Democracy and Genocide (Genocide) Democracy and Genocide (Genocide)

Democracy and Genocide (Genocide‪)‬

Arena Journal 2001, Annual, 16

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    • 12,99 zł

Publisher Description

Genocide has become another spectre of our times. It is repeatedly voiced in novels, films and 'harrowing' journalistic or TV accounts, and is now calling forth distinguished academic studies like Michael Mann's The Dark Side of Democracy. (1) Events from Tibet and East Timor to Kosovo and Macedonia constantly feed the tendency, which is almost invariably underpinned by a deeply gloomy vision of human nature. 'Is this what we are really like?' The ray-of-hope people then tend to clutch at is the thought that this is what we would be like, were we not at least part of the time prevented from being ourselves by reason, religion or at least reluctant calculation of the probable costs of 'being ourselves'. Another very typical example comes from the great Polish journalist Ryszard Kapuscinski in his recent article 'On the Nature of Genocide' in Le Monde Diplomatique. (2) His subtitle, 'A Century of Barbarism', indicates a line of argument that follows Hannah Arendt, Walter Laqueur, and Zygmunt Bauman's Modernity and the Holocaust. (3) In Kapuscinski's terms, 'Contemporary civilization has as part of its essence and dynamic certain features capable ... of producing acts of genocide'. Far from receding in importance, these may be on the increase. Rwanda, Bosnia and East Timor have all occurred in the 1990s, and yet reproduced many traits of, for example, the Nazi Judeocide and the massacre of the Armenians earlier in the century. Kapuscinski gives a left-Catholic version of this dismal story. He believes that 'the eclipse of religious conscience, and the atrophy of feelings and of the distinction between good and evil' have contributed to so many disasters. 'Love thy neighbour' has lost its conviction, he argues, and opened the door to more deeply embedded traits of human nature--a distrust of the Other and of the Unknown easily exploitable by 'contemporary ideologies of hatred, like nationalism, fascism, Stalinism, racism ...' The only answer lies in 'raising the moral level of both individuals and societies--a more lively spiritual awareness and a greater will to do good, and 'treat thy neighbour as thyself'. Shortly before this interpretation there appeared another, by Quebecois-British theorist Michael Ignatieff. (4) His left-Protestant view of the subject is if anything gloomier than Kapuscinski's. He claims that inherited moral principles have a 'tribal' origin that puts difference above the common features of the species. Thus 'moral universalism is a late and vulnerable addition to the moral vocabulary of mankind', and is always liable to collapse under pressure. Human nature craves above all homogeneity and a 'world without enemies'. In situations of breakdown it will usually be this desire that (suitably orchestrated) appears to offer salvation. We will only be ourselves once they are out of the way--once and for all.

GENRE
Religion & Spirituality
RELEASED
2001
1 January
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
17
Pages
PUBLISHER
Arena Printing and Publications Pty. Ltd.
SIZE
172.5
KB

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