Papers by USC Shoah Foundation Center for Advanced Genocide Research
In cooperation with:
-India Branch Office of the Max Weber Foundation, New Delhi (Indra Sengupta,... more In cooperation with:
-India Branch Office of the Max Weber Foundation, New Delhi (Indra Sengupta, Razak Khan)
-China Branch Office, Beijing (Max Jacob Fölster)
This conference is the second in a conference series devoted to people " In Global Transit. " The first conference, which took place in Kolkata in 2017 focused on Jewish and political refugees from Nazi-controlled Europe who fled, at least initially, to European colonies or countries of the global South. "In Global Transit: Forced Migration of Jews and other Refugees (1940s-1960s)" will build on the 2017 conference, taking a broader perspective and expanding the geographic and analytical focus. It will examine the experience of Jewish refugees who found haven – but not new homes – in Asia, Africa, and Latin America. For most of these individuals, the end of the war did not mean an end to life in transit. To the contrary: after a period of temporary settlement, they found themselves not only once again on the move, but also in a new, more ambiguous situation. On the one hand, growing awareness of the Nazis' attempt to wipe out European Jewry called attention to the plight of the Jewish refugees. But, on the other, they were just one among many groups in search of permanent homes as the large-scale expulsion of ethnic, religious, and/or national groups became a global phenomenon. The ever-more frequent waves of involuntary migration, in turn, provided the impetus for the development of an international refugee policy – a process in which onetime refugees from Nazi-controlled Europe played a notable part.
The conference "In Global Transit: Forced Migration of Jews and other Refugees (1940s-1960s)" aims to illuminate the particularities of (usually) involuntary Jewish migration from and between countries of the global South that have received little scholarly attention thus far. We seek, moreover, to use the experience of Jewish refugees as an analytical prism to consider the phenomenon of forced migration more generally. Jews were part of European and worldwide flows of migrants of unprecedented scale and diversity. Among those migrants were individuals, such as the Nazis and Nazi collaborators who fled to South America, North Africa, and the Middle East, whose experiences hardly fit narratives of victimhood. Most societies at the time were not prepared to deal with mass movements of refugees caught "in transit," and, needed new knowledge and legal instruments in order to respond. That new knowledge was produced not least of all by Jewish legal experts and social scientists who drew on their own experience of life in transit. The conference will look beyond established turning-points and consider long-term refugee movements between socially and culturally disparate countries and regions. Jewish refugees from Nazi-controlled Europe will be taken as a paradigmatic group to explore basic questions about the transit experience, for example, the question of the relationship between knowledge and modes of dealing with contingency and uncertainty. An important related issue is the tension between the simple desire to survive and the challenge of planning for a life in a new, unfamiliar setting. We are particularly interested in the encounters between Jewish refugees and members of other groups they encountered while in transit countries, such as other refugees, colonial subjects, and religious or ethnic minorities subject to discrimination.
We are particularly interested in the following topics and areas of inquiry:
- Coping strategies that refugees developed during various phases of transit and in shifting settings to deal with transience, uncertainty, and unpredictability
- What role did circumstances such as residence in a refugee camp, opportunities for employment, and dependence on material assistance play in the development of coping strategies? What types of knowledge were needed or deemed necessary to manage uncertainty? Which practices and which networks evolved from them? Who were the actors in the exchange of knowledge and who targeted sharing of knowledge for coping? How important were categories such as generation, age, gender, origin, social status, and family? How far do concepts such as
adaptation and identity offer insight into the “transit mindset”?
- Power structures that affect trans-migrants locally and on larger, national, regional and global levels. What was the relationship between officials and refugees, between bureaucratic practices and the
experience of forced migration? How did different state and non-state actors like aid organizations, resettlement agencies, employment bureaus, and even Jewish communities etc. react and get involved
with regard to migrants’ with different ethnic, religious, professional or class background? What role in particular did local Jewish communities and the local representatives of international aid organizations play as disseminators of knowledge or as producers of knowledge?
