Criminal Case 40/61, the Trial of Adolf Eichmann


An Eyewitness Account

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By Harry Mulisch, Translated by Robert Naborn, Foreword by Deborah Dwork
Imprint:
UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA PRESS
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Format:
PAPERBACK
Dimensions:
216 x 140 mm
Weight:

Pages:
208

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Description

Novelist, poet, and critic, Harry Mulisch (1927-2010) was one of the Netherlands' most prominent writers. His last book was the novel Siegfried (2001). Deborah Dwork is the Rose Professor of Holocaust Studies and Modern Jewish History and Culture at Clark University and author of Children with a Star: Jewish Youth in Nazi Europe.

Foreword, by Deborah Dwork 1. Introduction 2. The Verdict and the Execution 3. The Two Faces of Eichmann 4. Biography of a German 5. Jerusalem Diary I 6. A Ruin in Berlin 7. The Horror and Its Depiction 8. The Horror and Its Origin 9. The Order as Fate 10. The Ideal of Psycho-Technology 11. Jerusalem Diary II 12. On Feelings of Guilt, Guilt, and Reality 13. On Common Sense, Christians, and Thomas Mann 14. A Consideration in Warsaw 15. A Museum in Oswiecim

"Mulisch, a celebrated Dutch author who has written in many genres, originally published this account of the Eichmann trial in Holland in 1962... This is the first English translation... Mulisch makes an attempt to understand and expose the enigma that is Adolf Eichmann... Mulisch's conclusion is that Eichmann acted as a 'machine,' which is in many ways a more chilling conversion to contemplate than being 'hypnotized' by a madman's agenda... All academic libraries should have this primary account."-Library Journal "Mulisch provides an immensely personal account of the trial ... that is deftly intertwined with observations of Eichmann the man and Eichmann the myth, as well as observations regarding the development of the Israeli state, which 'had no long-established institutions' and which found in the Eichmann trial a raison d'etre, 'an opportunity for creative nation-building.'"-Human Rights & Human Welfare "In his book about the Eichmann trial in 1961, Mulisch is engrossed by the enigma of evil: not the incidental fact of pain, nor even the occasional nastiness of man to man, but the innate vastness of wickedness in the cosmos."-Times Literary Supplement

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