Concentration camp

From RationalWiki - Reading time: 2 min

Showers at Mauthausen concentration camp
RationalWiki's Chilling Tales of True
Crime
Crime icon.png
Articles on illegal behaviour
Busted

A concentration camp is like a jail, only without the hygienic conditions and concern for prisoners' basic human rights. Typically, authorities use concentration camps to isolate groups of people — identifiable by some "outsider" trait — from the general population for some trumped-up reason.

Concentration camps were designed in no small part to remove "undesirables" from their social and political contexts, reducing them to the status of "non-persons". Channeling Hannah Arendt and especially Michel Foucault, the Italian postmodernist philosopher Giorgio Agamben writes in States of Exception about how camps like Auschwitz represented "the most biopolitical space ever to have been realized, in which power confronts nothing but pure life."[1]:111

Examples[edit]

The Spanish placed hundreds of thousands of Cubans into concentration camps during the Cuban War of IndependenceWikipedia in 1896.[2] The British first used the term as a label to identify facilities used to detain BoersWikipedia in South Africa during the Second Boer War of 1899-1902.

When speaking of concentration camps (as one does), two examples dating to World War II quickly come to mind:

One could also regard American Indian reservations as examples (if one is prone to hyperbole). Likewise, some of the P.O.W. camps on both sides during the American Civil War. The Soviet GulagWikipedia system might provide a better comparison.

Concentration camps made a brief comeback in Europe in the 1990s with the Yugoslav Wars. There are reports that Russia built concentration camps to process Ukrainian citizensWikipedia from regions under Russian occupation before transferring them into Russia as they invaded the country in 2022. The best currently existing example of concentration camps, however, are those in North Korea, called kwan-li-so. These camps hold an estimated 150,000-200,000 political prisoners,[3] in a style very similar to the Soviet Gulags, though sometimes they can get somewhat... Nazi-like.

Chechnya has opened concentration camps for gay men.[4] Cuba had a similar institution, the UMAP,Wikipedia for a while, where thousands of LGBT people, Christians, and other dissidents were arrested and put into forced labor.

Conspiracy theories[edit]

Some cranks believe that the return of concentration camps in the United States is right around the corner (damn, it's taking those Illuminati shape-shifting lizards a long time). They also conveniently prefer to ignore or downplay the very real and very inhumane "detention centers" run by ICE.[5][6] Gee, I wonder why...

References[edit]

  1. Tom Frost, ed., Giorgio Agamben: Legal, Political and Philosophical Perspectives. Taylor & Francis, 2013. ISBN 9781134097791
  2. Cuba in War Time by Richard Harding Davis (1897). Reprinted in 2016 by Dover Publications. ISBN 0486811158.
  3. North Korea's gulag: Never again?, The Economist
  4. Chechnya has opened concentration camps for gay men, Pinknews
  5. With Trump’s Migrant Camps, the History We Should Fear Repeating Is Our Own, New York Magazine
  6. Holocaust Survivor: Yes, the Border Detention Centers Are Like Concentration Camps, The Daily Beast

Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 | Source: https://rationalwiki.org/wiki/Concentration_camp
16 views | Status: cached on October 06 2024 04:11:33
↧ Download this article as ZWI file
Encyclosphere.org EncycloReader is supported by the EncyclosphereKSF