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1-9 of 9 Search Results for
Nazi regime
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Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2024) 16 (1): 118–141.
Published: 01 March 2024
...’ definition of the environment. The author argues that contemporary ecological light-pollution research in greater Berlin can take place because of the site’s longer naturalcultural history, which includes the Nazi regime’s role in creating the nature reserve where Lake Stechlin and scientific infrastructure...
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Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2018) 10 (1): 20–39.
Published: 01 May 2018
... in Soviet Russia.” 24. An interesting contrast is the other ostensibly totalitarian state, Nazi Germany, which already by 1933 had implemented progressive animal protection laws, sentimentally motivated by the discursive association of animals with the defenseless, seen as pure victims of immoral...
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Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2020) 12 (2): 407–430.
Published: 01 November 2020
.... Checker, “Wiped Out By the ‘Greenwave’” ; Dale and Newman, “Sustainable Development for Some” ; McCann, “Livable City/Unequal City.” For further discussion of these debates, see below. 2. López-Durán, Eugenics in the Garden . 3. “Life unworthy of life” is a Nazi eugenicist term...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2020) 12 (1): 388–405.
Published: 01 May 2020
... is the author of an influential study that traces the failure of most Germans in the immediate postwar decades to come to terms with the Nazi past to what they diagnose as an almost pathological inability to mourn. 31 Because it was not acceptable for the German people to admit that Hitler had been...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2024) 16 (3): 842–849.
Published: 01 November 2024
... have consequences far beyond the pandemic context of this hero/villain binary, such as the development of Zyklon B—the gas that would be eventually used by the Nazis in the Shoah—as, among other things, an alternative to the Clayton apparatus and similar machines. 19 At the same time as forming...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2012) 1 (1): 23–55.
Published: 01 May 2012
... original or diverted), it is a third (or mediator).” Kockelman, “Enemies, Parasites, and Noise,” 412-3. 98 Serres, The Parasite, 15-16. 99 For an unconventional account of the final solution in Nazi Germany, and an account of tragic and comedic narratives, see: Hayden White, “Historical...
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Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2019) 11 (2): 373–401.
Published: 01 November 2019
... Strughold to the United States following World War II to contribute to the fledgling American space medicine program, even if Strughold was implicated in various projects involving human experimentation under the Nazis—projects Strughold denied any knowledge of despite significant evidence to the contrary...
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Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2024) 16 (1): 183–200.
Published: 01 March 2024
... on Sami lands in 1909, fascist Italy founded a national park on formerly Austrian territory in 1935, and Nazi Germany planned a national park in the Bavarian Forest where the Czechoslovak border previously stood. 21 The creation of the national park as both a governance institution and a cultural idea...
Journal Article
Environmental Humanities (2019) 11 (2): 402–426.
Published: 01 November 2019
... of Holocaust memorials in Germany as “brazen, painfully self-conscious memorial spaces conceived to challenge the very premises of their being.” 87 As Young explained, the traditional monument—a Nazi-favored propagandistic medium—has historically functioned as a “state-sponsored memory of a national past...
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