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CFPs & CFAs

 

The Vienna Wiesenthal Institute for Holocaust Studies (VWI) regularly conducts conferences and workshops. As a rule, the presenters are chosen following an open Call for Papers by a group of experts and in consultation with the International Academic Advisory Board of the institute. The annual fellowship application cycle of the VWI is similarly adjudicated.

 

All such calls – including others concerning research activities – are announced on this webpage.

 

 

CfP - Workshops
Call for Papers, Workshop: The Fantastic Afterlives of the Holocaust
   

from Monday, 2. December 2019 -  08:00
to Sunday, 16. February 2020 - 23:59

25-26 June 2020, Vienna Wiesenthal Institute for Holocaust Studies (VWI)

 

Ghosts, apparitions, phantoms, demons, monsters, and miracles all inhabit postwar references to the Holocaust. They constitute recurrent, though often neglected, tropes in testimonies and memoirs of survivors, but also increasingly come to the fore in contemporary engagements with the Holocaust. Fantastic, spectral, supernatural, monstrous, and uncanny figures permeate personal accounts of the Holocaust that stretch across generational boundaries, inform artistic and literary practices, and, as a recent development, also academic writing. Whether as incarnations of “ultimate evil”, concoctions of post-Holocaust imaginations, or figurations of its continuous relevance and resonance, their presence establishes a set of new themes through which to address the Holocaust and its experiential, affective, cultural, and political impact. Focussing on this fertile and, to a large extent, unexplored research terrain, this workshop aims to investigate the role and implications that the whole range of fantastic figures and phenomena have held for past and present-day approximations to the Holocaust, including their usage in popular culture (cartoons, new media, video games, etc.).

The workshop will open up space for debates on the various meanings these figures assume in relation to the Holocaust. To this end, we are equally interested in the ways they shape individual and collective perceptions and representations of the event, become means of conveying its experience (both first-hand and vicarious), and influence private and social/cultural imaginaries. Our intention is to locate this debate on a historical, political, and epistemological plane that goes beyond the questions of trauma and of representation and representability, and beyond current explorations of fantastic and supernatural phenomena in the Holocaust in terms of magic realism or ‘trauma fiction’. In a similar vein, we want to distance ourselves from conceptualisations that associate the fantastic and supernatural merely with escapist trajectories in literature and genres of evasion. Instead, we wish to address the complex and multifaceted aftereffects of the Holocaust and the phenomena that epitomise and embody the event’s haunting presence. Thus, rather than approaching them primarily as literary epiphenomena or aesthetic gestures of failed or successful imitations of the Holocaust’s realities, we propose to examine the ways in which certain aspects and experiences of the Holocaust live on in fantastic figures.

We seek papers from a wide range of disciplines, including literary/film/media studies, cultural and memory studies, anthropology, history, psychology, and philosophy. We are especially interested in combinations of theoretical considerations with analyses of specific cases. Possible lines of inquiry include:

  • Continuity/discontinuity of fantastic depictions with pre-Holocaust traditions
  • Epistemologies and ontologies of the post-Holocaust fantastic, spectral, supernatural, monstrous, and uncanny
  • Political/representational/affective dimensions of post-Holocaust ghosts and their cultural/regional variations
  • The fantastic and the ghostly between private/public and personal/political
  • Temporalities and spatialities of the ghostly, monstrous, fantastic, and uncanny

Paper proposals should include a title, an extended abstract (700-1000 words), institutional affiliation, and contact information. Please submit proposals to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. by 16 February 2020.
Authors whose papers were accepted will be asked to send a preliminary draft of their presentation (minimum 10 pages) two weeks before the workshop begins and to suggest another article/chapter written by another scholar which introduces a theoretical or otherwise useful point of departure for the discussion.

Concept and organisation: Zuzanna Dziuban and Kobi Kabalek

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

 

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wienkultur 179

 

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