Archaeological and anthropological aspects of the Holocaust from a Jewish perspective
Abstract
The intention of this research is to offer innovative ideas on methods that can be
utilised by academics and historians within a conflict context. The framework that
will support the overall research is from that of an archaeological, anthropological and
memory driven perspective. Discussion will turn to individual components such as
liminality, monumentality, the built environment and landscape theory highlighting
Nazi segregation policies. Analysis of ghettoisation, deportation and extermination
policy through archaeological sub-disciplines and anthropology as well as comparison
to other world atrocity sites will take place. This will illustrate that detection of
similar techniques of incarceration are recognisable as modes of controlling fear
whilst simultaneously achieving a terror regime.
Initially propaganda policy of the National Socialist Party in both pre and World War
II settings in Germany and throughout parts of Europe helped to fuel the already
present culture of antisemitism. A significant and sinister shift in decision-making
witnessed a move from persecution to exclusion and isolation that saw major cities
already damaged by invasion and warfare ‘holding’ Jews in purposefully
manufactured locations that was a preparatory step towards genocide. Ghettoisation
facilitated the next stage in the process, deportation by train to extermination centres,
as communities were despatched from ‘round-up’ points to ‘unknown destinations’
further east. At all times Jews were vulnerable and were placed into landscapes of
terror, although either the strong individual or Nazi methods of control, at times,
suppressed fear.
Arrival at industrialised death camps was the final stage of a journey for the majority
that culminated in death, but not before further measures that reduced the individual
to a state beyond life, a liminal entity in a place where extreme conditions prevailed.
Each component of the strategy was monitored and managed, as fear was
euphemistically dismissed by the perpetrator and the by-stander.
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