- Knowledge production in the course of and as a product of generally involuntary global transit: How did the experience of life in transit influence the development of new concepts such as statelessness and
human rights or anti-colonialism and development policy? How did that experience shape perceptions and interpretations of anti-Semitism and racism? The Americas are as pertinent as other regions of the world
in addressing these questions.
- Material dimensions of flight and transit: How did the importance of material possessions change from one phase of transit to the next? What were forced migrants allowed to take with them? How did that vary
over time and place? How did possessions shape the route of migration or affect the duration of the period of transit? What roles did specific objects play? What value do surviving objects possess as historical
sources? We are also interested in the economic importance of possessions and topics such as the sale of possessions to escape harm. Which actors were involved in the transfer of property as refugees were in transit? Who profited from such transfers?
- Visual and artistic representations of flight and transit: What images and portrayals of life in transit did those involved produce? Which forms of representation were developed in the situation of transit? How do the diverse literary treatments of the refugee transit experience relate to scholarly analyses of that experience? What aesthetic continuities and/or discontinuities are evident in the work of refugee artists?
If you are interested in discussing these or related questions, please send a brief CV and a proposal of no more than 300 words by August 1, 2018, to Heike Friedman ([email protected]) Lump sum travel grants will be provided to successful applicants.
Survivors and their testimonies have been central to Holocaust research and memorial culture, but... more Survivors and their testimonies have been central to Holocaust research and memorial culture, but as fewer and fewer survivors remain among us, we need to consider how and in what forms Holocaust scholarship and the memory of the Holocaust will continue. One critical focus will certainly be the legacy that survivors leave behind in the forms of written, audio, and video testimonies, as well as in the transmission of their testimony to their children and grandchildren, who have their own stories to tell, as well as to researchers. In addition, those who are not survivors or their descendants seem destined to play an increased role in the transmission of the history and memory of the Holocaust. We welcome proposals for papers on any aspect of the future of Holocaust testimonies, including, but not limited to, the following topics:
-methodological and theoretical issues
-"Holocaust testimony" -- renewed analysis of conceptualization and meaning of the term
-limitations and boundaries in the use of Holocaust testimonies -testimonies and historical context
-testimony classification and categorization by profession, occupation, age, gender, place, and time
-re-reading and reinterpreting early testimonies
-multiple testimonies by one and the same survivor
-second-and third-generation testimonies
-history, memory, and testimony
-post-memory
-intergenerational transmission of trauma and resilience
-how to remember what we did not experience
-the role of video-testimony in the future
-film as testimony
-the responsibilities of the scholar of the Holocaust
Scholarly work on survivor testimony is done today in many academic disciplines including history, literary analysis, linguistics, cultural criticism, psychology, neuroscience, anthropology and sociology. The rich and varied corpus of testimonies requires the collaborative efforts of researchers across disciplines to enable us to hear the voices of survivors articulated through their testimonies.
The USC Shoah Foundation Center for Advanced Genocide Research and the International Institute fo... more The USC Shoah Foundation Center for Advanced Genocide Research and the International Institute for Holocaust Research, Yad Vashem wish to announce the third joint workshop for advanced PhD candidates working on Holocaust topics.
This workshop intends to bring together graduate students from the United States, Canada, and Israel to exchange ideas and share their research results on the Holocaust, including its antecedents and aftermath. Yad Vashem’s Research Institute and the USC Shoah Foundation Center for Advanced Genocide Research encourage PhD candidates to submit their applications for the workshop, which will be held from 25-29 June 2017 at Yad Vashem, The World Holocaust Remembrance Center, in Jerusalem, Israel. All topics on the Holocaust and proposals from all disciplines are open for consideration.
