by Richard Rechtman (Author), Lindsay Turner (Translator), Veena Das (Foreword by)
Winner, Prix Littéraire Paris-Liège 2021
Winner, French Voices Award for Excellence in Publication and Translation
Back Jacket
"Marked by extensive and deep knowledge, care, and clarity, this book masterfully examines the epistemology of genocide. The book is striking in Rechtman's capacity to present the most gruesome acts of killing without exploiting, dismissing, or bypassing insights that have been available to us all along."--Ann Laura Stoler, The New School for Social Research
"A work that is both passionate and subtle, written with inexhaustible tact and compassion."--Veena Das, from the Foreword Winner, French Voices Award for Excellence in Publication and Translation When we speak of mass killers, we may speak of radicalized ideologues, mediocrities who only obey orders, or bloodthirsty monsters. Who are these men who kill on a mass scale? What is their consciousness? Do they not feel horror or compassion? Richard Rechtman's Living in Death offers new answers to a question that has haunted us at least since the Holocaust. The book descends into the ordinary life of people who execute hundreds every day, the same way others go to the office. Bringing philosophical sophistication to the ordinary, the book constitutes an anthropology of mass killers. Turning away from existing psychological and philosophical accounts of genocide's perpetrators, Rechtman instead explores the conditions under which administering death becomes a job like any other. Considering Cambodia, Rwanda, and other mass killings, Living in Death draws on a vast array of archival research, psychological theory, and anecdotes from the author's clinical work with refugees and former participants in genocide. Rechtman mounts a compelling case for reframing and refocusing our attempts to explain--and preempt--acts of mass torture, rape, killing, and extermination. Richard Rechtman is an anthropologist and psychiatrist and director of studies at EHESS in Paris. He is the author, with Didier Fassin, of The Empire of Trauma: An Inquiry into the Condition of Victimhood, which won the William A. Douglass Book Prize. Lindsay Turner is a poet and translator based in Denver.Author Biography
Richard Rechtman (Author)
Richard Rechtman is an anthropologist and psychiatrist and director of studies at EHESS in Paris. Since 1990, he has directed a transcultural outpatient clinic for refugees in central Paris. He is the author of several books in French and coauthor, with Didier Fassin, of The Empire of Trauma: An Inquiry into the Condition of Victimhood (2009), which won the William A. Douglass Book Prize.
Veena Das is Krieger-Eisenhower Professor of Anthropology at the Johns Hopkins University. Lindsay Turner (Translator)
Lindsay Turner, a poet and translator, is Assistant Professor of English and Literary Arts at the University of Denver. She has translated books by Stéphane Bouquet, Souleymane Bachir Diagne, Anne Dufourmantelle, Frédéric Neyrat, and Ryoko Sekiguchi.