Book contents
- The Cambridge World History of Genocide
- The Cambridge World History of Genocide
- The Cambridge World History of Genocide
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Maps
- Tables
- Contributors to Volume ii
- Introduction to Volume ii
- Part I Settler Colonialism
- Part II Empire-Building and State Domination
- Part III Nineteenth-Century Frontier Genocides
- Part IV Premonitions
- 22 Genocide and the Forcible Removal of Aboriginal Children in Australia, 1800–1920
- 23 The Killing Fields of Jiangnan
- 24 The Crime of the Congo
- 25 The Ottoman Massacres of Armenians, 1894–1896 and 1909
- 26 ‘Rivers of Blood and Rivers of Money’
- 27 Representations of the Poison Gas War on the Eastern Front, 1915–1917
- Index
27 - Representations of the Poison Gas War on the Eastern Front, 1915–1917
from Part IV - Premonitions
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 June 2023
- The Cambridge World History of Genocide
- The Cambridge World History of Genocide
- The Cambridge World History of Genocide
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Maps
- Tables
- Contributors to Volume ii
- Introduction to Volume ii
- Part I Settler Colonialism
- Part II Empire-Building and State Domination
- Part III Nineteenth-Century Frontier Genocides
- Part IV Premonitions
- 22 Genocide and the Forcible Removal of Aboriginal Children in Australia, 1800–1920
- 23 The Killing Fields of Jiangnan
- 24 The Crime of the Congo
- 25 The Ottoman Massacres of Armenians, 1894–1896 and 1909
- 26 ‘Rivers of Blood and Rivers of Money’
- 27 Representations of the Poison Gas War on the Eastern Front, 1915–1917
- Index
Summary
This chapter takes up a half-forgotten novel fragment of 1941-2 by André Malraux based on first-hand accounts from the 1914 War, as well as two, neglected photographs of targeted civilian casualties of poison gas made in a Macedonian town in 1917 by the German Jewish criminologist R. A. Reiss. It moves beyond conventional archives to uncover complex histories, interweaving cultural artifacts with archival material to represent at two distinct moments the experimental poison gas war on the eastern front. Prussic acid -- by 1917, the base for an early form of Zyklon – provides the constant in these episodes. Eastern Europe, an area historically associated with colonialism and post-colonialism, furnished the choice terrain in 1915-17 of poison gas warfare, and so, premonitions of a Nazi continental imperialism which relied on gas, a weapon designed for colonial use, to enforce racial hierarchies. These cultural artifacts –Malraux’s Bolimów/Bolgako and Reiss’s Monástir -- map the head of the “Zyklon trail,” in Lemkin’s phrase. The experimental poison gas war on the eastern front substitutes premonitory vistas for the classic, western battlescapes of Wilfred Owen’s poetry by redrawing the templates and boundaries of the developmental logic of Nazi “scientific violence” amidst occupation, subjugation, and ethnic/racial warfare.
Keywords
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Cambridge World History of Genocide , pp. 657 - 680Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023