Concentrationary Imaginaries
Tracing Totalitarian Violence in Popular Culture
Griselda Pollock editor Max Silverman editor
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Published:9th Sep '21
Should be back in stock very soon
This book considers how the unacknowledged legacy of a totalitarian mentality has seeped into the deepest recesses of everyday popular culture, and ask whether the 'concentrationary' now infests our cultural imaginary.
In 1945, French political prisoners returning from the concentration camps of Germany coined the phrase 'the concentrationary universe' to describe the camps as a terrible political experiment in the destruction of the human. This book shows how the unacknowledged legacy of a totalitarian mentality has seeped into the deepest recesses of everyday popular culture. It asks if the concentrationary now infests our cultural imaginary, normalizing what was once considered horrific and exceptional by transforming into entertainment violations of human life. Drawing on the political philosophy of Hannah Arendt and the analyses of violence by Agamben, Virilio, Lacoue-Labarthe and Nancy, it also offers close readings of films by Cavani and Haneke that identify and critically expose such an imaginary and, hence, contest its lingering force.
ISBN: 9781350229556
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 732g
330 pages