A leading scholar explores what it means to dehumanize others—and how and why we do it. “I wouldn’t have accepted that they were human beings. You would see an infant who’s just learning to smile, and it smiles at you, but you still kill it.” So a Hutu man explained to an incredulous researcher, when asked to recall how he felt slaughtering Tutsis in Rwanda in 1994. Such statements are shocking, yet we recognize them; we hear their echoes in accounts of genocides, massacres, and pogroms throughout history. How do some people come to believe that their enemies are monsters, and therefore easy to kill? In Making Monsters David Livingstone Smith offers a poignant meditation on the philosophical and psychological roots of dehumanization. Drawing on harrowing accounts of lynchings, Smith establishes what dehumanization is and what it isn’t. When we dehumanize our enemy, we hold two incongruous beliefs at the same time: we believe our enemy is at once subhuman and fully human. To call someone a monster, then, is not merely a resort to metaphor—dehumanization really does happen in our minds. Turning to an abundance of historical examples, Smith explores the relationship between dehumanization and racism, the psychology of hierarchy, what it means to regard others as human beings, and why dehumanizing others transforms them into something so terrifying that they must be destroyed. Meticulous but highly readable, Making Monsters suggests that the process of dehumanization is deeply seated in our psychology. It is precisely because we are all human that we are vulnerable to the manipulations of those trading in the politics of demonization and violence.
... 219-20 Methods, psychotherapeutic, 46 Michelle Remembers (Pazder), 162, 194, 198, 249-50 Miller, Arthur, 177 Mind-control experiments, 188, 193, 224 Mismeasure of Man, The (Gould), 9 Mismeasure of Women, The (Tavris), 11 Moniz, ...
Camille , Gothic Idol , 203 ; David Williams , Deformed Discourse : The Function of the Monster in Mediaeval Thought and Literature ( Montreal : McGillQueen's University Press , 1996 ) , 133–34 . 5. Images of Cerberus , the Classical ...
36. richard Waddington, La Guerre de Sept Ans: Histoire Diplomatique et Militaire (Paris, 1899), 1: 626. 37. Franz a. J. szabo, The Seven Years' War in Europe, 1756–1763 (Harlow, u.K., 2008), 98. 38. Waddington, La Guerre de Sept Ans, ...
As a teenager in a working-class English town, Jack Buckby found himself at the center of the biggest nationalist movement in modern British history.
In Monsters of Our Own Making, Marina Warner explores the dark realm where ogres devour children and bogeymen haunt the night.
Making Monsters: Take-Home Book
Clues are dotted throughout Georgian science and popular culture. The years before the book's publication saw huge advances in our understanding of the natural sciences, in areas such as electricity and physiology, for example.
Illustrated with a wealth of images - from the beautiful and the bizarre to the downright scary -this is a tour de force of scholarship and imagination.
W. J. Hooker and Thomas Taylor had produced the first two editions of Muscologia Britannica (London, 1818 and 1827); Wilson published the third edition under ... 79–86; B. Smith, European Vision and the South Pacific (New Haven, 1985).
Howard Boward, a 13-year-old boy-genius with a chip on his shoulder is too smart for his own good.