Is Complicity Evil? The Holocaust and Its Legacy Guest Lecture
On Friday, April 29 the Philosophy Department co-sponsoredĀ a guest lecture with theĀ Center for Holocaust and Genocide StudiesĀ in observance of Yom HaShoah titledĀ Is Complicity Evil? The Holocaust and Its Legacy. NitzanĀ Lebovic, Ph.D., professor of history and Apter Chair of Holocaust Studies and Ethical Values at Lehigh University, talked about the ethics of complicity and nonaction, and whether bystanders played an amoral or immoral role in the death of roughly 6 million Jews and 5 million non-Jews during the Holocaust.
NitzanĀ LebovicĀ received his B.A. in History and Theory of Literature from Tel Aviv University and his Ph.D. from UCLA. His first book, titledĀ The Philosophy of Life and Death: Ludwig Klages and the Rise of a Nazi BiopoliticsĀ (2013) focuses on the circle around the Lebensphilosophie and anti-Semitic thinker Ludwig Klages. His second book,Ā Zionism and Melancholy: The Short Life of Israel Zarchi, came out in Hebrew in 2015 and was published in June 2019 with the “New Jewish Philosophy and Thought” series at Indiana University Press.Ā HeĀ is also co-editor ofĀ The Politics of NihilismĀ (2014)Ā and ofĀ Catastrophes: A History and Theory of an Operative ConceptĀ (2014), and has authored special issues ofĀ Rethinking HistoryĢż(±·¾±³ó¾±±ō¾±²õ³¾),ĢżZmanimĀ (Religion and Power), andĀ The New German CritiqueĀ (Political Theology),Ā Comparative Literature and CultureĀ (Complicity and Dissent), andĀ Political TheologyĀ (Prophetic Politics).
Dr.Ā LebovicĀ regularly teaches classes about the history of the Holocaust, the history of total war, introduction to modern Jewish culture, and the history of fascism.Ā The university thanks Dr.Ā LebovicĀ for speaking with our campus community.