Review: The Survivor
Editorial Review - Kirkus ReviewsDrawing on existentialist literature, Lorenzian ethnology, and the clinical data of the Nazi extermination camps, this essay argues that the lesson of camp survival is our ""biological wisdom."" Once the horror of the material and the book's dark graphics are distanced, this thesis becomes inconsistent and rather silly. Des Pres shows that organized resistance in the camps drew on tremendous moral, intellectual and, usually, political resources; he claims that this occurred despite civilization, not because of it, and we should all become ""mature"" enough to settle for sheer physical survival. The book accounts for self-sacrifice in the camps by pointing to the cooperative instinct of insects. Presumably the kapos and passive victims were somehow born deficient in this instinct; Des Pres simply writes as if all kapos were choosing the cleverest way to give secret aid to others. On the other hand, if ""the body's crude claims"" are the key to survival, we cannot explain the inmates who were ready to die for others, not to mention the WW II anti-fascists without whom no resister would have survived the camps.
Review: The Survivor: An Anatomy of Life in the Death Camps
User Review - Paul - GoodreadsFor us the camps are terminal images. They are the realised archetypes of eternal victimhood and of evil forever triumphant. This is a very unflinching book about those most extreme places that haunt ... Read full review
Review: The Survivor: An Anatomy of Life in the Death Camps
User Review - Taylor - Goodreadsmacabre, yet epic in its ability to move you. Read full review
Review: The Survivor: An Anatomy of Life in the Death Camps
User Review - Goodreadsfantastic but the concluding chapter is not very good
Review: The Survivor: An Anatomy of Life in the Death Camps
User Review - Yvette Robinson - GoodreadsMust read for anyone who needs to get out of her own brain. Read full review