Landscaping the Human Garden: Twentieth-century Population Management in a Comparative FrameworkAmir Weiner For centuries, human perfection has been a powerful goal, but only in the twentieth century were national states able to achieve the capacity to impose radical change on entire societies in the name of rooting out imperfections. The contributions to this volume constitute an ambitious attempt to study a number of significant efforts by twentieth-century states to reshape--either through social policy or brute force--their societies and their populations according to ideologies based on various theories of human perfectibility. The cases examined include Germany during the World War I, the Russian Revolution and the subsequent Soviet regime, Germany under the Nazis, ethnic cleansing in the former Yugoslavia, French anti-abortion policies in the interwar era, the treatment of Japanese Americans during the World War II, attitudes toward postwar Soviet Jewry, the changing role of Israeli war widows, and the particular difficulties facing east central European governments from the World War I until 1956. |
Contents
State Violence as Technique | 19 |
The Transformation of State and Society | 46 |
Corporatism or Democracy | 67 |
Copyright | |
9 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Landscaping the Human Garden: Twentieth-century Population Management in a ... Amir Weiner No preview available - 2003 |
Common terms and phrases
anti-Semitism Archive Arendt argued Army Aryan biological Bolshevik Cambridge century Chechens Chechens and Ingush civil Communist concentration camps Crimean Crimean Tatars culture Czechs death democracy democratic deportations discourse East Central economic elusive enemies ethnic cleansing eugenics Europe European extermination February Revolution film France GARF gender genocide German groups Hannah Arendt historians History Hitler Holocaust human husband Ian Kershaw identity ideology individual Ingush internment interwar Israeli Jewish Jews kibbutz kulak leaders liberal London male mass memory ment military mobilization modern Moscow National Body Nazi Germany Nazism NKVD Omer Bartov organizations Party peasants perpetrators Poland policies political politicosocial body population postwar Princeton pronatalist propaganda Provisional Government racial recent regime Revolution role Russian sexual social Socialist society soldiers Soviet Union Stalin symbolic Tatars Third Reich tion totalitarian trans transformation Ukrainian University Press victims violence wartime Weimar widow women World York