Top Banner
The Banality of Evil: The Eichmann Trial Student Edition Prepared by: Dr. Caroline (Kay) Picart Assistant Professor of English Courtesy Asst. Professor of Law
15

The Banality of Evil: The Eichmann Trial Student Edition Prepared by: Dr. Caroline (Kay) Picart Assistant Professor of English Courtesy Asst. Professor.

Jan 03, 2016

Download

Documents

Dominick Doyle
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: The Banality of Evil: The Eichmann Trial Student Edition Prepared by: Dr. Caroline (Kay) Picart Assistant Professor of English Courtesy Asst. Professor.

The Banality of Evil: The Eichmann Trial

Student Edition

Prepared by:

Dr. Caroline (Kay) Picart

Assistant Professor of English

Courtesy Asst. Professor of Law

Page 2: The Banality of Evil: The Eichmann Trial Student Edition Prepared by: Dr. Caroline (Kay) Picart Assistant Professor of English Courtesy Asst. Professor.

Aims:

To formulate collective answers to the following questions:

1. What was unique about the Eichmann trial?

2. What have been some past and contemporary challenges to the promotion and protection of international human rights, and how has the individual body, in relation to the national and international bodies politic, been envisaged in relation to these challenges?

Page 3: The Banality of Evil: The Eichmann Trial Student Edition Prepared by: Dr. Caroline (Kay) Picart Assistant Professor of English Courtesy Asst. Professor.

Aims (2):

To examine Sival’s The Specialist alongside Arendt’s Eichmann in Jerusalem

To compare Eichmann’s portrayal in the “documentary” The Specialist with the docu-drama interpretations in Wannsee Conference and Conspiracy

Page 4: The Banality of Evil: The Eichmann Trial Student Edition Prepared by: Dr. Caroline (Kay) Picart Assistant Professor of English Courtesy Asst. Professor.

Estimated Timeline:

Chapters 4-6 of The Memory of Judgment: legal and cinematic legacies: 15 minutes

Sival’s The Specialist compared with Arendt’s Eichmann in Jerusalem: 30 mins. (15 minutes each)

Page 5: The Banality of Evil: The Eichmann Trial Student Edition Prepared by: Dr. Caroline (Kay) Picart Assistant Professor of English Courtesy Asst. Professor.

Estimated Timeline (2)

Clips from The Specialist—5 mins.

Clip from Wannsee Conference—5 mins.

Clip from Conspiracy—5 mins.

Conclusions—15 mins.

Page 6: The Banality of Evil: The Eichmann Trial Student Edition Prepared by: Dr. Caroline (Kay) Picart Assistant Professor of English Courtesy Asst. Professor.

The Eichmann Trial: Unique Properties

Nazi Concentration Camps was next shown again on June 8, 1961, within the context of the Eichmann Trial.

What was unique about how this film was edited and received?

Page 7: The Banality of Evil: The Eichmann Trial Student Edition Prepared by: Dr. Caroline (Kay) Picart Assistant Professor of English Courtesy Asst. Professor.

What else is unique about the Eichmann Trial?

Page 8: The Banality of Evil: The Eichmann Trial Student Edition Prepared by: Dr. Caroline (Kay) Picart Assistant Professor of English Courtesy Asst. Professor.

Discussion Question:

What have been some past and contemporary challenges to the promotion and protection of international human rights, and how has the individual body, in relation to the national and international bodies politic, been envisaged in relation to these challenges?

Page 9: The Banality of Evil: The Eichmann Trial Student Edition Prepared by: Dr. Caroline (Kay) Picart Assistant Professor of English Courtesy Asst. Professor.

Discussion Question:

Do you agree or disagree with Arendt’s negative appraisal of the trial? Why or why not?

Page 10: The Banality of Evil: The Eichmann Trial Student Edition Prepared by: Dr. Caroline (Kay) Picart Assistant Professor of English Courtesy Asst. Professor.

Discussion Question:

Do you think this depiction of the Jewish-resister-as hero has triumphed over the stereotype of the Jewish-victim-as-defenceless-sheep? Justify your answer carefully.

Page 11: The Banality of Evil: The Eichmann Trial Student Edition Prepared by: Dr. Caroline (Kay) Picart Assistant Professor of English Courtesy Asst. Professor.

Sivan’s The Specialist

Discussion Question:

Is The Specialist a “documentary”? Why or why not? Talk about film form as you justify your answers.

Page 12: The Banality of Evil: The Eichmann Trial Student Edition Prepared by: Dr. Caroline (Kay) Picart Assistant Professor of English Courtesy Asst. Professor.

Discussion Question:

Discuss the ending of The Specialist. What is it supposed to “mean”? Is the film still functioning as a documentary? Discuss film form alongside thematic elements.

Page 13: The Banality of Evil: The Eichmann Trial Student Edition Prepared by: Dr. Caroline (Kay) Picart Assistant Professor of English Courtesy Asst. Professor.

Discussion Question

How is Eichmann characterized in Wannsee Conference?

Page 14: The Banality of Evil: The Eichmann Trial Student Edition Prepared by: Dr. Caroline (Kay) Picart Assistant Professor of English Courtesy Asst. Professor.

Discussion Question:

Compare Eichmann’s characterization in Conspiracy with that in Wannsee Conference. Which do you find more convincing? Why?

Page 15: The Banality of Evil: The Eichmann Trial Student Edition Prepared by: Dr. Caroline (Kay) Picart Assistant Professor of English Courtesy Asst. Professor.

References:

Arendt, Hannah. Eichmann in Jerusalem (NY: Penguin, 1992).

Douglas, Lawrence. The Memory of Judgment. New Haven and London: Yale University Press, Chapters 4-6.

Reuter, Bernard. “Historical Discourse as Aesthetic Object in Eyal Sivan’s The Specialist . . .” inThe Holocaust Film Sourcebook, Caroline (Kay) Picart, Ed. (CT and London: Greenwood, forthcoming, 2004).

Photos from: “Eichmann Photo Gallery” and the “Internet Movie Data Base.” Online. Internet. Downloaded September 3, 2003. Available at: http://www.pbs.org/eichmann/gallery.htm and http://www.imdb.com/