The USC Shoah Foundation Center for Advanced Genocide Research invites research proposals from ad... more The USC Shoah Foundation Center for Advanced Genocide Research invites research proposals from advanced standing Ph.D. candidates for its 2016-2017 Greenberg Research Fellowship in Genocide Studies. The fellowship provides $4,000 support for dissertation research focused on testimony from the USC Shoah Foundation Visual History Archive, a collection of over 53,000 interviews conducted in 39 languages and in 63 countries, covering the life histories of survivors and other eyewitnesses of the Holocaust, the Rwandan and Armenian genocides and the Nanjing Massacre in China. The incumbent will spend up to one month in residence at the Center for Advanced Genocide Research during the 2016-2017 academic year. The deadline for applications is February 29, 2016. For more information, please visit http://sfi.usc.edu/news/2015/11/10454-call-applications-2016-2017-greenberg-research-fellowship-phd-candidates
The USC Shoah Foundation Center for Advanced Genocide Research invites research proposals from ad... more The USC Shoah Foundation Center for Advanced Genocide Research invites research proposals from advanced standing Ph.D. candidates for its 2016-2017 Inaugural Robert J. Katz Research Fellowship in Genocide Studies. The fellowship provides $4,000 support for dissertation research focused on testimony from the USC Shoah Foundation Visual History Archive, a collection of over 53,000 interviews conducted in 39 languages and in 63 countries, covering the life histories of survivors and other eyewitnesses of the Holocaust, the Rwandan and Armenian genocides and the Nanjing Massacre in China. The incumbent will spend up to one month in residence at the Center for Advanced Genocide Research during the 2016-2017 academic year. The deadline for applications is February 29, 2016. For more information, please visit: http://sfi.usc.edu/news/2016/01/10763-call-applications-2016-2017-katz-research-fellowship-genocide-studies-phd
Dr. Kiril Feferman (Israel/Russia) the 2015-2016 Center Fellow at USC Shoah Foundation Center for... more Dr. Kiril Feferman (Israel/Russia) the 2015-2016 Center Fellow at USC Shoah Foundation Center for Advanced Genocide Research, will speak about the findings of his research, Tuesday, Feb. 2, 2016 at USC Doheny Memorial Library, Room 240.
Dr. Kiril Feferman has conducted extensive research about the Holocaust in Crimea, the North Caucasus, and the Soviet Union. In this lecture, he will illuminate an important and previously unresearched aspect of the Holocaust: the role of religion in influencing the behavior and decisions of Jews and non-Jews in the Soviet territories during German occupation.
He is Senior Lecturer in the Department of Jewish Studies at the Russian State University for Humanities and was the Director of Education and Research at the Russian Research and Educational Holocaust Center in Moscow.
Dr. Feferman received his PhD in 2008 from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, where he presented a dissertation on the Holocaust in Crimea and the Caucasus. He has since authored two books, The Holocaust on the Russian Ethnic Frontier: The Crimea and North Caucasus and Soviet Jewish Stepchild: The Holocaust in the Soviet Mindset, 1941-1964, as well as edited or co-edited multiple collections on the Holocaust and/or mass violence. Dr. Feferman is currently finishing his third book project, "If We had Wings, We would Fly to You": A Soviet Jewish Family Faces Destruction, 1941-42, which is under review by Indiana University Press.
Dr. Feferman, our 2015-2016 Center Fellow, has held previous fellowships at the Yad Vashem International Institute for Holocaust Research and the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies. Dr. Feferman was a 2013 recipient of the Egit Prize for Holocaust and Jewish Resistance Literature from the Israeli Trade Union, and has also received awards from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, the Nevzlin Center, the Ben Zvi Institute, and the World Sephardic Federation.
Refreshments will be served. Please RSVP at [email protected].
