The Question of German Guilt by Karl Jaspers, S.J. Joseph W. Koterski

The Question of German Guilt



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The Question of German Guilt Karl Jaspers, S.J. Joseph W. Koterski ebook
Format: pdf
ISBN: 0823220680, 9780823220687
Publisher: Fordham University Press
Page: 142


This interesting paper published just after the war is quite fascinating in its insights into the question of German guilt. The terrorist attacks in Jordan on November 9th were apparently supposed to be a reminder of the 9-11 attacks, because November 9th is written "9.11." in many parts of the world. Christian Buss, a culture editor for the magazine Spiegel wrote in a review of the drama that while the question of Germans' collective guilt had been resolved, the role of individuals remained unclear. Margalit, Gilad: Guilt, Suffering, and Memory. One of by a documentary program in which real German veterans discussed their experiences during the war, and viewers were referred to a web page where they could share their own memories or answer questions like "What would you have done?". Germany Since the early 2000s, there has been increasing interest in the question how Germans have remembered their experiences as victims of the Second World War. The minefield scene is, in fact, just one of many horrific acts the two brothers perpetrate over the course of the miniseries, a sweeping television event that has galvanized a new discussion about Germany's war guilt. For the future lives of Soviet soldiers withdrawing from Germany, or raising the question of relative guilt and atonement in God's Cell – A Women's Prison (Gotteszell - Ein Frauengefaengnis, which premiered in the Berlinale Forum in 2001). Bruno Ganz, who plays the professor, actually includes Karl Jaspers' The Question of German Guilt as required reading for his young law students, including Michael Berg, Hanna's lover. Just a year after Churchill's speech, German philosopher Karl Jaspers published The Question of German Guilt, in which he called for the necessity to remember. Karl Jaspers, The Question of German Guilt (New York: Capricorn Books, 1961; reprint, New York: Dial Press, 1947).