ABSTRACT

Taking Lives is a pivotal effort to reconstruct the social and political contexts of twentieth century, state-inspired mass murder. Irving Louis Horowitz re-examines genocide from a new perspective-viewing this issue as the defining element in the political sociology of our time. The fifth edition includes approximately 30 percent new materials with five new chapters. The work is divided into five parts: "Present as History Past as Prologue," "Future as Memory," "Toward A General Theory of State-Sponsored Crime," "Studying Genocide." The new edition concludes with chapters reviewing the natural history of genocide studies from 1945 to the present, along with a candid self-appraisal of the author's work in this field over four decades.

Taking Lives asserts that genocide is not a sporadic or random event, nor is it necessarily linked to economic development or social progress. Genocide is a special sort of mass destruction conducted with the approval of the state apparatus. Life and death issues are uniquely fundamental, since they alone serve as a precondition for the examination of all other issues. Such concerns move us beyond abstract, formalist frameworks into new ways of viewing the social study of the human condition. Nearly all reviewers of earlier editions have recognized this. Taking Lives is a fundamental work for political scientists, sociologists, and all those concerned with the state's propensity toward evil.

part III|85 pages

Present as History

chapter 1|9 pages

Present as History

chapter 2|17 pages

Defining Genocide

chapter 3|19 pages

Counttiiß Botes

chapter 4|17 pages

Colledmziwß Death

chapter 5|19 pages

inAwikalizinß iife

part II|121 pages

Past as Prologue

chapter 6|22 pages

Democracy, Autocracy, and Terrorism

chapter 7|17 pages

Human Rißhts ana Persona Responsibilities

chapter 8|24 pages

Bureaucracy aû state Tower

chapter 9|28 pages

Nationalism ana Gewcidd systems

chapter 10|28 pages

Totalitarianism as a Penal colony

part III|84 pages

Future As Memory

chapter 11|17 pages

Memory as History

chapter 12|25 pages

Banality of state Power

chapter 13|17 pages

A Natural History of the Holocaust

chapter 14|22 pages

Jewish, survival in a Poá-Holocaust worlâ

part iv|60 pages

Toward A General Theory Of State-Sponsored Crime

chapter 17|15 pages

swvivinß the Genocíkl State

part V|47 pages

Studying Genocide

chapter 18|8 pages

Life, Death, and sociohgy

chapter 19|21 pages

Rescarcknß Genocide

chapter 20|16 pages

Gmßlwß Genocík