Conference Presentations by USC Shoah Foundation Center for Advanced Genocide Research
Septiembre 11-14, 2016
Diciembre del 2016 marcará el 20º aniversario de la firma de los acuerdos... more Septiembre 11-14, 2016
Diciembre del 2016 marcará el 20º aniversario de la firma de los acuerdos de paz culminando así treinta y seis años de guerra civil en Guatemala. El Centro para la investigación avanzada de genocidio de la Fundación de USC Shoah convocará a una conferencia académica internacional con investigadores en diversas disciplinas, en los campos de estudios latinoamericanos y estudios del genocidio para avanzar la discusión de "genocidio y resistencia en Guatemala". La Conferencia será organizada por Wolf Gruner, director y fundador del centro y Victoria Sanford, directora y fundadora del Centro para los Derechos Humanos y Estudios para la Paz (CfHRPS) del Lehman College, City Universidad de Nueva York.
September 11-14, 2016
December 2016 will mark the 20th anniversary of the signing of the Guatema... more September 11-14, 2016
December 2016 will mark the 20th anniversary of the signing of the Guatemalan peace accords that ended more than thirty years of civil war in 1996. USC Shoah Foundation Center for Advanced Genocide Research will convene an international academic conference bringing researchers from all disciplines as well as the fields of Latin American Studies and Genocide Studies to advance the discussion of “Genocide and Resistance in Guatemala.” The conference will be organized by Wolf Gruner, Center founding director, and Victoria Sanford, founding director of the Center for Human Rights and Peace Studies (CfHRPS) at Lehman College, City University of New York.
Uploads
Papers by USC Shoah Foundation Center for Advanced Genocide Research
-India Branch Office of the Max Weber Foundation, New Delhi (Indra Sengupta, Razak Khan)
-China Branch Office, Beijing (Max Jacob Fölster)
This conference is the second in a conference series devoted to people " In Global Transit. " The first conference, which took place in Kolkata in 2017 focused on Jewish and political refugees from Nazi-controlled Europe who fled, at least initially, to European colonies or countries of the global South. "In Global Transit: Forced Migration of Jews and other Refugees (1940s-1960s)" will build on the 2017 conference, taking a broader perspective and expanding the geographic and analytical focus. It will examine the experience of Jewish refugees who found haven – but not new homes – in Asia, Africa, and Latin America. For most of these individuals, the end of the war did not mean an end to life in transit. To the contrary: after a period of temporary settlement, they found themselves not only once again on the move, but also in a new, more ambiguous situation. On the one hand, growing awareness of the Nazis' attempt to wipe out European Jewry called attention to the plight of the Jewish refugees. But, on the other, they were just one among many groups in search of permanent homes as the large-scale expulsion of ethnic, religious, and/or national groups became a global phenomenon. The ever-more frequent waves of involuntary migration, in turn, provided the impetus for the development of an international refugee policy – a process in which onetime refugees from Nazi-controlled Europe played a notable part.
The conference "In Global Transit: Forced Migration of Jews and other Refugees (1940s-1960s)" aims to illuminate the particularities of (usually) involuntary Jewish migration from and between countries of the global South that have received little scholarly attention thus far. We seek, moreover, to use the experience of Jewish refugees as an analytical prism to consider the phenomenon of forced migration more generally. Jews were part of European and worldwide flows of migrants of unprecedented scale and diversity. Among those migrants were individuals, such as the Nazis and Nazi collaborators who fled to South America, North Africa, and the Middle East, whose experiences hardly fit narratives of victimhood. Most societies at the time were not prepared to deal with mass movements of refugees caught "in transit," and, needed new knowledge and legal instruments in order to respond. That new knowledge was produced not least of all by Jewish legal experts and social scientists who drew on their own experience of life in transit. The conference will look beyond established turning-points and consider long-term refugee movements between socially and culturally disparate countries and regions. Jewish refugees from Nazi-controlled Europe will be taken as a paradigmatic group to explore basic questions about the transit experience, for example, the question of the relationship between knowledge and modes of dealing with contingency and uncertainty. An important related issue is the tension between the simple desire to survive and the challenge of planning for a life in a new, unfamiliar setting. We are particularly interested in the encounters between Jewish refugees and members of other groups they encountered while in transit countries, such as other refugees, colonial subjects, and religious or ethnic minorities subject to discrimination.
