Conference “The First World War in the Middle East: Experience, Knowledge, Memory”

On the occasion of the commemoration of the First World War, the Orient-Institut Beirut (OIB), the Institut français du Proche-Orient (Ifpo), the History Department of the Université Saint-Joseph (USJ) and the Institute of Palestinian Studies (IPS) are organising the international conference “The First World War in the Middle East: Experience, Knowledge, Memory” to be held in Beirut on November 3 and 4, 2014. 

The aim of the conference is to question and to rethink the place of this conflict in the history of the Middle East. Aiming at encouraging new approaches to a well-established field of historical enquiry, the debates of the conference are organised around three interconnected axes:OIB PLakat

● From the perspective of social history and historical anthropology, the scholars want to explore how people experienced the war, how they lived through it and what it meant for their daily lives.

● From the point of view of a long-term history of science and knowledge production, the conference considers the impact of the war and of its transregional and global dimensions on orders of knowledge and the institutional and informal systems producing it. Of special interest are the emerging nationalist movements, their interactions with the self-reforming Ottoman and later the colonial or Mandatory educational systems, and their long-term effects on shifting notions of science and education in the region.

● Finally, the scholars will examine, from the point of view of the sociology of memory, how this ‘Great War’ is remembered in literature, arts, commemorations and celebrations. The aim is to reflect the dynamics of how, when, where and by whom this war has become the object of commemoration, be it private or official, particularly when taking into account the more recent periods of violence in the region.

The abstracts of the conference you will find here.

Quelle: http://grandeguerre.hypotheses.org/1840

Weiterlesen

Invitation: “Narrating the First World War – Experiences and Reports from Transregional Perspectives”

1932575_668302079878199_5130398072406880368_oThe second WeberWorldCafé

How did civilians live and work at the home front? How did artists and writers document their experiences in the trenches? How did the war influence people outside of Europe?

The Max Weber Stiftung and the Forum Transregionale Studien would like to kindly invite you to the WeberWorldCafé “Narrating the First World War – Experiences and Reports from Transregional Perspectives”, an exclusive event with international experts hosted at and in cooperation with the Deutsches Historisches Museum (DHM) in Berlin on September 16, 2014.

During the afternoon experts and participants will discuss the events of the First World War from an interdisciplinary and transregional perspective. With the help of primary sources the guests will be given the opportunity to explore the impact of the war on everyday life of contemporaries all over the world.

The WeberWorldCafé will take place at the Deutsches Historisches Museum, Unter den Linden 2, 10117 Berlin, from 2-6 p.m. It will be introduced by a 45-minute guided tour through the First World War exhibition of the DHM.

The guests of our WeberWorldCafé are: 

1. Western Europe: Elisa Marcobelli, Deutsches Historisches Institut Paris / Dr. Juliane Haubold-Stolle, curator of the exhibition 1914–1918. Der Erste Weltkrieg, Deutsches Historischen Museum

2. Central Europe: Dr. Frank Reichherzer, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin / Dr. Silke Fehleman, Johann Wolfgang Goethe-Universität Frankfurt am Main

3. Eastern Europe: Dr. Stephan Lehnstaedt, Deutsches Historisches Institut Warschau /Andreas Mix, curator of the exhibition 1914–1918. Der Erste Weltkrieg, Deutsches Historischen Museum

4. North America/Oceania: Dr. Sebastian Jobs, John-F.-Kennedy-Institut für Nordamerikastudien, Freie Universität Berlin / Dr. Christina Spittel, University of New South Wales Canberra

5. Western Asia: Dr. Philipp Wirtz, SOAS, University of London / Dr. Nazan Maksudyan, Istanbul Kemerburgaz University

6. Near and Middle East: Dr. Valeska Huber, Deutsches Historisches Institut London /Fatameh Masjedi, Zentrum Moderner Orient

7. East Asia/South Asia: Dr. Torsten Weber, Deutsches Institut für Japanstudien Tokyo / Dr. Samiksha Sehrawat, Newcastle University

8. Africa: Dr. Michelle Moyd, Indiana University / Dr. Joe Lunn, University of Michigan (solicited)

Join the discussions whether you know everything or nothing about the First World War – everybody is welcome! There is only a limited number of places available. Please register until August 15, 2014 via schifferdecker@maxweberstiftung.de. Find out more about the event on wwc.hypotheses.org.

