John M. Steiner collection

Identifier
irn539431
Language of Description
English
Alt. Identifiers
  • 2016.566.1
Dates
1 Jan 1908 - 31 Dec 2014
Level of Description
Item
Languages
  • German
  • English
  • Czech
Source
EHRI Partner

Extent and Medium

boxes

55

Creator(s)

Biographical History

John Michael Steiner (1925-2014) was born August 3, 1925 in Prague, Czechoslovakia, the son of Kurt and Ilse Steiner. Raised as a Christian, Steiner and his family nevertheless were identified as being Jewish by the Nazis during the German occupation of Bohemia and Moravia. In August 1942, Steiner was arrested and sent to a series of concentration camps, beginning with Theresienstadt, and including Auschwitz-Birkenau (1943), Blechhammer (early 1944), Reichenbach (early 1945), and ending with Dachau (February 1945), from which he was liberated in April 1945. His father also survived the Holocaust, but his mother and her relatives perished. Steiner returned to Prague to begin his studies at Charles University in 1946. After the Communist seizure of power, he fled Czechoslovakia in 1949 for Australia, where he earned a bachelor’s degree in German language and psychology at Melbourne University in 1952. He then moved to the United States, where he earned a master’s degree in German language and sociology at the University of Missouri in 1955, then continuing his studies at the University of California, while teaching as adjunct faculty and working as a social worker at the San Quentin State Prison. In 1962, he moved to Germany to pursue his doctorate at the University of Freiburg, examining social structures of the National Socialist regime and its concentration camps. During this period, he began the work for which he became best known: conducting surveys among former concentration camp guards and members of the S.S. Between 1962 and 1966, with the help of a former general in the Waffen-SS, Felix Steiner, and former SS-Obergruppenführer Karl Wolff, who were supportive of his research, he distributed several hundred questionnaires to former Nazis, and attended some of their meetings in order to make further contacts and do research. Few of those he met realized that he was a Holocaust survivor who had spent several years in concentration camps. His work was also encouraged by those who were involved in the prosecution of former Nazis, such as Fritz Bauer and Heinz Meyer-Velde, of the ministry of justice in the West German state of Hessen, as well as criminologist Armand Mergen. While at Freiburg, Steiner also worked at the Arnold Bergstraesser Institute, doing work in nearby prisons in order to implement group counseling as a means of rehabilitating prisoners. He completed his doctoral dissertation, under the supervision of sociologist Eduard Baumgarten, titled “Power Politics and Social Change in National Socialist Germany.” He returned to California, where he was appointed as a sociologist to the faculty of Sonoma State University, where he remained until being named professor emeritus in 1997. During his tenure at Sonoma State, he conducted research in a number of areas related to criminology, including conducting studies of theft and shoplifting, and working with Stanford professor Philip Zimbardo on the latter’s well-known “Stanford Prison Experiment.” He also remained engaged with the subject of the authoritarian personality and other topics related to the sociology of Nazi perpetrators. He collaborated with scholars such as Joel Dimsdale, Jochen Fahrenberg, and Jobst Freiherr von Cornberg, among others. In relation to this work, he continued to correspond and meet with a number of former Nazis and members of the S.S., and to collect testimonies and source documentation from them. Steiner also founded the Holocaust Studies Center at Sonoma State University, and was a prominent as a Holocaust survivor and speaker in Northern California during his later years. He was awarded the Bundesverdienstkreuz (Order of Merit) by the German government in 2004. John Steiner died in Novato, California on May 6, 2014.

Archival History

United States Holocaust Memorial Museum

Acquisition

United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Collection, Gift of Ingmar Steiner

Gift of Ingmar Steiner, 2016.

Scope and Content

The John M. Steiner collection comprises biographical material, research, writings, correspondence, photographs, notes, and printed and audiovisual material documenting John M. Steiner, his survival of the Holocaust, postwar migration, academic career, research interests in sociology, the Holocaust, and the SS, and publications. The collection is particularly strong in correspondence, writings, and files documenting Steiner’s research into the sociology of the Holocaust, the social psychology of perpetrators and authoritarian personality traits, and his research interactions with former Nazis and SS members. Biographical materials document Steiner’s postwar migration to Australia and the United States, education, academic career, and restitution claims. Schutzstaffel (SS) materials documenting Steiner’s sociological research on SS members. Writings comprise published articles, stories, essays, drafts, speeches, and notes authored or co-authored by Steiner. Sonoma State University materials document Steiner’s professional career there. Correspondence primarily relates to Steiner’s research and teaching but includes some personal messages. Subject files assemble various topics of interest to Steiner and include sections on Otto Strasser, Herbert Taege, and Philip Zimbardo. Photographs depict Steiner and professional events in his life but also include reproductions of Holocaust-era images. The collection includes many of Steiner’s original notes for his research and writings. Printed material covers subjects such as the Holocaust, the SS, sociology, and Czechoslovakia. Audiovisual material has not yet been evaluated but appears to document conversations and events related to Steiner’s sociological research and interests in the Holocaust and the SS.

System of Arrangement

The John M. Steiner papers arrived at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum with little or no discernable original order in folders with few meaningful titles. The papers have been arranged as 10 series and 14 subseries by function, subject, or format: Series 1: Biographical materials, 1908-2014 Subseries 1: General, 1949-2014 Subseries 2: Australia, 1908-1911, 1948-1953 Subseries 3: Academic, 1952-2006 Subseries 4: Printed materials, 1972-2014 Subseries 5: Student papers, 1948-1970 Subseries 6: Restitution, 1940-2011 Series 2: Schutzstaffel (SS) Materials, 1924-2008 Subseries 1: Individual files, 1924-2008 Subseries 2: Questionnaires, circa 1960s Subseries 3: Project files, circa 1960-2008 Subseries 4: Research files, circa 1959-1999 Series 3: Writings, circa 1953-2013 Series 4: Sonoma State University, 1969-2013 Series 5: Correspondence, 1947-2012 Series 6: Subject files, 1909-2013 Subseries 1: General, 1909-2013 Subseries 2: Otto Strasser material, circa 1958-1974 Subseries 3: Herbert Taege material, 1921-1993 Subseries 4: Philip Zimbardo material, 1957-2001

Conditions Governing Reproduction

Copyright Holder: Dr. John M. Steiner

People

Subjects

Genre

This description is derived directly from structured data provided to EHRI by a partner institution. This collection holding institution considers this description as an accurate reflection of the archival holdings to which it refers at the moment of data transfer.