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Tracing the arc of sexual violence coursing through Europe's twentieth century from the Armenian genocide through Auschwitz and Algeria to Bosnia, this pathbreaking volume expands military history to include the realm of sexuality for both soldiers and civilians, both during war and in its aftermath. Examining contrapuntal stories of consensual romance and accounts of grotesque violence and intimate brutality, it also contributes significant new insights to the history of sexuality in the twentieth century. The volume also breaks important conceptual ground precisely by broadening…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Tracing the arc of sexual violence coursing through Europe's twentieth century from the Armenian genocide through Auschwitz and Algeria to Bosnia, this pathbreaking volume expands military history to include the realm of sexuality for both soldiers and civilians, both during war and in its aftermath. Examining contrapuntal stories of consensual romance and accounts of grotesque violence and intimate brutality, it also contributes significant new insights to the history of sexuality in the twentieth century. The volume also breaks important conceptual ground precisely by broadening twentieth-century European history to include colonial and border areas (from the Ottoman Empire in the 1910s to Indochinese and Senegalese soldiers in WWI to Italy's war in Ethiopia in the 1930s to the Nazi-occupied Soviet Union in the 1940s to Algeria in the 1950s-1960s) to the wars in the former Yugoslavia in the 1990s. A pathbreaking history of sexual violence in Europe from the Armenian genocide through Auschwitz and Algeria to Bosnia
Autorenporträt
MATTHIAS BJORNLUND Historian and Independent Scholar specializing in the Armenian Genocide RAPHAËLLE BRANCHE Lecturer, the University of Paris 1-La Sorbonne, France RICHARD S. FOGARTY Assistant Professor of History, the State University of New York at Albany, USA LULU ANNE HANSEN PhD Candidate in Contemporary History, the University of Southern Denmark, Esbjerg TERESA IACOBELLI PhD Candidate in the Department of History, the University of Western Ontario in London, Ontario, Canada MARIE-ANNE MATARD-BONUCCI Professor of Contemporary History, the Université de Grenoble II, France REGINA MÜHLHÄUSER Hamburg Institute for Social Research, Germany NA'AMA SHIK The International School for Holocaust Studies, Yad Vashem, Israel ROBERT SOMMER Phd Candidate in Cultural Studies, the Humboldt University of Berlin, Germany EMMA VICKERS PhD Candidate, the University of Lancaster, UK
Rezensionen
'Many myths have been produced about sexual pleasures and sexual terror in war and genocide. Dagmar Herzog's outstanding, disturbing, and ultimately fascinating anthology is the first to seriously historicize this most sensitive topic. Sexual desire was enmeshed in brutal violence all over Europe's most destructive century, but it was so in surprisingly diverse ways. A pathbreaking reference book and a must-read for each student of military history, gender history, and Holocaust and genocide studies.'

Thomas Kühne, Clark University, USA

'This wonderful book makes a powerful contribution to the history of Europe in the 20th century. With their complex and comparative treatment of wars from the Armenian genocide, to the Holocaust, colonization and decolonization, and the recent conflict in the Balkans these collected essays carefully historicize the meanings and modalities of sexualized violence and sexual desire. Together they brilliantly demonstrate the intimate and integral ties between the history of sexuality and the history of European war.'

- Judith Surkis, Centre for European Studies, Harvard University, USA

'Scholars and instructors from a broad range of disciplines (European history, military history, gender studies, imperialism, racism) will be grateful for this path-breaking collection of essays that analyze the complex intersections of sexuality and war from the Armenian genocide to the Balkan Wars of the 1990s. By focusingnot only on sexual violence but also on desire and the consensual sexuality made possible by the dislocation and anonymity of war, the authors of this fine book also provide an important history of both female and male sexuality during Europe's bloody century.'

- Maria Höhn, Vassar College, USA

'Astonishing and unforgettable, this book is one of a kind. Its explorations into the taboo territory of sex and war span the 20th century, from Anatolia to Ethiopia, Auschwitz, Algeria, Bosnia-Herzegovina, and points between and beyond. These chapters are as remarkable for the deep particularity they exhibit in each case as for the powerful and urgently universal nature of the viciousness, pain, exhilaration, and desire they reveal. Dagmar Herzog has assembled a compelling, indeed, indisputable case for the inseparability of war and sex, in all their manifestations.'

- Doris L. Bergen, University of Toronto, Canada

'This history of sexuality risks a great deal. It confronts the issue of sexual violence against women, against men, and against children. It also takes on desire and love or, in any case, consensual relationships in times of war. The book succeeds and may serve as a model for further explorations because it is based on remarkably thorough research and on prudence as well as good judgment in making sense of sexuality in times of war.'

- Michael Geyer, University of Chicago, USA

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