We are particularly interested in the following topics and areas of inquiry:
- Coping strategies that refugees developed during various phases of transit and in shifting settings to deal with transience, uncertainty, and unpredictability
- What role did circumstances such as residence in a refugee camp, opportunities for employment, and dependence on material assistance play in the development of coping strategies? What types of knowledge were needed or deemed necessary to manage uncertainty? Which practices and which networks evolved from them? Who were the actors in the exchange of knowledge and who targeted sharing of knowledge for coping? How important were categories such as generation, age, gender, origin, social status, and family? How far do concepts such as
adaptation and identity offer insight into the “transit mindset”?
- Power structures that affect trans-migrants locally and on larger, national, regional and global levels. What was the relationship between officials and refugees, between bureaucratic practices and the
experience of forced migration? How did different state and non-state actors like aid organizations, resettlement agencies, employment bureaus, and even Jewish communities etc. react and get involved
with regard to migrants’ with different ethnic, religious, professional or class background? What role in particular did local Jewish communities and the local representatives of international aid organizations play as disseminators of knowledge or as producers of knowledge?
- Knowledge production in the course of and as a product of generally involuntary global transit: How did the experience of life in transit influence the development of new concepts such as statelessness and
human rights or anti-colonialism and development policy? How did that experience shape perceptions and interpretations of anti-Semitism and racism? The Americas are as pertinent as other regions of the world
in addressing these questions.
- Material dimensions of flight and transit: How did the importance of material possessions change from one phase of transit to the next? What were forced migrants allowed to take with them? How did that vary
over time and place? How did possessions shape the route of migration or affect the duration of the period of transit? What roles did specific objects play? What value do surviving objects possess as historical
sources? We are also interested in the economic importance of possessions and topics such as the sale of possessions to escape harm. Which actors were involved in the transfer of property as refugees were in transit? Who profited from such transfers?
- Visual and artistic representations of flight and transit: What images and portrayals of life in transit did those involved produce? Which forms of representation were developed in the situation of transit? How do the diverse literary treatments of the refugee transit experience relate to scholarly analyses of that experience? What aesthetic continuities and/or discontinuities are evident in the work of refugee artists?
If you are interested in discussing these or related questions, please send a brief CV and a proposal of no more than 300 words by August 1, 2018, to Heike Friedman ([email protected]) Lump sum travel grants will be provided to successful applicants.
-methodological and theoretical issues
-"Holocaust testimony" -- renewed analysis of conceptualization and meaning of the term
-limitations and boundaries in the use of Holocaust testimonies -testimonies and historical context
-testimony classification and categorization by profession, occupation, age, gender, place, and time
-re-reading and reinterpreting early testimonies
-multiple testimonies by one and the same survivor
-second-and third-generation testimonies
-history, memory, and testimony
-post-memory
-intergenerational transmission of trauma and resilience
-how to remember what we did not experience
-the role of video-testimony in the future
-film as testimony
-the responsibilities of the scholar of the Holocaust
Scholarly work on survivor testimony is done today in many academic disciplines including history, literary analysis, linguistics, cultural criticism, psychology, neuroscience, anthropology and sociology. The rich and varied corpus of testimonies requires the collaborative efforts of researchers across disciplines to enable us to hear the voices of survivors articulated through their testimonies.
This workshop intends to bring together graduate students from the United States, Canada, and Israel to exchange ideas and share their research results on the Holocaust, including its antecedents and aftermath. Yad Vashem’s Research Institute and the USC Shoah Foundation Center for Advanced Genocide Research encourage PhD candidates to submit their applications for the workshop, which will be held from 25-29 June 2017 at Yad Vashem, The World Holocaust Remembrance Center, in Jerusalem, Israel. All topics on the Holocaust and proposals from all disciplines are open for consideration.
Dr. Kiril Feferman has conducted extensive research about the Holocaust in Crimea, the North Caucasus, and the Soviet Union. In this lecture, he will illuminate an important and previously unresearched aspect of the Holocaust: the role of religion in influencing the behavior and decisions of Jews and non-Jews in the Soviet territories during German occupation.
