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A public conversation about our worlds.

  • Monday: Morgan J. Locke
  • Tuesday: Madeleine E. Robins
  • Wednesday: Maureen F. McHugh
  • Thursday: Bradley Denton
  • Friday: Steven Gould
  • Saturday: Caroline Spector
  • Sunday: Rory Harper

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Condemned to Repeat

May 31st, 2007 by Bradley Denton

The Trial of Adolf Eichmann

Forty-five years ago today, Adolf Eichmann, the Nazi war criminal responsible for transporting hundreds of thousands of European Jews to their deaths, was hanged just outside Tel Aviv.  He had initially escaped justice by fleeing to Argentina after the war, but had been captured in 1960 by agents of the Mossad and brought to Israel for trial.

Hannah Arendt’s 1963 book on that trial, Eichmann in Jerusalem, was subtitled “A Report on the Banality of Evil” – and “the banality of evil” is now a part of our language and our understanding of human behavior, even among those who have never heard of Eichmann.

Eichmann in Jerusalem also provided one of the epigraphs for George Zebrowski’s 1984 short story “The Eichmann Variations”:

“And just as you supported and carried out a policy of not wanting to share the earth with the Jewish people and the people of a number of other nations — as though you and your superiors had any right to determine who should and who should not inhabit the world — we find that no one, that is, no member of the human race, can be expected to want to share the earth with you.  This is the reason, and the only reason, you must hang.”

In the alternate world of “The Eichmann Variations” (first published as the anchor story in Michael Bishop’s landmark anthology Light Years and Dark), Adolf Eichmann is captured in Argentina and smuggled to Israel just as he was in our world (albeit via submarine rather than airplane).  But here, instead of being tried and hanged himself, he is duplicated over and over again, year after year – and his doppelgangers are executed “Ten per hour, these years . . . it will be six million one day.”

“The Eichmann Variations” hit me like a ballpeen hammer to the forehead when I first read it.  It’s rare indeed that a story just over 3,000 words long is powerful enough to do that to me — and even rarer still that it’s powerful enough to hit me just as hard twenty-three years later.  It’s a tremendously disturbing story, and is supposed to be.

As far as I know, the text of “The Eichmann Variations” is not available online.  But it can be found in Light Years and Dark (Berkley, 1984), in Nebula Awards 20 (HBJ, 1985), and in Mr. Zebrowski’s story collection Swift Thoughts (Golden Gryphon, 2002).

It must be read.

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Another powerful story dealing with the same basic theme as “The Eichmann Variations” — and posing equally disturbing questions – is Terry Bisson’s “macs” (1999). 

It must be read, too. 

Posted in Brad, History, Horror, Science Fiction | 9 Comments »

9 Responses

  1. James Hollaman Says:

    i had never read The Eichmann Variations, now i think i want to. Thats sounds weird

  2. Morgan J. Locke Says:

    That’s interesting, Brad. And disturbing. Thanks for the reading suggestions.

  3. Steven Gould Says:

    Macs is brilliant.

  4. Caroline Spector Says:

    MACS was just great, Brad. I hadn’t read it before. Thanks for the link.

  5. Maureen McQ Says:

    I hadn’t read it either. Terry Bisson is one of my favorite writers ever. Everyone says sf is a literature of ideas, but Terry is one of the few people who actually write that way.

    There’s no answer to the question of how to deal with evil without introducing more evil, but that doesn’t mean the question shouldn’t be asked over and over.

  6. Morgan J. Locke Says:

    Bisson does some amazing stuff. I love his work.

  7. Rory Harper Says:

    Oh, yeah. I liked the Bisson. Dark and fucked up, and if I was one of the family members, if somebody killed Rachael, I’d want more than 30 days.

    I’d be crazy and useless for life at the end of it, but that would be okay. Ick.

    The place where it rings a bit false for me, though, is that I can’t see anybody wanting anything other than the original. I don’t think guilt is transferable.

    But all the cultures that have sin-eaters, in one guise or another, would disagree.

  8. Paula Helm Murray Says:

    Thanks, Brad. Was bored at lunch, read MACS and was creeped out. And I read it when it came out and was creeped out then too.

    Makes me vaguely glad I’m wading through Harry Potter again in a lit crit sort of way, that’ll keep me from having nightmares.

  9. Bill Householder Says:

    All I can say is: wow. Both stories were something else. Zebrowski’s is much more of a meditation on evil than the Bisson, but the Bisson punches you in the gut at the end. Have any of you read Thomas Merton’s ” A Devout Meditation in Memory of Adolf Eichmann?” Here’s a link: http://www.tomjoad.org/eichmann.htm
    That knocked me out when I first read it almost 20 years ago. Thanks Brad.

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