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Dr Robert Jay Lifton |
THE NAZI DOCTORS:
Medical
Killing and
the Psychology
of Genocide © |
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Page
429 |
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Doubling: The Faustian
Bargain |
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conquering time and therefore death; if the new self will
dare to be barbaric, twice barbaric indeed.39*
Within German psychological and
cultural experience, the theme of doubling is powerful and persistent.
Moreover, German vulnerability to doubling was undoubtedly intensified by the
historical dislocations and fragmentations of cultural symbols following the
First World War. Who can deny the Germanic feel of so much of the
doubling process, as best described by a brilliant product of German culture,
Otto Rank?
Yet the first great poet to take up the Faust theme was not
Goethe but the English playwright Christopher Marlowe. And there has been a
series of celebrated English and American expressions of the general theme of
the double, running through Edgar Allan Poes William Wilson,
Robert Louis Stevensons The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr.
Hyde, Oscar Wildes Picture of Dorian Gray, and the comic strip
Superman. Indeed, the theme penetrates the work of writers of all
nationalities: for instance, Guy de Maupassants Le Horla and Dostoevski's
novel The Double.41
Clearly,
the Nazis took hold of a universal phenomenon, if one given special emphasis by
their own culture and history. But they could not have brought about widespread
doubling without the existence of certain additional psychological patterns
that dominated Auschwitz behavior. These internalized expressions of the
environment of the death camp came to characterize the Auschwitz self, and have
significance beyond that place and time. |
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__________ * Mann also captures the
continuity in doubling by speaking of the implicit Satanism in
German psychology, and by having the devil make clear to the Faust figure that
we lay upon you nothing new
[but] only ingeniously strengthen and
exaggerate all that you already are.40 |
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THE NAZI DOCTORS:
Medical Killing and the Psychology of
Genocide Robert J. Lifton ISBN 0-465-09094 ©
1986 |
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Page 429 |
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