ABSTRACT
This book comprises 14 essays by scholars who disagree about the methods and purposes of comparing Nazism and Communism. The central idea is that if these two different memories of evil were to develop in isolation, their competition for significance would distort the real evils both movements propagated. Whilst many reject this comparison because they feel it could relativize the evil of one of these movements, the claim that a political movement is uniquely evil can only be made by comparing it to another movement.
How do these issues affect postwar interrelations between memory and history? Are there tensions between the ways postwar societies remember these atrocities, and the ways in which intellectuals and scholars reconstruct what happened? Nazism and Communism have been constantly compared since the 1920s. A sense of the ways in which these comparisons have been used and abused by both Right and Left belongs to our common history.
These twentieth century evils invite comparison, if only because of their traumatic effects. We have an obligation to understand what happened, and we also have an obligation to understand how we have dealt with it.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |4 pages
Introduction
part |2 pages
Part I Approaches
chapter |18 pages
Nazism–Communism: Delineating the Comparison
chapter |10 pages
The Uses and Abuses of Comparison
chapter |38 pages
Worstward Ho: On Comparing Totalitarianisms
chapter |12 pages
Imagining the Absolute: Mapping Western Conceptions of Evil
chapter |9 pages
Comparative Evil: Degrees, Numbers and the Problem of Measure
part |2 pages
Part II Frames of Comparison
chapter |12 pages
Asian Communist Regimes: The Other Experience of the Extreme
chapter |17 pages
A Lesser Evil? Italian Fascism in/and the Totalitarian Equation
chapter |13 pages
On the Moral Blindness of Communism
part |2 pages
Part III Legacies