The “Double” of Erika B. - Sexual Conduct and Honour in a Hungarian Race Defilement Case Cover Image

The “Double” of Erika B. - Sexual Conduct and Honour in a Hungarian Race Defilement Case
The “Double” of Erika B. - Sexual Conduct and Honour in a Hungarian Race Defilement Case

Author(s): Gábor Szegedi
Subject(s): Gender Studies, History of Law, Recent History (1900 till today), History of the Holocaust
Published by: Wiener Wiesenthal Institut für Holocaust-Studien
Keywords: anti-Jewish laws; ‘race defilement’ practices; gender history of the Holocaust; emotional history approach; Foucault;

Summary/Abstract: This paper introduces the everyday realities of ‘race defilement’ practices in early 1940s Hungary through a case study. I argue that race defilement was an integral part of the Hungarian őrségváltás, ‘the changing of the guards’, in which the socalled ‘Christian’ middle class tried to push their ‘Jewish’ male rivals away from economic and political opportunities and this included access to ‘honourable, Christian women’. The case of a well-to-do and influential lawyer exemplifies that the judicial system was especially keen on enforcing őrségváltás by handing out punitive measures for Jews who were in a position of power and therefore seemed more of a threat to the non-Jewish elite. The case study also shows that playing with the gendered notion of ‘honour’ and with the resources still available to Jews in Horthy-era Hungary in the early 1940s, the outcome of cases could be swung. I here employ an emotional history approach and Michel Foucault’s concept of the psychological-ethical ‘double’ to indicate how emotions and readily available stereotypes were used by the actors of this particular case for various, often game-changing purposes.

  • Issue Year: 3/2016
  • Issue No: 2
  • Page Range: 59-70
  • Page Count: 12
  • Language: English