Veranstaltungen
Mit seinen wissenschaftlichen Veranstaltungen versucht das Wiener Wiesenthal Institut für Holocaust-Studien (VWI) die neuesten Ergebnisse im Bereich der Holocaust-, Genozid- und Rassismusforschung einem breiteren ebenso wie einem ausgewiesenen Fachpublikum regelmäßig näher zu bringen. Die unterschiedlichen Formate dieser über einen engen Wissenschaftsbegriff hinausweisenden Veranstaltungen, die von in einem kleinen Rahmen gehaltenen gehaltenen Vorträgen, den Simon Wiesenthal Lectures über für ein Fachpublikum interessante Workshops bis zu großen internationalen Tagungen, den Simon Wiesenthal Conferences reichen, spiegeln das breite Tätigkeitsfeld des Instituts wider.
Präsentationen von ausgewählten Neuerscheinungen zu den einschlägigen Themen des Instituts, Interventionen im öffentlichen Raum, die Filmreihe VWI Visuals und die Fachkolloquien der Fellows runden die Palette der Veranstaltungen des Instituts weiter ab.
VWI invites/goes to... | |||
Laura Almagor: Forgotten Alternatives: Jewish Territorialism as a Movement of Political Action and Ideology, 1905–1960 | |||
Mittwoch, 17. Februar 2016, 16:00 - 18:00 University of Vienna, Department of History Seminar Room No. 1 Universitätsring 1, 1010 Vienna
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VWI goes to the University of Vienna This presentation aims to shed light on the history of a largely forgotten Jewish political movement: Jewish Territorialism. It also demonstrates how the history of twentieth century Jewish politics is not confined to the realm of Jewish studies, but tells us something about larger geopolitical trends, especially in the immediate post-1945 period. Starting with the so-called Uganda Controversy of 1905, the Jewish territorialists searched for areas outside Palestine in which to create settlements of Jews. They recognised an imminent threat to Central and Eastern European Jewry, consisting of both the physically violent treatment of Jewish individuals, and the damage or outright destruction of Jewish tradition and culture that this violence might in due course entail. The Territorialists believed that only concentrated Jewish settlement outside Europe could solve the Jewish plight. Following the disbandment of Israel Zangwill’s Jewish Territorial Organisation (ITO) in 1925, the movement was reinstated in 1933 as the Freeland League for Jewish Territorial Colonization. Comments by: Martina Steer Laura Almagor is Junior Fellow at the VWI. She defended her PhD thesis at the European University Institute in Florence in 2015. She was a visiting researcher at UCLA’s History Department, as well as a fellow in the 20th Summer Institute of the Holocaust Educational Foundation of Northwestern University. Previously, she was affiliated with the Netherlands Institute for Military History. She has published on Jewish history, Dutch military history, and Second World War remembrance culture. Martina Steer is assistant professor in the Department of History at the University of Vienna. Click here to download the invitation as a PDF file. In cooperation with: |
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