The following contribution by Bart Nauta is part of JiC’s ongoing symposium on Alette Smeulers’ new book “Perpetrators of Mass Atrocities Terribly and Terrifyingly Normal?”. Bart is a historian and interdisciplinary researcher at ARQ National Psychotrauma Centre and a PhD candidate at Utrecht University, where his research explores the concept of perpetrator trauma. You can find all of the other contributors, here.

Attempting to comprehend the lived experiences of perpetrators, in a world fraught with everyday atrocities, is a moral imperative not just for scholars, but for anyone concerned with the present state of the world. Alette Smeulers’ Perpetrators of Mass Atrocities: Terribly and Terrifyingly Normal? invites us to examine without prejudice the unimaginable acts of violence that have been committed by thousands of perpetrators. The book explores the various types of individuals involved in such crimes, offering a rigorously documented resource for scholars, students, and the public.
As unsettling as it may seem, stepping into the minds and moral worlds of perpetrators reveals a disquieting truth: they, too, can be traumatized by their own acts of violence. Their acts of killing or torturing unarmed civilians can develop into a trauma, a psychological wound. Their trauma manifests itself through nightmares and overwhelming feelings of guilt.
The study of ‘perpetrator trauma’ remains in its infancy, largely due to the immense challenges of empirical research, since engaging directly with perpetrators is a daunting task. Fortunately, Terribly and Terrifyingly Normal? provides several meticulously documented case-studies. In doing so, it sheds light on a possibly emerging typology: the Traumatized Perpetrator. What insights on perpetrator trauma can we gain from Smeulers’ work?
We might consider perpetrator trauma a perverse topic, since many would conceive trauma as the experience of victims who must receive recognition, attention and respect. However, Berkeley law professor Saira Mohamed stated that perpetrator trauma ‘recognizes trauma as a neutral, human trait, divorced from morality, and not incompatible with choice and agency.’
Continue reading