He is Senior Lecturer in the Department of Jewish Studies at the Russian State University for Humanities and was the Director of Education and Research at the Russian Research and Educational Holocaust Center in Moscow.
Dr. Feferman received his PhD in 2008 from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, where he presented a dissertation on the Holocaust in Crimea and the Caucasus. He has since authored two books, The Holocaust on the Russian Ethnic Frontier: The Crimea and North Caucasus and Soviet Jewish Stepchild: The Holocaust in the Soviet Mindset, 1941-1964, as well as edited or co-edited multiple collections on the Holocaust and/or mass violence. Dr. Feferman is currently finishing his third book project, "If We had Wings, We would Fly to You": A Soviet Jewish Family Faces Destruction, 1941-42, which is under review by Indiana University Press.
Dr. Feferman, our 2015-2016 Center Fellow, has held previous fellowships at the Yad Vashem International Institute for Holocaust Research and the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies. Dr. Feferman was a 2013 recipient of the Egit Prize for Holocaust and Jewish Resistance Literature from the Israeli Trade Union, and has also received awards from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, the Nevzlin Center, the Ben Zvi Institute, and the World Sephardic Federation.
Refreshments will be served. Please RSVP at [email protected].
Conference Presentations by USC Shoah Foundation Center for Advanced Genocide Research
Diciembre del 2016 marcará el 20º aniversario de la firma de los acuerdos de paz culminando así treinta y seis años de guerra civil en Guatemala. El Centro para la investigación avanzada de genocidio de la Fundación de USC Shoah convocará a una conferencia académica internacional con investigadores en diversas disciplinas, en los campos de estudios latinoamericanos y estudios del genocidio para avanzar la discusión de "genocidio y resistencia en Guatemala". La Conferencia será organizada por Wolf Gruner, director y fundador del centro y Victoria Sanford, directora y fundadora del Centro para los Derechos Humanos y Estudios para la Paz (CfHRPS) del Lehman College, City Universidad de Nueva York.
December 2016 will mark the 20th anniversary of the signing of the Guatemalan peace accords that ended more than thirty years of civil war in 1996. USC Shoah Foundation Center for Advanced Genocide Research will convene an international academic conference bringing researchers from all disciplines as well as the fields of Latin American Studies and Genocide Studies to advance the discussion of “Genocide and Resistance in Guatemala.” The conference will be organized by Wolf Gruner, Center founding director, and Victoria Sanford, founding director of the Center for Human Rights and Peace Studies (CfHRPS) at Lehman College, City University of New York.
-India Branch Office of the Max Weber Foundation, New Delhi (Indra Sengupta, Razak Khan)
-China Branch Office, Beijing (Max Jacob Fölster)
This conference is the second in a conference series devoted to people " In Global Transit. " The first conference, which took place in Kolkata in 2017 focused on Jewish and political refugees from Nazi-controlled Europe who fled, at least initially, to European colonies or countries of the global South. "In Global Transit: Forced Migration of Jews and other Refugees (1940s-1960s)" will build on the 2017 conference, taking a broader perspective and expanding the geographic and analytical focus. It will examine the experience of Jewish refugees who found haven – but not new homes – in Asia, Africa, and Latin America. For most of these individuals, the end of the war did not mean an end to life in transit. To the contrary: after a period of temporary settlement, they found themselves not only once again on the move, but also in a new, more ambiguous situation. On the one hand, growing awareness of the Nazis' attempt to wipe out European Jewry called attention to the plight of the Jewish refugees. But, on the other, they were just one among many groups in search of permanent homes as the large-scale expulsion of ethnic, religious, and/or national groups became a global phenomenon. The ever-more frequent waves of involuntary migration, in turn, provided the impetus for the development of an international refugee policy – a process in which onetime refugees from Nazi-controlled Europe played a notable part.