Following the WeberWorldCafé there will be a panel discussion “Im Gedenkjahr nichts Neues? – Der Erste Weltkrieg und die Zukunft Europas” which all participants are welcome to attend.

Quelle: http://grandeguerre.hypotheses.org/1622

Weiterlesen

[Video] Das 20. Jahrhundert & der Erste Weltkrieg: Ulrike Jureit – „Staat als Lebensform“. Raumkonzepte für eine geordnete Moderne

Dr. Ulrike Jureit ist Gastwissenschaftlerin der Hamburger Stiftung zur Förderung von Wissenschaft und Kultur am Hamburger Institut für Sozialforschung.

Das 20. Jahrhundert & der Erste Weltkrieg: Ulrike Jureit – Staat als Lebensform from maxweberstiftung on Vimeo.

Abstract

Quelle: http://grandeguerre.hypotheses.org/1613

Weiterlesen

Débuts, commencements, initiations: Les « Premières fois » de la Grande Guerre

En articulant échelles individuelles et collectives, l’intention de ce colloque résolument comparatif est de repenser la question des expériences de guerre vécues par les contemporains et la manière dont ceux-ci les perçoivent, les endurent puis les « construisent » à partir d’une expérience originelle jugée le plus souvent fondatrice pour en proposer une histoire sociale et culturelle, ouverte sur les autres sciences sociales. Derrière la question des « premières fois » et des « initiations » dans la guerre de 1914-1918, c’est bien une interrogation sur le « pouvoir des commencements » que le colloque souhaite déployer. Il s’agit donc depuis l’individu jusqu’aux sociétés plongées dans la guerre, de penser la rupture et la nouveauté radicale que représenta, pour ses contemporains, celle qu’on appela, dès 1914, la Grande Guerre.  

Foto: Auszug deutscher Soldaten aus ihrer Garnisonsstadt, 1. August 1914| Bundesarchiv, Bild 183-25684-0004 | CC-BY-SA 3.0 DE

Foto: Auszug deutscher Soldaten aus ihrer Garnisonsstadt, 1. August 1914| Bundesarchiv, Bild 183-25684-0004 | CC-BY-SA 3.0 DE

 

Programme

Du lundi 30 juin au mercredi 2 juillet aura lieu à l’Historial de la Grande Guerre, Péronne (Somme) un colloque international.

Lundi 30 juin 2014

09H00    ACCUEIL

  • Hervé François, Directeur de l’Historial de la Grande Guerre
  • Jean-Jacques Becker, Président d’Honneur du Centre international de recherche de l’Historial
  • Stéphane Audoin-Rouzeau, Président du Centre international de recherche de l’Historial

09h30    INTRODUCTION

Nicolas Beaupré (Université Blaise Pascal, Clermont-Ferrand, IUF)

10h00 – 12h30    APPRENTISSAGES – INITIATIONS

10h00 – 11h00    Modérateur : Jay Winter (Yale University)

  • Simon House (Londres) : Baptism of Fire : the French Army in the Ardennes, 22 August 1914
  • Olivier Cosson (Paris) : Faire face : le chef et l’imprévisibilité du combat dans l’armée française (1914)

PAUSE

11h30 – 12h30    Modératrice : Annie Deperchin (Université de Lille II)

  • Larissa Wegner (Freiburg) : The Great War and the Hague Conventions: Failed Test for “Humanity in Warfare”?
  • Alison Fell (University of Leeds): Striking Women: First World War Industrial Action as Initiation for Female Activists in Britain and France.

