The Unmaking of Man

Disability and the Holocaust

Nonfiction, Social & Cultural Studies, Social Science, Disability, Political Science, Politics, Social Services & Welfare, History, Jewish, Holocaust
Cover of the book The Unmaking of Man by Simon Duffy, The Centre for Welfare Reform
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Author: Simon Duffy ISBN: 9781907790485
Publisher: The Centre for Welfare Reform Publication: June 30, 2013
Imprint: The Centre for Welfare Reform Language: English
Author: Simon Duffy
ISBN: 9781907790485
Publisher: The Centre for Welfare Reform
Publication: June 30, 2013
Imprint: The Centre for Welfare Reform
Language: English

The Unmaking of Man is a series of four essays by Dr Simon Duffy exploring the lessons of the Holocaust for people with disabilities. Few people know that people with disabilities not only made up a large number of the victims of the Holocaust but they were the first victims, marked out for destruction at a very early stage. Doctors argued that people with disabilities lived lives not worth living and lobbied Hitler to start a programme of euthanasia. The technologies and approaches then developed were then transferred to the destruction of the Jewish people.

Dr Duffy explores the practical and theoretical factors that led to the Holocaust and the common experiences of people with disabilities, the Jews and other victims of the Holocaust. He uses this analysis to explore the current risks for people with disabilities including the on-going threats of eugenics, segregation, stigmatisation, poverty and rightlessness. Dr Duffy also explores the strategies necessary to defend people at a time of growing economic insecurity.

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The Unmaking of Man is a series of four essays by Dr Simon Duffy exploring the lessons of the Holocaust for people with disabilities. Few people know that people with disabilities not only made up a large number of the victims of the Holocaust but they were the first victims, marked out for destruction at a very early stage. Doctors argued that people with disabilities lived lives not worth living and lobbied Hitler to start a programme of euthanasia. The technologies and approaches then developed were then transferred to the destruction of the Jewish people.

Dr Duffy explores the practical and theoretical factors that led to the Holocaust and the common experiences of people with disabilities, the Jews and other victims of the Holocaust. He uses this analysis to explore the current risks for people with disabilities including the on-going threats of eugenics, segregation, stigmatisation, poverty and rightlessness. Dr Duffy also explores the strategies necessary to defend people at a time of growing economic insecurity.

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