The conference "In Global Transit: Forced Migration of Jews and other Refugees (1940s-1960s)" aims to illuminate the particularities of (usually) involuntary Jewish migration from and between countries of the global South that have received little scholarly attention thus far. We seek, moreover, to use the experience of Jewish refugees as an analytical prism to consider the phenomenon of forced migration more generally. Jews were part of European and worldwide flows of migrants of unprecedented scale and diversity. Among those migrants were individuals, such as the Nazis and Nazi collaborators who fled to South America, North Africa, and the Middle East, whose experiences hardly fit narratives of victimhood. Most societies at the time were not prepared to deal with mass movements of refugees caught "in transit," and, needed new knowledge and legal instruments in order to respond. That new knowledge was produced not least of all by Jewish legal experts and social scientists who drew on their own experience of life in transit. The conference will look beyond established turning-points and consider long-term refugee movements between socially and culturally disparate countries and regions. Jewish refugees from Nazi-controlled Europe will be taken as a paradigmatic group to explore basic questions about the transit experience, for example, the question of the relationship between knowledge and modes of dealing with contingency and uncertainty. An important related issue is the tension between the simple desire to survive and the challenge of planning for a life in a new, unfamiliar setting. We are particularly interested in the encounters between Jewish refugees and members of other groups they encountered while in transit countries, such as other refugees, colonial subjects, and religious or ethnic minorities subject to discrimination.
We are particularly interested in the following topics and areas of inquiry:
- Coping strategies that refugees developed during various phases of transit and in shifting settings to deal with transience, uncertainty, and unpredictability
- What role did circumstances such as residence in a refugee camp, opportunities for employment, and dependence on material assistance play in the development of coping strategies? What types of knowledge were needed or deemed necessary to manage uncertainty? Which practices and which networks evolved from them? Who were the actors in the exchange of knowledge and who targeted sharing of knowledge for coping? How important were categories such as generation, age, gender, origin, social status, and family? How far do concepts such as
adaptation and identity offer insight into the “transit mindset”?
- Power structures that affect trans-migrants locally and on larger, national, regional and global levels. What was the relationship between officials and refugees, between bureaucratic practices and the
experience of forced migration? How did different state and non-state actors like aid organizations, resettlement agencies, employment bureaus, and even Jewish communities etc. react and get involved
with regard to migrants’ with different ethnic, religious, professional or class background? What role in particular did local Jewish communities and the local representatives of international aid organizations play as disseminators of knowledge or as producers of knowledge?
- Knowledge production in the course of and as a product of generally involuntary global transit: How did the experience of life in transit influence the development of new concepts such as statelessness and
human rights or anti-colonialism and development policy? How did that experience shape perceptions and interpretations of anti-Semitism and racism? The Americas are as pertinent as other regions of the world
in addressing these questions.
- Material dimensions of flight and transit: How did the importance of material possessions change from one phase of transit to the next? What were forced migrants allowed to take with them? How did that vary
over time and place? How did possessions shape the route of migration or affect the duration of the period of transit? What roles did specific objects play? What value do surviving objects possess as historical
sources? We are also interested in the economic importance of possessions and topics such as the sale of possessions to escape harm. Which actors were involved in the transfer of property as refugees were in transit? Who profited from such transfers?
- Visual and artistic representations of flight and transit: What images and portrayals of life in transit did those involved produce? Which forms of representation were developed in the situation of transit? How do the diverse literary treatments of the refugee transit experience relate to scholarly analyses of that experience? What aesthetic continuities and/or discontinuities are evident in the work of refugee artists?
If you are interested in discussing these or related questions, please send a brief CV and a proposal of no more than 300 words by August 1, 2018, to Heike Friedman ([email protected]) Lump sum travel grants will be provided to successful applicants.
