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Ilse Koch on Trial

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

An authoritative reassessment of one of the Third Reich's most notorious war criminals, whose alleged sexual barbarism made her a convenient scapegoat and obscured the true nature of Nazi terror.
On September 1, 1967, one of the Third Reich's most infamous figures hanged herself in her cell after nearly twenty-four years in prison. Known as the "Bitch of Buchenwald," Ilse Koch was singularly notorious, having been accused of owning lampshades fabricated from skins of murdered camp inmates and engaging in "bestial" sexual behavior. These allegations fueled a public fascination that turned Koch into a household name and the foremost symbol of Nazi savagery. Her subsequent prosecution resulted in a scandal that prompted US Senate hearings and even the intervention of President Truman.
Yet the most sensational atrocities attributed to Koch were apocryphal or unproven. In this authoritative reappraisal, Tomaz Jardim shows that, while Koch was guilty of heinous crimes, she also became a scapegoat for postwar Germans eager to distance themselves from the Nazi past. The popular condemnation of Koch—and the particularly perverse crimes attributed to her by prosecutors, the media, and the public at large—diverted attention from the far more consequential but less sensational complicity of millions of ordinary Germans in the Third Reich's crimes.
Ilse Koch on Trial reveals how gendered perceptions of violence and culpability drove Koch's zealous prosecution at a time when male Nazi perpetrators responsible for greater crimes often escaped punishment or received lighter sentences. Both in the international press and during her three criminal trials, Koch was condemned for her violation of accepted gender norms and "good womanly behavior." Koch's "sexual barbarism," though treated as an emblem of the Third Reich's depravity, ultimately obscured the bureaucratized terror of the Nazi state and hampered understanding of the Holocaust.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 16, 2023
      In this disturbing investigation, historian Jardim (The Mauthausen Trial) recasts Nazi war criminal Ilse Koch as a scapegoat. The wife of Buchenwald commandant Karl Koch, Ilse was acquitted by a Nazi court of “receiving stolen goods” in 1944 and convicted by U.S. and West German authorities of war crimes in 1947 and 1951. After spending nearly 24 years in prison, she died by suicide in 1967. Scrupulously examining the trial records, Jardim argues that Ilse was “a relatively inconsequential woman” who became “one of the most enduring symbols of Nazi Terror” because of the public’s “voyeuristic fascination with her alleged crimes” and “outrage at her perceived violation of accepted gender norms.” According to Jardim, there is no evidence that Ilse committed the most “sensational and grotesque” crimes attributed to her, including that she “had ordered the murder of tattooed inmates in order to collect their skins for the production of lampshades.” Ilse’s West German trial “was more of a moral crusade than an attempt to reckon with the crimes of the concentration camp system,” Jardim argues, and “provided a safe target for the postwar German public to comfortably condemn without having to reflect on the criminality and violence implicit in the National Socialism that most had either supported or enabled.” Scrupulous and unsettling, this is a vital reconsideration of a notorious figure from history. Photos.

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