ABSTRACT

The Routledge International Handbook of Perpetrator Studies traces the growth of an important interdisciplinary field, its foundations, key debates and core concerns, as well as highlighting current and emerging issues and approaches and pointing to new directions for enquiry. With a focus on the perpetrators of mass killings, political violence and genocide, the handbook is concerned with a range of issues relating to the figure of the perpetrator, from questions of definition, typology, and conceptual analysis, to the study of motivations and group dynamics to questions of guilt and responsibility, as well as representation and memory politics. Offering an overview of the field, its essential concepts and approaches, this foundational volume presents contemporary perspectives on longstanding debates and recent contributions to the field that significantly expand the theoretical, temporal, political, and geographical discussion of perpetrators and their representation through literature, film, and art. It points to emerging areas and future trends in the field, thus providing scholars with ideas or encouragement for future research activity. As such, It will appeal to scholars across a range of disciplines, including sociology, anthropology, criminology, philosophy, memory studies, psychology, political science, literary studies, film studies, law, cultural studies and visual art.

chapter |4 pages

Introduction

BySusanne C. Knittel, Zachary J. Goldberg

part 1|1 pages

Core Concepts and Key Debates

part 1.1|1 pages

Definitions and Terminology

chapter 1|16 pages

From Perpetrators to Perpetration

Definitions, Typologies, and Processes
ByUğur Ümit Üngör, Kjell Anderson

part 1.2|2 pages

Group Dynamics and Moral Psychology

chapter 2|12 pages

The Making and Un-making of Perpetrators

Patterns of Involvement in Nazi Persecution 1
ByMary Fulbrook

chapter 3|9 pages

Ordinary Organizations

A Systems Theory Approach to Perpetrator Studies 1
ByStefan Kühl

chapter 4|15 pages

Stanley Milgram’s Obedience Experiments

ByStephen Gibson

chapter 5|13 pages

The Authoritarian Personality

Then and Now
ByChristina Gerhardt

chapter 6|10 pages

What’s Moral Character Got to Do with It?

Perpetrators and the Nature of Moral Evil
ByZachary J. Goldberg

chapter 7|11 pages

The Making of a Torturer

ByJessica Wolfendale

chapter 8|12 pages

Linking Perpetrator Characteristics to Jihadist Modus Operandi

An Exploratory Study
ByTeun van Dongen

part 1.3|2 pages

Perpetrators and the Law

chapter 9|11 pages

Nazi Perpetrators and the Law

Postwar Trials, Courtroom Testimony, and Debates about the Motives of Nazi War Criminals
ByHilary Earl

chapter 10|10 pages

When Perpetrators Become Defendants and then Convicts

ByMark A. Drumbl

chapter 11|12 pages

Unsettling Accounts

Perpetrators’ Confessions in the Aftermath of State Violence and Armed Conflict
ByLeigh A. Payne

chapter 12|11 pages

The Coercive Effects of International Justice

How Perpetrators Respond to Threats of Prosecution
ByDavid Mendeloff

part 2|1 pages

Intersections

part 2.1|2 pages

Perpetrators—New Theoretical Approaches

chapter 13|14 pages

Gendering the Perpetrator

Gendering Perpetrator Studies
ByClare Bielby

chapter 14|12 pages

Posthumanism and Perpetrators

ByJonathan Luke Austin

chapter 15|11 pages

Notes on the Subaltern

Or, How Postcolonial Critique Meets the Perpetrator
Byrashné limki

chapter 16|14 pages

Perpetrators, Animals, and Animality

ByKári Driscoll

chapter 17|11 pages

Understanding Perpetrators’ Use of Music

ByM.J. Grant

chapter 18|11 pages

Information Technologies and Constructions of Perpetrator Identities

ByAdam Henschke

chapter 19|13 pages

Climate Change Perpetrators

Ecocriticism, Implicated Subjects, and Anthropocene Fiction
ByRick Crownshaw

part 2.2|2 pages

Aftermaths, Responsibility, Trauma, and Memory

chapter 20|11 pages

Moral Responsibility and Evil

ByPaul Formosa

chapter 21|11 pages

Restorative justice and the challenge of perpetrator accountability

ByMargaret Urban Walker

chapter 22|11 pages

The Contours and Controversies of Perpetrator Trauma

BySaira Mohamed

chapter 23|11 pages

The Intergenerational Effects of Mass Trauma in Sculpting New Perpetrators

ByLane Benjamin, Melike M. Fourie

chapter 24|12 pages

One Perpetrator at a Time

The Contribution of Public Health Science to Genocide Prevention 1
ByReva N. Adler

part 2.3|1 pages

Perpetrators and Representation

chapter 25|10 pages

Perpetrators and Perpetration in Literature

ByStephanie Bird

chapter 26|10 pages

Whose Evil Is This? Perpetrators in the Theater

ByRobert Skloot

chapter 27|11 pages

Representing Infamous Others

Perpetrator Imagery in Visual Art
ByDiana I. Popescu

chapter 28|11 pages

Cultural Codes

Holocaust Resonances in Representations of Genocide Perpetrators
ByRebecca Jinks

chapter 29|14 pages

Playing Perpetrators

Interrogating Evil in Videogames about Violent Conflicts
ByHolger Pötzsch, Emil Lundedal Hammar

part 2.4|2 pages

Teaching About Perpetrators

chapter 30|5 pages

Playing Devil’s Advocate

Classroom Encounters with Holocaust Perpetrators
ByAlasdair Richardson

chapter 31|5 pages

Teaching the perpetrator’s perspective in Holocaust literature

ByErin McGlothlin

chapter 32|5 pages

Teaching for/about Empathy in Peace Education

ByMichalinos Zembylas

chapter 33|5 pages

Beyond Thinking Like a Lawyer

Providing a Space for Perpetrator Studies within the Legal Classroom
ByBrianne McGonigle Leyh

chapter 34|6 pages

The Ethics of Discomfort

Critical Perpetrator Studies and/as Education after Auschwitz
BySusanne C. Knittel