PAUSE

13h30 – 15h30    APPRENTISSAGES – INITIATIONS (Suite)

13h30 – 15h30    Modératrice : Anne Rasmussen (Université de Strasbourg)

  • Ken Daimaru (London University/Paris Ouest Nanterre la Défense) : La mobilisation des médecins japonais au début de la Première Guerre mondiale.
  • Eric Kocher-Marboeuf (Université de Poitiers) : La Grande Guerre, matrice de la bataille contre le cancer
  • Romaric Nouat (Université de Tours) : L’apprentissage du Service de santé aux armées de la 9e région militaire et ses missions durant la Première Guerre mondiale.

PAUSE

16h00 – 17h30    Modérateur : Nicolas Patin (Institut Historique Allemand Paris)

  • Julien Gueslin (Université de Lyon III) : Naissance d’un projet national : les tirailleurs lettons ou l’initiation au sacrifice (1915-1917)
  • Claire Morelon (IEP Paris) : The Arrival of Galician Refugees in Bohemia during the First World War: A Problematic Encounter and the limits of Austrian Patriotism.

17h30    Cérémonie de remise des bourses Gerda Henkel du Centre international de recherche de l’Historial de la Grande Guerre, par Christian Manable, Président du Conseil général de la Somme, Pierre Linéatte, Président de l’Historial de la Grande Guerre, Jean-Jacques Becker, Président d’Honneur et Stéphane Audoin-Rouzeau, Président du Centre international de recherche de l’Historial de la Grande Guerre

20h00    Conférence

  • Keynote: Annette Becker (Université Paris Ouest Nanterre la Défense, IUF) : Violences extrêmes contre les civils durant la Grande Guerre.

Mardi 1er juillet 2014

06h00    Cérémonies commémoratives de la bataille de la Somme : La Boisselle et Thiepval avec John Horne (Trinity College Dublin) et Philippe Nivet (Université de Picardie Jules Verne) (inscription obligatoire, rdv devant l’Historial)

14h00 – 17h30    ÉMOTIONS

14h00 – 15h30    Modérateur : Emmanuel Saint-Fuscien (EHESS Paris)

  • Jaqueline Carroy (EHESS Paris) : Rêves de guerre.
  • Matteo Caponi (École normale supérieure de Pise) : “Je n’aurais pas cru que cette nouvelle forme de bataille fût si terrible et épouvantable.” Les raids aériens sur les villes italiennes pendant la Grande Guerre.

PAUSE

16h00 – 17h30    Modératrice : Franziska Heimburger (EHESS Paris)

  • Jane Potter (Oxford Brooks University) : ‘I can find no word to qualify my experiences except de word SHEER’ : Wilfred Owen’s Letters and his Baptism of Fire.
  • Clémentine Vidal-Naquet (EHESS Paris) : L’écriture des sentiments. L’apprentissage épistolaire de l’intimité conjugale.

PAUSE

20h30 – 22h00    Projection du film La cicatrice. Une famille dans la Grande Guerre de Laurent Veray, suivi d’un débat en présence de l’auteur, animé par Alexandre Sumpf(Université de Strasbourg) et Gene Tempest (Boston University) au Cinéma Le Picardy de Péronne.

Mercredi 2 juillet 2014

09h00 – 12h30    RUPTURES ET RENCONTRES

09h00 – 11h00    Modératrice : Heather Jones (London School of Economics)

  • Marine Branland (Université Paris Ouest Nanterre La Défense) : Rencontres atypiques dans les camps de prisonners des la Grande Guerre
  • Ronan Richard (Université de Rennes 2) : Premiers contacts : l’accueil en gare des réfugiés et des prisonniers au début de la guerre. L’exemple du Grand Ouest de la France.
  • Nazan Maksudyan (Istanbul Kemerburgaz University) : Ottoman Orphans in Germany during the First World War.

PAUSE

11h30 – 12h30    Modérateur : Benoît Majerus (Université du Luxembourg)

  • Chris Kempshall (Sussex University) : ‘What Barbarians They Must think us!”. When Tommy met Poilu: Allied Interactions on the Western Front.
  • James Connolly (Université de Paris IV-Sorbonne): Starting as the meant to go on? Franco-German Relations in the occupied Nord.

