
Contents
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The God That Failed The God That Failed
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Primo Levi (1919–1987) Primo Levi (1919–1987)
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The Drowned and the Saved (1986) The Drowned and the Saved (1986)
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History's Miscellany History's Miscellany
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The Facts of the Holocaust The Facts of the Holocaust
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The Poverty of Historicism The Poverty of Historicism
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Cite
Abstract
After World War II, which wreaked havoc on a Europe still in shock and bleeding from the great war before it, a distrust and rejection of “historicism”—skepticism toward any abstract, imposing generalization about the character and trajectory of society and history except in defense of individual liberty and personal responsibility. The resistance to historicism was understandably tough and livid among Jewish European intellectuals, wherever the fates of war had pushed them. An abhorrence of this sort, though nobody has yet looked for it there, certainly agitates the writings of an Italian, Primo Levi. Because he was a man of science raised to value education and achievement, he knew how to craft articulate, purposeful prose. His writing is never just a list of facts, a mere catalogue of events. When he wants to, he shapes narratives that move gracefully through a beginning, middle, and end.
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