Sexual Violence in History: A Bibliography

compiled by Stefan Blaschke

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Start: Alphabetical Index: Author Index: A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z | Unknown

First published: October 1, 2025 - Last updated: October 1, 2025

TITLE INFORMATION

Authors: Elissa Mailänder

Title: Visual Pleasures?

Subtitle: Wehrmacht Vernacular Trophy Photographs and the Female Other in Nazi-Occupied Europe

Journal: The Journal of Holocaust Research

Volume: 38

Issue: 3-4: Gender-Based and Sexual Violence during the Holocaust (Edited by Dorota Glowacka, Regina Mühlhäuser and Michal Aharony)

Year: July-September 2024 (Published online: September 9, 2024)

Pages: 353-377

pISSN: 2578-5648 - Find a Library: WorldCat | eISSN: 2578-5656 - Find a Library: WorldCat

Language: English

Keywords: Modern History: 20th Century | European History: German History | Types: Sexual Assault / Sexual Violence during the Holocaust, Stripping; Types: Wartime Sexual Violence / Second World War; Representations: Photography



FULL TEXT

Link: Taylor & Francis Online (Free Access)



ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

Author: Elissa Mailänder, Centre d’Histoire (Center for History), Sciences Po - Academia.edu

Abstract: »Innumerable historical snapshots from World War II depict German soldiers visually celebrating their victories over an enemy or conquered population. Trophy photographs of German soldiers serve as one valuable heuristic tool to probe German visual cultures and military performances of the self. Indulging in common pictorial tropes that include fixating on female bodies, they have largely been ignored by Holocaust scholars who tend to concentrate on photographs of violence and their evidentiary value. This article places German images of wartime courtship and sexual conquest in dialogue within a broader spectrum of images depicting encounters with women in Nazi-occupied Europe. Photographs of hookups and flirtation with the female vanquished population enable us to embed Nazi warfare and the Holocaust not only in the larger context of conquest and exploitation, but also the cultural and affective mindset of combatants. Delving into the multifaceted histories of these images allows one to deconstruct the violence that lurks beneath the esthetically ‘benign’ visibility and to question the ambivalent affective power of the hyper-violent photographs. In the aggregate, images of violence, humiliation, and non-injurious sexual desire expose a range of behaviors and further shine a light on the ways in which mass violence and genocide are embedded in photographs. The article investigates different motives and ways in which German soldiers visually and physically conquered foreign women and how they ogled and photographically appropriated them. By scrutinizing body language, gestures, facial expressions, and poses the article peels back different layers of the camera’s gaze and of the depicted German soldiers and female subjects, while simultaneously scrutinizing the intersection of sexuality and violence, where desire, spectacle, and esthetics converge into visual pleasure.« (Source: The Journal of Holocaust Research)

Contents:
  Abstract (p. 353)
  Gaze, visual pleasure, and visual power: theoretical premises (p. 357)
  Gestural trophy selfies: the groped breast (p. 359)
  Snapping a private pinup: the vicissitudes of the gaze in Nazi-occupied Europe (p. 362)
  Sexual violence and pornography: lust, destruction, and the penetrative gaze (p. 368)
  Conclusion: the thrill of the real and the ethics of seeing (p. 371)
  Disclosure statement (p. 373)
  Notes on contributor (p. 373)

Wikipedia: History of Europe: History of Germany / Nazi Germany | Photography: World War II photography / Photography of the Holocaust | Genocide: The Holocaust / Sexual violence during the Holocaust | Sex and the law: Wartime sexual violence / Wartime sexual violence in World War II | War: World War II / War crimes of the Wehrmacht