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News – Veranstaltungen – Calls

24. April 2025 00:00 - 04. Mai 2025 00:00
InterventionFremde Erde – Festival Verfemte Musik
Mit dem Musikfestival FREMDE ERDE, das VIVA LA CLASSICA! in Kooperation mit Wiener Wiesenthal Institut für Holocaust-Studien (VWI), Neubau erinnert, Israelitische Kultusgemeinde Wien (IKG.Kultur) und Exilarte Zentrum der mdw – Universität für Musik und darstellende Kunst Wien durchfüh...Weiterlesen...
28. April 2025 19:00
BuchpräsentationJürgen Matthäus: Gerahmte Gewalt. Private Fotoalben von Deutschen im „Osteinsatz“ und die kollektive Erinnerung an den Zweiten Weltkrieg, Metropol Verlag, Berlin, 2025
Sie liegen in Schubladen und Kellern von Wohnhäusern, auf Verkaufstischen von Flohmärkten und in Archiven: Private Fotoalben sind materielle Zeugnisse, wie Deutsche den Zweiten Weltkrieg erlebten und wie sie ihn erinnert wissen wollten. Einige dieser Kriegsalben haben in Ausstellungen...Weiterlesen...
08. Mai 2025 18:00
Simon Wiesenthal LecturePhilippe Sands: Londres 38 - On Impunity, Pinochet in England and a Nazi in Patagonia
The house at 38 Londres Street, Santiago, is home to the legacies of two men whose personal stories span continents, nationalities and decades of atrocity: Augusto Pinochet, President of Chile, and Walther Rauff, a Nazi SS officer responsible for the use of gas vans.On the run from ju...Weiterlesen...
14. Mai 2025 13:00
VWI invites/goes to...Workshop: What’s New in Holocaust Studies?
VWI invites the Department of Contemporary History, University of Vienna Chair: Regina Fritz (Department of Contemporary History, University of Vienna) and Éva Kovács (VWI) Programme 13:00-13:45Irina Nastasă-Matei (Gerda Henkel Research Fellow at VWI)The United Romanian Jews of Ame...Weiterlesen...
03. Juni 2025 18:30
BuchpräsentationInes Koeltzsch: Vor dem Weltruhm. Nachrufe auf Franz Kafka und die Entstehung literarischer Unsterblichkeit, böhlau, Wien, 2024
Franz Kafka gilt seit den 1940er Jahren als unbestrittene Ikone der Weltliteratur. Woher kam dieser postume Ruhm des zu Lebzeiten nur mäßig bekannten Schriftstellers? Das Buch Vor dem Weltruhm zeigt, dass das Schreiben und Sprechen über Franz Kafka seit seinem Tod im Juni 1924 in der ...Weiterlesen...

VWI-Fellow Tim Corbett Granted Prestigious Fellowship at The Center for Jewish History in New York City

 

Tim Corbett awarded the Prins Foundation Postdoctoral and Early Career Fellowship for Emigrating Scholars for the 
2015 – 2016 academic year.

 

NEW YORK – July 14, 2015 – Tim Corbett of the Vienna Wiesenthal Institute for Holocaust Studies has been named a 2015 – 2016 Prins Foundation Postdoctoral Fellow at the Center for Jewish History – the home to the world’s largest and most comprehensive archive of the modern Jewish experience outside of Israel. Corbett will use his new position to conduct original research around the memory of Jewish-Austrian exiles and émigrés in the United States for a period of ten months.


Corbett’s doctoral dissertation at the UK's Lancaster University investigates Jewish-Austrian identity through the lens of military service, during the rise of political fascism, and in the wake of the Holocaust.

 

 

“I congratulate this new class of Fellows and invite them to use our more than five miles of collection materials to enrich their studies,” said Joel Levy, president and CEO of the Center for Jewish History. “The Center for Jewish History is a unique institution, and these Fellowships offer an extraordinary opportunity to help promising individuals –focused on Jewish studies and beyond – learn and grow as scholars.”

 

Now in its 14th year, the Center’s Fellowship program offers financial support to humanities scholars, across different stages of their careers. This distinguished community of scholars has used the Center’s resources to produce scholarship that adds to historical knowledge and advances the field of Jewish Studies. Fellows have published their work in leading presses and journals and hold positions at prestigious universities and cultural institutions in the US, Europe, and Israel.


Fellows work on their individual projects, while attending weekly meetings. They present the results of their research through an informal seminar, and submit a final report upon completion of their assignment.  

 

About the Center for Jewish History

 

The Center for Jewish History in New York City illuminates history, culture, and heritage. The Center provides a collaborative home for five partner organizations: American Jewish Historical Society, American Sephardi Federation, Leo Baeck Institute, Yeshiva University Museum, and YIVO Institute for Jewish Research.

 

The partners’ archives comprise the world’s largest and most comprehensive archive of the modern Jewish experience outside of Israel. The collections span 700 years, with more than 5 miles of archival documents (in dozens of languages and alphabet systems), more than 500,000 volumes, as well as thousands of artworks, textiles, ritual objects, recordings, films, and photographs.

 

The Center’s experts are leaders in unlocking archival material for a wide audience through the latest practices in digitization, library science, and public education. As one of the world’s foremost research institutions, the Center offers fellowships, a wide array of exhibitions, symposia, conferences and lectures. The Center is a Smithsonian Affiliate, and is a partner of the Google Cultural Institute.

 

The Center for Jewish History is home to the Lillian Goldman Reading Room, Ackman & Ziff Family Genealogy Institute, The David Berg Rare Book Room and The Collection Management & Conservation Wing. Public programs create opportunities for diverse audiences to explore the rich historical and cultural material that lives within the Center’s walls.

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Aktuelle Publikationen

 

SWW2019_Cover

 

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SIMON-03-2023

 

 

Weitere Publikationen


Das Wiener Wiesenthal Institut für Holocaust-Studien (VWI) wird gefördert von:

 

bmbwf 179

 

wienkultur 179

 

  BKA 179