PAUSE

13h30 – 17h30    INTERPRÉTATIONS / PREMIERS RÉCITS

13h30 – 15h00    Modératrice : Laurence Van Ypersele (Université catholique de Louvain)

  • Marco Mondini (Institut Historique Italo-Allemand – Fondation Bruno Kessler, Trete/Université de Padoue) : Les écrivains-combattants italiens et la guere “vita nova”.
  • Dunja Dusanic (Université de Belgrade) : “Nous de 1914″ : l’expérience formative de la Grande Guerre chez les écrivains serbes modernistes.

PAUSE
15h30 – 17h30    Modérateur : Arndt Weinrich (Institut Historique allemand Paris)

  • Gerd Krumeich (Université de Düsseldorf) : Stegemann 1917. La première histoire allemande de la Grande Guerre.
  • Benjamin Gilles (EHESS Paris) : Premières mises en récit de l’expérience combattante collective. Anthologies de guerre en France et en Allemagne de 1914 à 1940
  • Jennifer Wellington (King’s College London) : National Beginnings, Tragic Pasts : Constructing First World War Memory in the British Empire.

PAUSE

17h45 – 18h30    Débats conclusifs dirigés par Gene Tempest et Manon Pignot(Université de Picardie Jules Vernes, IUF)

 

Informations:

Call for Papers

PROGRAMME 2014

Pour tout renseignement, veuillez contacter
c.fontaine [@] historial.org

 

Comité d’organisation:

  • Nicolas Beaupré (UBP Clermont-Ferrand, CIRHGG, IUF),
  • Caroline Fontaine (CIRHGG),
  • Franziska Heimburger (EHESS Paris),
  • Benoît Majerus (Université du Luxembourg),
  • Nicolas Patin (Institut Historique Allemand, Paris),
  • Manon Pignot (Université de Picardie-Jules-Verne, IUF),
  • Emmanuel Saint-Fuscien (EHESS Paris),
  • Alexandre Sumpf (Université de Strasbourg),
  • Gene Tempest (Boston University),
  • Arndt Weinrich (Institut Historique Allemand, Paris).

 

Financeurs: L’interprétation simultanée français-anglais et anglais-français est soutenue par le Fonds Pascal.

Quelle: http://grandeguerre.hypotheses.org/1601

Weiterlesen

Round Table Debate – 1914: What Historians Don’t Know about the Causes of the First World War

In cooperation with the University College London and the Arts and Humanities Research Council the German Historical Institute London holds a round table debate on 6pm on the 18th of June 2014:

The majority of lectures and conferences marking the centenary of the outbreak of the First World War will be examining why the conflict occurred, concentrating on particular sets of events leading to war or on different aspects of the war’s course, character and consequences. By contrast, the emphasis of this roundtable discussion – and claim to originality – will be on continuing areas of uncertainty in the historical account of the outbreak of war: it will show how key decisions are still ‘unexplained’, allowing a variety of interpretations. This roundtable of internationally-renowned scholars will ask what we still do not know about the causes of the First World War.

Chair: Mark Hewitson (UCL)
Speakers: Margaret MacMillan (Oxford)
Annika Mombauer (Open University)
Sönke Neitzel (LSE)
John Röhl (Sussex)

Owing to limited seating, prior registration is essential: Please register by Email: abellamy(ghi)ghil.ac.uk, Tel: 0207 309 2023
Download flyer (PDF file)

Quelle: http://grandeguerre.hypotheses.org/1591

Weiterlesen

Commémorer la Grande Guerre cent après: 100 Jahre Erster Weltkrieg (Paris, 19.06.2014)

Bild: "The Battle of Vimy Ridge" (ca. 1918), kollorierte Fotodruck von Richard Jack | Library and Archives Canada, Reproduction reference no. C-000148/MIKAN IDno. 2837452 | Public Domain

