The Moral Witness

The Eichmann Trial and Its Aftermath

Authors

  • Carolyn J. Dean Yale University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.23777/SN0119/SWL_CDEA01

Keywords:

Eichmann Trial, genocide, Holocaust, Jewish witness, contemporary Western moral culture

Abstract

This lecture addresses how “bearing witness to genocide” became a central trope of contemporary Western moral culture. The 1960/61 trial of Adolf Eichmann in Jerusalem put victims of genocide centre-stage and affirmed the pre-eminence of the Jewish Holocaust survivor in European and especially American politics and culture. The lecture revisits the Eichmann trial to understand its contribution not simply to bringing the world’s attention to the Jewish dimension of the Holocaust, but also to understanding how the trial shaped the pervasive figure of the Jewish “witness” who marked the Holocaust as a caesura in human history. The Holocaust survivor remained the iconic witness even when, after the 1990s, the witness to genocide became a more generic symbol of suffering humanity in the shadow of all state-sponsored mass violence against persons and cultures. The lecture suggests that only by placing the witness to genocide in a longer historical trajectory can we understand why the Holocaust remains iconic in spite of the occurrence of many other genocides since.

Abstract View:

562

Published

2019-06-13

How to Cite

Dean, Carolyn J. 2019. “The Moral Witness: The Eichmann Trial and Its Aftermath”. S: I.M.O.N. Shoah: Intervention. Methods. Documentation. 6 (1):71-81. https://doi.org/10.23777/SN0119/SWL_CDEA01.