"Undoubtedly a race, but they are not human": Immuno-politics and the Recognition of the Jew as Pathogenic Nonself in Art Spiegelman's Maus.

IF 1.2 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY Journal of Medical Humanities Pub Date : 2024-09-04 DOI:10.1007/s10912-024-09881-x
Arindam Nandi
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Abstract

This article engages with the immuno-political juxtaposition of the healthy self and the pathogenic other to critically examine the representation of Nazis and Jews in Art Spiegelman's Pulitzer Prize-winning graphic novel Maus (1996). Written as a postmemory narrative, Maus recounts the horrors experienced by the author's father Vladek Spiegelman as a survivor of the Holocaust that claimed an approximate six million Jewish lives. Beginning with the years leading up to World War II, Spiegelman's novel reimagines the discrimination, dislocation, and dehumanization suffered by Vladek and his family at various prison camps in Nazi-occupied Poland before being transferred to Auschwitz. Deploying an immuno-political reading of Maus, this article investigates how the Third Reich undertook a systematic extermination of the Jewish race by construing them as immunological nonself or pathogenic others. It further argues that Nazism's fantasy of constructing a racially aseptic German identity by eradicating the Jews as vermin or parasites was reinforced by the late nineteenth-century eugenicist ideologies of racial hygiene. This article finally considers how policies of excessive immunization that was deployed by Nazi biopolitics against the Jewish community, as well as exercised by the Jews to survive the Holocaust, eventually assumed the form of an autoimmune pathology that culminated with the attempted destruction of the entire medico-juridical infrastructure of the German Reich on the one hand and the fostering of suicidal tendencies by the Jewish survivors on the other.

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"无疑是一个种族,但他们不是人":免疫政治学与承认犹太人是阿特-斯皮盖尔曼《毛斯》中的非自我致病体。
本文从免疫政治的角度,将健康的自我与致病的他者并置,批判性地研究了阿特-斯皮盖尔曼(Art Spiegelman)获得普利策奖的图画小说《毛斯》(Maus,1996 年)中纳粹和犹太人的形象。毛斯》以后记忆叙事的形式,叙述了作者的父亲弗拉迪克-斯皮格尔曼作为大屠杀幸存者所经历的恐怖,大屠杀夺去了约六百万犹太人的生命。斯皮格尔曼的小说从第二次世界大战前的岁月开始,再现了弗拉迪克和他的家人在被转移到奥斯威辛集中营之前,在纳粹占领下的波兰各个战俘营所遭受的歧视、颠沛流离和非人待遇。本文通过对《毛斯》的免疫政治学解读,研究了第三帝国是如何将犹太人视为免疫学上的非自我或致病的他者,从而对犹太人进行系统性灭绝的。文章进一步指出,纳粹主义幻想通过将犹太人作为害虫或寄生虫消灭来构建种族无菌的德国身份,而 19 世纪末优生主义的种族卫生意识形态强化了这一幻想。本文最后探讨了纳粹生物政治学针对犹太社区实施的过度免疫政策,以及犹太人为在大屠杀中幸存而实施的过度免疫政策,最终是如何形成一种自身免疫病理学,最终导致一方面试图摧毁德意志帝国的整个医疗-法学基础设施,另一方面又助长了犹太幸存者的自杀倾向。
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来源期刊
Journal of Medical Humanities
Journal of Medical Humanities HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
1.90
自引率
11.10%
发文量
33
期刊介绍: Journal of Medical Humanities publishes original papers that reflect its enlarged focus on interdisciplinary inquiry in medicine and medical education. Such inquiry can emerge in the following ways: (1) from the medical humanities, which includes literature, history, philosophy, and bioethics as well as those areas of the social and behavioral sciences that have strong humanistic traditions; (2) from cultural studies, a multidisciplinary activity involving the humanities; women''s, African-American, and other critical studies; media studies and popular culture; and sociology and anthropology, which can be used to examine medical institutions, practice and education with a special focus on relations of power; and (3) from pedagogical perspectives that elucidate what and how knowledge is made and valued in medicine, how that knowledge is expressed and transmitted, and the ideological basis of medical education.
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