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Journal ArticleDOI

The Roots of Evil: The Origins of Genocide and Other Group Violence.

Leo Kuper, +1 more
- 01 Sep 1990 - 
- Vol. 19, Iss: 5, pp 683
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TLDR
The psychological and cultural bases of genocide and other forms of group violence are discussed in this paper, with a focus on the psychology of hard times and the effects of difficult life conditions.
Abstract
Pt. 1. Psychological and cultural bases of genocide and other forms of group violence: An introduction ; The origins of genocide and mass killing : core concepts ; The psychology of hard times : the effects of difficult life conditions ; Cultural and individual characteristics ; The psychology of perpetrators : individuals and groups ; Steps along a continuum of destruction : perpetrators and bystanders -- pt. 2. The Nazi Holocaust: Hitler comes to power ; Preconditions for the Holocaust in German culture ; Nazi rule and steps along the continuum of destruction ; The SS and the psychology of perpetrators ; The behavior and psychology of bystanders and victims -- pt. .3 Other genocides and mass killings: The Turkish genocide of the Armenians ; Cambodia : genocide to create a better world ; The disappearances : mass killing in Argentina ; Summary and conclusions : the societal and psychological origins of genocide and other atrocities -- pt. 4. Further extensions : the roots of war and the creation of caring and nonaggressive persons and societies: The cultural and psychological origins of war ; The nature of groups : security, power, justice, and positive connection ; The creation and evolution of caring, connection, and nonaggression.

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Dissertation

Making enemies: psychoanalysis and the personality profiling of ideological adversaries

TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue that the elision of psychoanalysis with the Western hegemonic and normative ideological position of the personality pathology paradigm represents an inherent bias, which risks alienating in particular Islam and undermining the perception of psychobiography as a universal discipline.
Journal ArticleDOI

Obeying, Joining, Following, Resisting, and Other Processes in the Milgram Studies, and in the Holocaust and Other Genocides: Situations, Personality, and Bystanders

TL;DR: In this paper, a conception of the origins of genocide and other mass violence, based on case studies of actual instances, ranging from the Holocaust to the genocide in Rwanda and great violence in the Congo, in which psychological and social science principles were applied to historical data.
Journal ArticleDOI

A social psychological study of ethnonyms: cognitive representation of the in-group and intergroup hostility.

TL;DR: The authors report the results of 3 studies examining the potential effects of various features of ethnonyms on intergroup behavior, indicating that among indigenous African cultures, indigenous Native American cultures, and African Americans, intergroup hostility was greater among in-groups characterized by less complex ethnonyms.
Journal ArticleDOI

Interfacing With Faces: Perceptual Humanization and Dehumanization:

TL;DR: The authors argue that the ways in which people visually encode others' faces can result in a rapid-fire perceptual categorization, which can lead to a social behavior that is similar to ours.

“Contemporary Reactions to War and the Holocaust with a Focus on The Role of the Polish- Language Press in North America from 1926-1945.”

TL;DR: This paper examined the attitude toward Jews prior to and during the Holocaust and how information on such attitudes was disseminated, thus helping to reveal who knew what? When? Furthermore, in examining the evolution of the Holocaust, the question of who was interpreted as a target for genocide is explored.