist wrote, "[prior] to the Eichmann trial, what we call the Holocaust did not exist as a collective story." Hasian suggests that maybe the conception of the Holocaust did exist with some persons, but the Eichmann trial "helped turn [this Holocaust] into a more didactic tale." The basic elements of this "tale" came to permeate not only the Israeli legal system, but also that of the United States, as seen in the Demjanjuk trial, and of other democratic countries. Hasian--associate professor of Communication at the U. of Utah and on the editorial board of the journal "Rhetoric and Public Affairs"--does not suggest that such trials were in any way baseless, wrong-headed, or were show trials. His material and analyses are much more subtle and revealing about the motives for and effects of trials. He shows that trials, like the media of novels, films, or journalism, help to bring elaboration to certain historical and communal episodes and in so doing shape a society's memories of them.
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