Bild: “The Battle of Vimy Ridge” (ca. 1918), kollorierte Fotodruck von Richard Jack | Library and Archives Canada, Reproduction reference no. C-000148/MIKAN IDno. 2837452 | Public Domain

100 Jahre nach seinem Beginn ist der Erste Weltkrieg in den beteiligten Gesellschaften teilweise immer noch sehr präsent. Doch die Erinnerung an den Krieg ist weit davon entfernt, einheitlich zu sein. Die unterschiedlichen Beiträge der Zeitschrift, die dem Gedenken an den „Großen Krieg“ gewidmet sind, setzen sich aus internationaler Perspektive mit der derzeitigen Bedeutung der Erinnerung an 1914-18 auseinander.

Warum sind die Spuren des Konflikts im Sozialen und Politischen in Frankreich, Australien und Großbritannien so gegenwärtig, und warum sind sie, umgekehrt, in anderen Ländern wie Deutschland, Österreich oder den USA verwischt oder verdrängt?

Die Autoren beschäftigen sich mit dieser Frage, indem sie in ihre Überlegungen nicht nur die Erinnerungspolitiken von Staaten und territorialen Kollektiven, sondern auch das Gedenken in den Zivilgesellschaften einbeziehen. Durch diese Methode, angewandt auf 15 Länder weltweit, versucht, „Commémorer la Grande Guerre“ nationale Besonderheiten, aber auch grenz- und gruppenüberschreitende Erinnerungsräume hervorzuheben.

 

Programm:

Vorstellung der Zeitschrift “Matériaux pour l’histoire de notre temps“ (BDIC/ Association des amis de la BDIC) n° 113 und 114

Koordinatoren: Benjamin Gilles und Nicolas Offenstadt

Diskussionsrunde mit

  • Benjamin Gilles, Konservator der BDIC, Bibliothèque de documentation internationale contemporaine, Verantwortlich für die Drucksammlung und die digitale Sammlung;
  • Nicolas Offenstadt, Historiker an der Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne,
  • Arndt Weinrich, Historiker am Deutschen Historischen Institut (s. r.),
  • Joseph Zimet, Direktor der Mission du Centenaire

 

Die Veranstaltung findet in Französischer Sprache am Donnerstag, den 19. Juni 2014 statt.

Veranstaltungsort- und beginn:  Goethe Institut Paris, 17 avenue d’Iéna, 75116 Paris;  19 Uhr,

Der Eintritt ist frei, um Reservierung wird dennoch gebeten (Tel. +33 1 44439230).

Quelle: http://grandeguerre.hypotheses.org/1581

Weiterlesen

First World War Noises – Listening to the Great War

In Monty Python’s famous record shop, First World War Noises was not among the “terrifically popular” items. While other records were selling fast, the soundtrack of the Great War got stuck. In modern historiography, too, the acoustics of history were left on the shelf for a long time – historians have only just begun to discover the significance of sound as a field of research. Inspired by this new strand of scholarship, the German Historical Institute London will mark this year’s centenary with a series of lectures that revolve around the auditory dimensions of the First World War. In order to highlight the experience and the impact of sound in history from various angles, the lecture series will take a broad approach, including perspectives from military history, media history, the history of music and the history of collective memory. The lectures will explore what the acoustics of the Great War meant for the soldiers on the battlefield and how they influenced public remembrance, popular media and the arts. The lecture series will thus probe the place of sound both in contemporary experience and the aftermath of the war.

 

WAR NOISES IN THE MEDIA

27 May

MARK CONNELLY (CANTERBURY)

War Noises in Silent Films. First World War Battle Reconstructions
in British Instructional Films, 1921-1931

British Instructional Films made a series of battle reconstructions with the aid of the War Office and Admiralty that proved smash hits across the Empire. Now almost entirely unknown, these films attempted to show the people of the Empire exactly what their soldiers and sailors had done on their behalf. Using hundreds of troops and ships lent by the army and navy, BIF was able to create epics which thrilled people whilst also making them consider the cost of the war. Of course, these films were never ‘silent’ – sound effects and music were added to enhance as well as shape the viewing experience. In addition, the frequent use of soldiers’ songs in the musical accompaniment encouraged the audiences to sing along, turning a screening into a community experience resurrecting memories and emotions. The lecture will explore what these films reveal about how people across the British Empire understood the war in its immediate aftermath.

