Understanding Evil: Lessons from Bosnia / Edition 2

Understanding Evil: Lessons from Bosnia / Edition 2

by Keith Doubt
ISBN-10:
0823227006
ISBN-13:
9780823227006
Pub. Date:
01/15/2007
Publisher:
Fordham University Press
ISBN-10:
0823227006
ISBN-13:
9780823227006
Pub. Date:
01/15/2007
Publisher:
Fordham University Press
Understanding Evil: Lessons from Bosnia / Edition 2

Understanding Evil: Lessons from Bosnia / Edition 2

by Keith Doubt

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Overview

Understanding Evil seeks to articulate the evil that happened in Bosnia within the context of war crimes and crimes against humanity. Its analysis centers on the question of whether it is possible to understand evil as action. Since the foundations of the social are found in human action, evil's assault on these foundations results in the demise of the social. While evil simulates the outer form of action, ultimately evil belies itself as action. Can someone act with an evil end? Socrates says no, no one willingly does evil. Although, with a mixture of reason and empiricism, the author tries hard to overcome the Socratic position-searching for evil's agency, purpose, means, conditions, and ethos-in the end, the search fails. The author concludes by accepting the Socratic position: action whose end is evil is unthinkable. This tack provides an alternative to recent theorizing about evil by philosophers such as Richard Bernstein and Jeffrey Alexander.The book understands evil via a neologism-as sociocide, the murdering of society. In Bosnia, not only were families destroyed, but their homes as well. Not only were bridges, libraries, schools, mosques, and churches demolished, but towns and cities were obliterated. Bosnian Muslims were murdered behind the mindless rhetoric of ethnic cleansing,and their history and collective memory were viciously attacked. In the first case, the social violence is called domicide,in the second, urbicide,and in the third, genocide.In Bosnia, however, war took on a truly twisted orientation. Not only were social structures and institutions attacked, but society itself became the target. The book develops the significance of sociocide as the consequence of evil in order to understand the suffering and tragedy of people and communities in Bosnia.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780823227006
Publisher: Fordham University Press
Publication date: 01/15/2007
Edition description: 2
Pages: 184
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.25(h) x (d)

About the Author

Keith Doubt is Professor and Chair of the Sociology Department at Wittenberg University. His books include Towards a Sociology of Schizophrenia: Humanistic Reflections and Sociology after Bosnia, and Kosovo: Recovering Justice.

Table of Contents


Acknowledgments     vii
Witnessing Evil: "Sea"   Mak Dizdar     1
Evil as Action     3
Evil's Direction     8
Evil's Reason     16
Evil's Vanity     25
Rape as Evil     35
Evil's Agency     39
Evil's Disfigurement of Language     52
Understanding Evil: "Paths"   Mak Dizdar     63
Postmodernism's Relation to Evil     65
Psychologizing Evil     80
Ritualizing Evil     91
Theorizing Evil with Socratic Naivete     107
Sociocide: A New Paradigm for Evil     119
"Lilies"   Mak Dizdar     137
References     139
Index     147
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