Never Again, Once Again | Peter E. Gordon | The New York Review of Books
A few years ago, in the early summer of 2019, the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum declared on its website that it “unequivocally rejects efforts to create analogies between the Holocaust and other events, whether historical or contemporary.” Apparently it felt that this declaration was necessary because Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, the Democratic congresswoman from New York, had the temerity to characterize detention centers for migrants on the US southern border as “concentration camps.” Her statement might not have provoked such a strong reaction from the USHMM had she not felt moved to invoke the phrase “Never Again.” As someone who thinks a fair bit about the conceptual underpinnings of the social sciences, I found the USHMM’s condemnation of analogies between the Holocaust and what it (rather blandly) called “other events” truly puzzling, and I responded with an essay in these pages . I sought to explain just why analogies are indispensable to historical inquiry...