Biopolitics and Historic Justice
Coming to Terms with the Injuries of Normality
Human rights violations linked to norms of health, fitness, and social usefulness have long been overlooked by Historic Justice Studies. Kathrin Braun introduces the concept of »injuries of normality« to capture the specifics of this type of human rights violation and the respective struggles for historic justice. She examines the processes of Vergangenheitsbewältigung in the context of coercive sterilization, institutional killings, as well as the persecution of homosexual men and of »asocials« under Nazi rule. She argues that an analytic perspective on political temporality allows us to better understand the formation of these biopolitical human rights violations and their exclusion from memory and historic justice.
Overview Chapters
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Frontmatter
Seiten 1 - 4 -
Contents
Seiten 5 - 8 -
1 Introduction: Coming to Terms with Biopolitics, Temporality and Historic Justice
Seiten 9 - 28 -
2 Biopolitics and Modernity: Revisiting the Eugenics Project
Seiten 29 - 54 -
3 Nazi Sterilization Policy, Second-Order Injustice and the Struggle for Reparations
Seiten 55 - 76 -
4 Justice at Last: The Persecution of Homosexual Men and the Politics of Amends
Seiten 77 - 98 -
5 Marginal Justice: Coming to Terms with the Persecution of the 'Asocials'
Seiten 99 - 120 -
6 Hannah Arendt and Michel Foucault on Biopolitics, Time and Totalitarianism
Seiten 121 - 140 -
7 Increasing the Forces of Life: Biopolitics, Capitalism and Time in Marx and Foucault
Seiten 141 - 162 -
Acknowledgments
Seiten 163 - 164 -
List of Abbreviations
Seiten 165 - 168 -
References
Seiten 169 - 194
11 May 2021, 194 pages
ISBN: 978-3-8376-4550-7
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