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https://doi.org/10.14765/zzf.dok-1845

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'Political Tyranny and Ideological Crime': Rereading 'Anatomy of the SS State'

[review]

Pendas, Devin O.

Reviewed work
Buchheim, Hans; Broszat, Martin; Jacobsen, Hans-Adolf; Krausnick, Helmut: Anatomie des SS-Staates. München: Deutscher Taschenbuch Verlag 1967

Abstract

Rereading a book is always an uncanny experience in multiple temporalities. If the linguistic turn has taught us anything, it is that the context of reading shapes the meaning of the text that is read. The historicist impulse to reconstruct the original context on the basis of the text itself is at ... view more

Rereading a book is always an uncanny experience in multiple temporalities. If the linguistic turn has taught us anything, it is that the context of reading shapes the meaning of the text that is read. The historicist impulse to reconstruct the original context on the basis of the text itself is at best an asymptotic, at worst a quixotic, pursuit. Yet texts remain, some more so than others. Those texts which continue to be read and reread long after their original context has passed we call 'classics'. This is a term most frequently applied to literature, of course, but also to philosophy and other scholarly works animated by a generalising impulse. It pertains to works, in other words, which lay claim to a significance transcending their original context. It is rarely applied to works whose principle value is empirical or narrowly scholarly. These are presumed to be only temporarily useful interventions into an ongoing scholarly debate, in which later works draw on and ‘supersede’ the insights of earlier ones, rendering their predecessors superfluous. (Rather the reverse of Jove and his children.) Consequently, relatively few works of historical scholarship are considered classics in the full sense. History’s emphasis on the particular, its frequent skepticism of theoretical generalisations, and its embrace of archival empiricism have all tended to preclude the emergence of a broad canon of 'historical classics'. There have, however, been exceptions to this rule.... view less

Classification
General History

Document language
English

Publication Year
2008

Page/Pages
p. 475-480

Journal
Zeithistorische Forschungen / Studies in Contemporary History, 5 (2008) 3

ISSN
1612-6041

Status
Published Version; peer reviewed


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© 2007 - 2025 Social Science Open Access Repository (SSOAR).
Based on DSpace, Copyright (c) 2002-2022, DuraSpace. All rights reserved.