Stories of Euthanasia in Germany

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Date

2000

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Association for Interdisciplinary Studies

Abstract

The lived context of euthanasia under the Nazis is established through four brief narratives. The first two tell of the author's experience with a German farm family which hid a deaf mute during the war and with a silent building which turned out to have housed Joseph Mengele and his staff. The third narrative concerns Mengele's fascination with a Gypsy boy at Auschwitz and the fourth a film used to accustom German audiences to mercy-killing. A survey of key developments in the history of eugenics theory in Germany and the United States follows, and a thesis is developed that the same racial-purification impulses that drove German science during the 1930s and 1940s were present in American documents and legal proceedings.

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Citation

Denham, Scott. "Stories of Euthanasia in Germany." Issues in Integrative Studies 18 (2000): 7-25.