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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...
Sarah Cramsey: Uncertain Citizenship – Jewish Belonging and the “Ethnic Revolution” in Poland and Czechoslovakia, 1917–1947
   

Mittwoch, 28. Juni 2017, 18:00 - 19:30

Herrengasse 17, 1010 Vienna

 

VWI goes to the Czech Centre Vienna

predmet unor2015 cramseyUsually, the creation of the State of Israel is cast as a story that begins with Herzl and is brought to fulfilment by the Holocaust. My book project, Uncertain Citizenship: Jewish Belonging and the “Ethnic Revolution” in Poland and Czechoslovakia, 1917-1947, considers the resolution of questions concerning Jewish political belonging and citizenship in Europe as the contingent result of transnational debates, diplomatic manoeuvrings, demographic pressures and policies on multiple levels across three decades.  In sum, by exploring conversations spanning this incisive thirty-year period, I show how the process by which East Central Europeans ‘solved’ questions of Jewish citizenship offers a synecdoche for the history of the unprecedented nationalisation of space in the region more generally.  Arguably, the overall disentangling of populations in post-Second World War East Central Europe demanded the simultaneous embrace of a Jewish homeland in Palestine as a territorial nationalist project.

Commented by Michal Fankl

Sarah A. Cramsey is a Research Fellow at the VWI. She is a Professor of Practice of Jewish Studies at Tulane University. A graduate of the University of California, Berkeley, Oxford University, and the College of William & Mary in Virginia, she has been awarded various fellowships for research in the Czech Republic, Poland, the United Kingdom, Israel, and the United States.

Michal Frankl is a Senior Researcher at the Masaryk Institute and Archives of the Czech Academy of Sciences in Prague. An author of several books and many articles, his research interests include modern antisemitism, refugee policies, and the Holocaust in East Central Europe. He is the leader of the work package “New views on digital archives” in the European Holocaust Research Infrastructure (EHRI-2).

Click here to download the invitiation as a PDF file.

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

 

bmbwf 179

 

wienkultur 179

 

  BKA 179