Mark Connelly is Professor of Modern British History at the University of Kent. His main research interests are on the memory of war, the image of the armed forces in popular culture and aspects of operational military history. His publications include The Great War: Memory and Ritual (2002); We Can Take It: Britain and the Memory of the Second World War (2004) and Steady the Buffs! A Regiment, a Region and the Great War
(2005).

 

WAR NOISES ON THE BATTLEFIELD

10 June

JULIA ENCKE (BERLIN)

The Beleaguered Ear. On Fighting Underground and Learning to
Listen in the Great War

On the frontlines of the First World War the noise of battle, rattling machine guns, cannonading artillery and bursting shells laid siege to the ear. Soldiers had to learn how to discriminate between these various war noises in order to anticipate looming danger and increase their chances of survival. Technical devices and tactics were designed to detect the sounds of war: listening posts were employed, telephone systems and microphone equipment were installed, sound locators were invented and geophones adapted to the mine war. Unlike the eye that could be closed, however, the ear was always open and constantly in touch with the fighting. Perceiving and identifying war noises became a top priority in the trenches. The lecture will explore the sound of war from the perspective of the soldiers on the battlefields.

Julia Encke is editor of the feuilleton in the Frankfurter Allgemeine Sonntagszeitung and from 2001 to 2005 was editor of the feuilleton in the Süddeutsche Zeitung. After studying literature in Freiburg, Toulouse and Munich, her doctoral research was on the sensory perception of the First World War. Her publications include Augenblicke der Gefahr. Der Krieg und die Sinne, 1914-1934 (2006) and Charisma und Politik – Warum unsere Demokratie mehr Leidenschaft braucht (2014).

 

WAR NOISES IN GERMAN MUSIC

24 June

STEFAN HANHEIDE (OSNABRÜCK)

Reflections of War Sounds in German Concert Halls

Shortly after the outbreak of the First World War, composers in the belligerent countries began to comment on the hostilities in their works. A variety of war noises and their musical representation served as semantic symbols to express their views on the war. They did not rely primarily on the sounds of the battlefield, however, but mostly on other war-related acoustic signals, like anthems, patriotic chorales, military music and
marching songs. As the war progressed, more and more tones of sorrow, grievance and denunciation entered the music. After 1918, sarcastically distorted military music and noises from military life were used to express criticism of the unprecedented carnage. The lecture will investigate the aims underlying the German composers’ treatment of the sounds of war in their work. It will analyse techniques applied and discuss why the sounds of the battlefield were incorporated only to a limited degree.
Stefan Hanheide is Professor of Music History at the University of Osnabrück. His current research focuses on music in the context of political violence from the seventeenth to the twentieth century. His recent publications include Music Positions its Forces – Functionalisations of Music during the First World War (2013); and Pace. Musik zwischen Krieg und Frieden. 40 Werkporträts (2007).

 

WAR NOISES IN BRITISH MUSIC

15 July

JEREMY DIBBLE (DURHAM)

War, Impression, Sound and Memory. British Music and the First
World War

The First World War occurred at a critical juncture in Britain’s musical history. It led to mass casualties among younger talent, whose cohort had been enjoying a new, more highly respected status as composers and performers, and further marginalized the declining influence of the Victorian pedagogues. The war’s end helped define a musical aftermath of cathartic memory from which the country’s musical institutions had to rebuild. Against this backdrop, British composers not only adopted a new cultural nationalism, but also attempted, in different ways, to represent the sights and sounds of the war in their works. The lecture will
analyse how the guns of the Somme, the evocations of the dreadnought battleships, the spectre of mechanized warfare and the sounds of military signals were incorporated into British music of the time.

