POSTPONED --Gender, the Holocaust, and its Aftermath: Old Questions, New Research

March 07, 2013 1:50 PM - 3:15 PM

 

POSTPONED

Date:
March 7, 2013

Time:
1:50-3:15pm
Common Hour

Location:
D'Angelo Center 206

 St. John's University Department of History, the  Women's and Gender Studies program, and the World History Faculty Group

                             ~ present ~

Dr. Atina Grossmann, Professor of History, Cooper Union
Gender, the Holocaust, and its Aftermath: Old Questions, New Research

Dr. Grossmann, a noted historian of Germany, German Jewry and gender, will provide new insights into the gender dimension of the Holocaust in this talk.  Reflecting on the Holocaust through the perspective of gender, does not, as many have worried, create a troubling hierarchy of victimization but rather deepens our understanding of experiences that are difficult to fathom. The lecture examines commonalities and differences  between female and male experience in a variety of circumstances, including early persecution, flight and emigration, life in the ghettos, the ordeals of concentration and labor camps, the perils of hiding, liberation, and the aftermath of the war.
 
Atina Grossmann is Professor of History at the Cooper Union in New York City where she teaches Modern German and European History, and Gender Studies. A graduate of the City College of New York (BA) and Rutgers University (Ph.D.), she has held fellowships from the National Endowment for the Humanities, German Marshall Fund,  American Council of Learned Societies, the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, the American Academy in Berlin, and the Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum and held Guest Professorships at the Humboldt University Berlin and Schiller University Jena. Publications include Reforming Sex: The German Movement for Birth Control and Abortion Reform, 1920-1950 (1995), Wege in der Fremde: Deutsch-jüdische Begegnungsgeschichte zwischen New York, Berlin und Teheran  (2012) and co-edited volumes on Crimes of War: Guilt and Denial in the Twentieth Century (2002) and After the Nazi Racial State: Difference and Democracy in Germany and Europe (2009), as well as articles on gender and modernity in interwar Germany, history and memory in postwar Germany, and gender and human rights. Her book Jews, Germans, and Allies: Close Encounters in Occupied Germany (2007, 2009, German edition, Wallstein, 2012) was awarded the George L. Mosse Prize of the American Historical Association (2007), the Fraenkel Prize in Contemporary History from the Wiener Library, London (2006), and listed as one of the five best books of the year by the HSKult ListServ in 2008. Her current research focuses on “Transnational Jewish Refugee Stories: Soviet Central Asia, Iran, and India as Sites of Relief and Refuge for European Jews during World War II.”