-methodological and theoretical issues
-"Holocaust testimony" -- renewed analysis of conceptualization and meaning of the term
-limitations and boundaries in the use of Holocaust testimonies -testimonies and historical context
-testimony classification and categorization by profession, occupation, age, gender, place, and time
-re-reading and reinterpreting early testimonies
-multiple testimonies by one and the same survivor
-second-and third-generation testimonies
-history, memory, and testimony
-post-memory
-intergenerational transmission of trauma and resilience
-how to remember what we did not experience
-the role of video-testimony in the future
-film as testimony
-the responsibilities of the scholar of the Holocaust
Scholarly work on survivor testimony is done today in many academic disciplines including history, literary analysis, linguistics, cultural criticism, psychology, neuroscience, anthropology and sociology. The rich and varied corpus of testimonies requires the collaborative efforts of researchers across disciplines to enable us to hear the voices of survivors articulated through their testimonies.
This workshop intends to bring together graduate students from the United States, Canada, and Israel to exchange ideas and share their research results on the Holocaust, including its antecedents and aftermath. Yad Vashem’s Research Institute and the USC Shoah Foundation Center for Advanced Genocide Research encourage PhD candidates to submit their applications for the workshop, which will be held from 25-29 June 2017 at Yad Vashem, The World Holocaust Remembrance Center, in Jerusalem, Israel. All topics on the Holocaust and proposals from all disciplines are open for consideration.
Dr. Kiril Feferman has conducted extensive research about the Holocaust in Crimea, the North Caucasus, and the Soviet Union. In this lecture, he will illuminate an important and previously unresearched aspect of the Holocaust: the role of religion in influencing the behavior and decisions of Jews and non-Jews in the Soviet territories during German occupation.
He is Senior Lecturer in the Department of Jewish Studies at the Russian State University for Humanities and was the Director of Education and Research at the Russian Research and Educational Holocaust Center in Moscow.
Dr. Feferman received his PhD in 2008 from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, where he presented a dissertation on the Holocaust in Crimea and the Caucasus. He has since authored two books, The Holocaust on the Russian Ethnic Frontier: The Crimea and North Caucasus and Soviet Jewish Stepchild: The Holocaust in the Soviet Mindset, 1941-1964, as well as edited or co-edited multiple collections on the Holocaust and/or mass violence. Dr. Feferman is currently finishing his third book project, "If We had Wings, We would Fly to You": A Soviet Jewish Family Faces Destruction, 1941-42, which is under review by Indiana University Press.
Dr. Feferman, our 2015-2016 Center Fellow, has held previous fellowships at the Yad Vashem International Institute for Holocaust Research and the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies. Dr. Feferman was a 2013 recipient of the Egit Prize for Holocaust and Jewish Resistance Literature from the Israeli Trade Union, and has also received awards from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, the Nevzlin Center, the Ben Zvi Institute, and the World Sephardic Federation.
Refreshments will be served. Please RSVP at [email protected].
Diciembre del 2016 marcará el 20º aniversario de la firma de los acuerdos de paz culminando así treinta y seis años de guerra civil en Guatemala. El Centro para la investigación avanzada de genocidio de la Fundación de USC Shoah convocará a una conferencia académica internacional con investigadores en diversas disciplinas, en los campos de estudios latinoamericanos y estudios del genocidio para avanzar la discusión de "genocidio y resistencia en Guatemala". La Conferencia será organizada por Wolf Gruner, director y fundador del centro y Victoria Sanford, directora y fundadora del Centro para los Derechos Humanos y Estudios para la Paz (CfHRPS) del Lehman College, City Universidad de Nueva York.
December 2016 will mark the 20th anniversary of the signing of the Guatemalan peace accords that ended more than thirty years of civil war in 1996. USC Shoah Foundation Center for Advanced Genocide Research will convene an international academic conference bringing researchers from all disciplines as well as the fields of Latin American Studies and Genocide Studies to advance the discussion of “Genocide and Resistance in Guatemala.” The conference will be organized by Wolf Gruner, Center founding director, and Victoria Sanford, founding director of the Center for Human Rights and Peace Studies (CfHRPS) at Lehman College, City University of New York.