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Interventions

 

Since the 1980s, the politics of remembrance and the central place held by the Holocaust therein have moved into the focus of a global cultural policy debate. Triggered by popular formats such as TV series, the establishment of Holocaust museums, and the erection of memorial sites and memorials, and by documentations, feature films, plays, as well as exhibitions, the highly controversial debate has addressed and continues to address the question of the sense and form of Holocaust remembrance as well as its possibilities and limits.

 

The Vienna Wiesenthal Institute for Holocaust Studies (VWI) understands its educational mission as the task of preserving the visibility of the cultural context of remembrance and the media anthropological background as well as the discursive context of popular remembrance of the Holocaust and other genocides for its audience. The materiality and the act of remembrance itself are focussed on by making these the very topic and issue of educational questions. This is achieved on the one hand via academic debate and reasoning, on the other by testing the issue in various contexts by experiment. The latter takes place in the framework of “Interventions in Public Spaces”, involving especially artists and writers.

 

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Echoes, memories, and aftereffects – resonances – are usually laden with emotion, sentimental and individual. The aim of this event series is therefore to cultivate anew a conversation beyond the today much discussed ‘echo chambers’ of social media and to offer a space for mutual thought and reflection – in other words for resonating – at the intersection of living memory, collective memory, and scholarly analysis: Different aspects of, approaches to, and perspectives on the research areas of the VWI will be sounded out here; intergenerational conversations will be enabled; questioning, ruminating, and doubting will be allowed – borrowing freely from the words of Bertolt Brecht and Marcel Reich-Ranicki: “Curtains closed and all the questions open.”

 

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Jaclyn Granick: Jewish Country Houses and the Holocaust in History and Memory
   

Tuesday, 16. May 2023, 14:00 - 16:00

Wiener Wiesenthal Institut für Holocaust-Studien (VWI) 1010 Wien, Rabensteig 3, Research Lounge

 

Granick is co-investigating a British Arts and Humanities Research Council project on Jewish Country Houses, and leading its Holocaust research dimension. She will speak about different entry points the new research field of Jewish country house studies has opened up in relation to Holocaust and memory research, as well as in relation to heritage and educational practices. Stately houses associated with aristocracy and their legacy are a central feature of European heritage infrastructure today, but typically interpreted within national frameworks shaped by Christianity. Wealthy, emancipated Jews began acquiring these houses in the 19th century, entering aristocratic sociability as Europe began shifting towards republican forms of governance. Granick will discuss the fate of these families, their homes, and their relationship to other Jews during the Holocaust, and how the project is working with historic houses across Europe to tell Jewish stories after genocide.

Jaclyn Granick is a Senior Lecturer in Modern Jewish History at Cardiff University. Her book International Jewish Humanitarianism in the Age of the Great War (Cambridge University Press) has won the National Jewish Book Award. Currently she is working on the project Jewish Country Houses.

Please register at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.  by latest 15 May, 12.00 am and bringyour ID.

By attending, you consent to the publication of photographs, video and audio recordings made during the event.

Download the invitation as PDF.

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The Vienna Wiesenthal Institute for Holocaust Studies (VWI) is funded by:

 

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