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VWI invites/goes to...

 

Cycle of VWI Fellows’ Colloquia

 

The VWI fellows present their intermediary research results in the context of colloquia which are announced to a small audience and are open to a public audience with an academic and topical interest. The lectures are complemented by a response or commentary by an expert in the given field and are discussed with the other fellows.

 

Due to the previous lack of an appropriate space, the colloquia were held at other Viennese research and cultural institutions with a topical or regional connection to the given subject. From this circumstance was born the “VWI goes to …” format.

 

With the move to a new institute building at Rabensteig 3, the spatial circumstances have changed, so that the VWI is now happily able to invite other research and cultural institutions. Therefore, the VWI is now conducting its colloquia both externally and within its own building, in the framework of continued co-operation with other institutions.

 

The new cycle of fellows’ colloquia “VWI invites/goes to …” is not only able to reach a broader circle of interested persons, but moreover integrates the VWI further into the Viennese scholarly establishment, perhaps even crossing borders into the greater regional research landscape.

 

 

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VWI invites/goes to...
Judith Szapor: The Numerus Clausus in Hungary: Gender, Race, and the Jewish Family. Lecture and Book Presentation
   

Thursday, 15. March 2018, 12:00 - 14:00

Institut für Zeitgeschichte, Seminarraum 1, Universitätscampus, Spitalgasse 2-4/Hof 1, 1090 Wien

 

VWI goes to The Department of Contemporary History of the University of Vienna

Szapor CoverThe talk will focus on the impact of the so-called numerus clausus law on young Hungarian Jewish women in the early interwar period. Introduced in September 1920, the law, the first antisemitic legislation of the post-war era, limited the admission of Jewish students at Hungarian universities at six per cent, the percentage of Jews in the general population. Jewish women were disproportionally affected by it because of the de facto ban on women’s enrolment at some universities until 1926 and the previous high ratio of female Jewish students at Hungarian universities.

The legal and political history of the law had been well covered by older studies. More recent studies have also established the law’s far-reaching impact – namely, that by normalising the breach of the principle of equal citizenship, it prepared the ground for the openly racial anti-Jewish laws and the Holocaust in Hungary. Research has also been emerging on the so-called numerus clausus exiles, Jewish students who left Hungary to study at universities in Austria, Germany, Czechoslovakia, and Italy. Yet, no study has explored women students’ specific experience or even established their approximate numbers. The talk will highlight the law’s previously neglected family and gender historical aspects, the factors that affected personal and family decisions, and explore the potential, long-term impact of the law on women’s emancipation, Jewish assimilation, and, ultimately, the choice between tradition and modernity.

Judith Szapor is currently Senior Fellow at VWI. She teaches European history at McGill University, Montreal. Her publications include Hungarian Women’s Activism in the Wake of the First World War; From Rights to Revanche, published by Bloomsbury Academic in 2018 and Jewish Intellectual Women in Central Europe (edited with Andrea Pető, Maura Hametz, and Marina Calloni, Edwin Mellen Press, 2012).

Click here to download the invitation as a PDF file.

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