Jeremy Dibble is Professor of Music at the University of Durham. His research covers a wide range of topics including historiography, Irish music, opera and church music in Britain during the Victorian, Edwardian and Georgian eras. His recent book publications include John Stainer: A Life in Music (2007); Michele Esposito (2010); and Hamilton Harty: Musical Polymath (2013).

 

 

Seminars are held at 5.30 p.m. in the Seminar Room of the German Historical Institute, 17 Bloomsbury Square, WC1A 2NJ London
Tea is available from 5.00 p.m. in the Common Room, and wine is served after the seminars 
Please check for any last minute changes on 020 7309 2050 (tel.) or visit: http://www.ghil.ac.uk

 

Quelle: http://grandeguerre.hypotheses.org/1566

Weiterlesen

The Jews and the Great War: European Leo Baeck Lectures series takes place at the DHI London

A lecture series organised by the Leo Baeck Institute London, the Jewish Museum and the Fritz Bauer Institut, Frankfurt/Main, in cooperation with the German Historical Institute London examines the topic The Jews and the Great War and how the experience of World War I reshaped Jewish history and culture and challenged perceptions of Jewish identity in the UK, Palestine, Germany and Eastern Europe.

On 22nd of May Glenda Abramson will describe life in the Jewish settlement in Palestine under the autocratic rule of Jemal Pasha. Once the war took hold, Palestine was in a parlous condition, almost entirely cut off from the rest of the world, short of essential goods, medical supplies and funds to support those in the Jewish Settlement who depended on international charity. The lack of supplies led to large-scale starvation and disease. How did the Jewish settlement in Palestine cope with these dramatic political, economic and cultural challenges?

Glenda Abramson is Professor of Hebrew and Jewish Studies and Emeritus Fellow of St Cross College, Oxford. Her publications include Drama and Ideology in Modern Israel, Hebrew Writing of the First World War, Soldiers’ Tales and edited books such as: The Encyclopedia of Modern Jewish Culture. She is editor-in-chief of The Journal of Modern Jewish Studies.

The lecture will be held at the German Historical Institute London, 17 Bloomsbury Square, LondonWC1A 2NJ and begin at 6.30pm.

The first lecture of the series was held by Roz Currie, Jewish Military Museum, London and dealt with the topic “Curating the Jewish Experience of the First World War”. The podcast of this lecture can be found here. In the lectures coming up Prof. Dr. Micha Brumlik, Universität Frankfurt/M. will speak about “Hermann Cohen and Franz Rosenzweig – German Jewish Patriots in the Great War” on 12th of June, Prof. Jay Winter, Yale University, USA will talk about “The Great War and Jewish Memory”. More information about the lecture series can be found on the homepage of the Leo Baeck Institute.

Quelle: http://grandeguerre.hypotheses.org/1564

Weiterlesen

Das 20. Jahrhundert & der Erste Weltkrieg: Andreas Wirsching – Sicherheit durch die europäischen Mächte

Die internationale Konferenz, die gemeinsam vom Institut für Zeitgeschichte und der Max Weber Stiftung vom 14. bis zum 16. November 2013 in München veranstaltet wurde, beschränkte sich nicht auf gewohnte eurozentrische Perspektiven und traditionelle Narrative, etwa vom Zäsurcharakter des Krieges, sondern diskutierte die Auflösung, Neuformierung und Kontinuität von Ordnungen innerhalb und besonders auch außerhalb Europas. Politische, soziokulturelle, ökonomische und rechtliche Ordnungen auf internationaler und nationaler Ebene wurden dabei ebenso thematisiert wie ideologische Ordnungssysteme und neue Wissensordnungen.

Das 20. Jahrhundert & der Erste Weltkrieg: Andreas Wirsching – Sicherheit durch die europäischen Mächte from maxweberstiftung on Vimeo.

Quelle: http://grandeguerre.hypotheses.org/1505

Weiterlesen