CfP: ‘The way out – Microhistories of flight from Nazi Germany’

The international conference ‘The way out – Microhistories of flight from Nazi Germany’ will be held from 24 to 26 January 2018 at the University of Luxembourg / The event will study the broad theme of the flight of Jewish refugees from Nazi Germany in the 1930s and their trajectories during the war and its aftermath from multiple perspectives.

 

 

 

 

The international conference ‘The way out – Microhistories of flight from Nazi Germany’ will be held from 24 to 26 January 2018 at the University of Luxembourg. The event will study the broad theme of the flight of Jewish refugees from Nazi Germany in the 1930s and their trajectories during the war and its aftermath from multiple perspectives. We invite scholars in history, social and political science, law and related research fields to submit their research.

 

 

‘The way out’ is co-organised by

 

Luxembourg Centre for Contemporary and Digital History (C2DH), University of Luxembourg

CNRS – Institut d’histoire moderne et contemporaine, Ecole normale supérieure, Paris

Institut für Zeitgeschichte, München

NIOD Institute for War, Holocaust and Genocide Studies, Amsterdam

 

 

 

In recent years, the microhistorical turn in Holocaust history has placed increasing importance on individual practices and experiences by exploring new, nominative mass sources and combining a prosopographical approach with quantitative analysis of individual trajectories. As Claire Zalc and Tal Bruttmann state in the introduction to Microhistories of the Holocaust (2016): “Reducing the level of analysis increases knowledge, because smaller spaces can better elucidate the complexities of decision-making, help reestablish the “space of the possible”, show how reality was experienced at the individual level, and ultimately provide more compelling insights into the events that contemporaries faced in their day-to-day lives.” The micro-level of the individual and the family is a scale of observation that sheds light in a new way on the relationships between Jewish migrants and representatives of state authorities and places individual behaviour in the context of its social and political environment. It enables us to observe migrants in their networks and groups of belonging, trace their biographical and migratory trajectories and identify their agency, the means at their disposal and the opportunities or obstacles that the policy framework allowed them, so that we can identify their spaces of possibility and constraint.

 

 

The submission deadline is 1 September 2017.

 

 

See more at:

 

https://wwwen.uni.lu/c2dh/news_events/cfp_the_way_out_microhistories_of_flight_from_nazi_germany

 

 

 

 

Odgovori