Ungarische Zwangsarbeit in Wien
Benedetta Carnaghi: Spies in the Concentration Universe. How Nazi “V-Männer” Contributed to Deportation in the Second World War
VWI invites/goes to...
Beate Kutschke: Music and Heroisation in the Mauthausen Liberation Celebrations. New Perspectives on Holocaust Remembrance and Commemoration in Austria
Jonathan Kaplan: Ambassadors of Memory. The Struggle of Guilt and Responsibility in the GDR
Michal Frankl: What is in a No Man's Land? Refugees in East-Central Europe in 1938
Diana Dumitru: From the Holocaust to the Gulag: Jewish 'Collaborators' in Stalinist Courts After World War II
Justyna Majewska: "I Don't Know When Exactly...", The Idea of Time: Understanding Present and Future in the Warsaw Ghetto
Kathryn Brackney: Beyond Bearing Witness. Art and Literature after the Holocaust, 1945-1963
Thomas Chopard: A Jewish Family from Poland to America. Exploring Persecution Trajectories in Their Collective and Social Dimensions
Ion Popa: Conversion and Identity. Experiences of Jews who Converted to Christianity Before and During the Holocaust
Michala Lônčíková: Antisemitic Propaganda During the Second World War. The Case of the Slovak State and the Independent State of Croatia
Devrim Sezer: Two Concepts of Genocide. Arendt, Lemkin, and the Destruction of the Armenians
György Majtényi: Transnational Memory of the Roma Holocaust/Porajmos
Dagi Knellessen: Kontinuitäten, Transformationen und Paradoxien in 40 Jahren Zeugenschaft zu Sobibor vor der bundesdeutschen Justiz, 1949-1989
Paula Oppermann: Violence as Communication? Latvian Fascists’ Attacks on Jews in the 1930s
Nikolaus Hagen: Gender and the Nazi Persecution of ‘Mixed Marriages’. The Cases of the Perlhefter and Loewit Siblings
Das Wiener Wiesenthal Institut für Holocaust-Studien (VWI) wird gefördert von: