This landmark collection addresses the hard moral dilemmas that have arisen in the wake of genocide and crimes against humanity during the 20th century.
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Claudia Card is the Emma Goldman Professor of Philosophy at the University of Wisconsin. She is the author of The Atrocity Paradigm: A Theory of Evil (2002), The Unnatural Lottery: Character and Moral Luck (1996), and Lesbian Choices (1995) and the editor of many books, most recently The Cambridge Companion to Simone de Beauvoir. She is currently a senior fellow at the Institute for Research in the Humanities (Madison, Wisconsin), where she is writing another book on evil and an introduction to feminist philosophy.
Armen T. Marsoobian is professor and chair of philosophy at Southern Connecticut State University. He is editor in chief of the Blackwell journal Metaphilosophy and has co-edited four books: Justus Buchler&;s Metaphysics of Natural Complexes (1990), Nature&;s Perspectives: Prospects for Ordinal Metaphysics (1991), The Philosophical Challenge of September 11 (2004), and The Blackwell Guide to American Philosophy (2004). He has published articles in aesthetics and American philosophy, and his current work deals with philosophical issues arising from genocide.
The twentieth century has been indelibly marked as the century of genocide, while the twenty-first continues to perpetuate this dark legacy. The term itself, "genocide," was coined by Raphael Lemkin in 1944 to capture the peculiarly heinous mass killings of both the Jews in Europe from 1942 to 1945 and the Ottoman Armenians from 1915 to 1923. The atrocities committed by the Hutus of Rwanda against the Tutsis and the events currently unfolding in the Darfur region of Sudan perpetuate this legacy of genocide. Genocide's Aftermath takes up the hard moral dilemmas that have arisen in the wake of genocide and crimes against humanity. As we now attempt to rethink U.S. history through the lens of genocide, many historical occurrences, such as the national policy of slavery and the forcible removal of Native Americans from their lands, must be re-examined in the light of what we now identify as genocide. From the questions of guilt to the consideration of reconciliation and reparations, this volume of original essays represents the latest research in the moral issues that have developed in the aftermath of a century of genocide.
The twentieth century has been indelibly marked as the century of genocide, while the twenty-first continues to perpetuate this dark legacy. The term itself, "genocide," was coined by Raphael Lemkin in 1944 to capture the peculiarly heinous mass killings of both the Jews in Europe from 1942 to 1945 and the Ottoman Armenians from 1915 to 1923. The atrocities committed by the Hutus of Rwanda against the Tutsis and the events currently unfolding in the Darfur region of Sudan perpetuate this legacy of genocide. Genocide's Aftermath takes up the hard moral dilemmas that have arisen in the wake of genocide and crimes against humanity. As we now attempt to rethink U.S. history through the lens of genocide, many historical occurrences, such as the national policy of slavery and the forcible removal of Native Americans from their lands, must be re-examined in the light of what we now identify as genocide. From the questions of guilt to the consideration of reconciliation and reparations, this volume of original essays represents the latest research in the moral issues that have developed in the aftermath of a century of genocide.
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