Don't miss Marina Alia Jurišić's review of The Women of the Arrow Cross Party: Invisible Hungarian Perpetrators in the Second World War by @petoandrea. It uncovers the overlooked role of women in Hungary’s Arrow Cross Party during WWII, challenging narratives on gender and power.
@DGJournals@dg_history This article delves into the systemic failures of Germany’s early Wiedergutmachung process, highlighting the heartbreaking case of Haim Nahon and revealing how limited interpretations of the 1951 restitution fund left many survivors without adequate compensation.
Check out Ruth Jolanda Weinberger’s latest piece in the Eastern European Holocaust Studies journal: "Seeking Justice, Not Charity’: Medical Experiment Victims’ Struggle with Purposefully Inadequate Compensation."
https://t.co/h3ImD75obh
@DGJournals@dg_history
@DGJournals@dg_history The author addresses the issue of memory ownership and the material culture of Holocaust institutions. She introduces the term “forensic restitution”, whereby cultural objects found via excavations are returned to an individual or community rather than belonging to a nation-state
The new article “Forensic Restitution” and the Ownership of Memory at Sobibor Death Camp, Poland" by Hannah Wilson is out! @DGJournals@dg_history
https://t.co/EhWxdSyNvj
Don't miss a new article in EEHS journal by Micol Meghnagi, Lorenzo Posocco, and Valerio Angeletti, titled "Contested Memories in the Border Town of Trieste: A Comparative Analysis of the Risiera di San Sabba and The Foiba di Basovizza"
https://t.co/QJQiQxDou4
We are excited to share a recent publication in the Eastern European Holocaust Studies journal. The article by Bori Klacsmann, the EEHS Editorial Team member, features an insightful interview with Pia Schölnberger, Director of the Austrian Commission for Provenance Research.
A new article 'Fossil Memory: Unaltered Narratives of Resistance and Deportation in the Oldest Italian Holocaust and Resistance Museums' by Valerio Angeletti, Lorenzo Posocco, and Micol Meghnagi is available for open access by @dg_history@DGJournals .
@ucddublin@petoandrea A must-read for anyone interested in Jewish history, public art, and cultural identity. Open access via the link: https://t.co/ajtRFnyzi5
Thrilled to announce the publication of "Exegi monumentum: monuments of Jews in public spaces in Budapest as texts (1880–1944)" by Bori Klacsmann (@ucddublin) and @petoandrea, EEHS Editorial Team members, in the Immigrants & Minorities journal.
Congratulations to Tali Nates, an esteemed member of the EEHS Advisory Board, on being bestowed with the prestigious International Religious Freedom Award by the US Secretary of State.
For more information about the award:
https://t.co/eIru2MSmwu
The transcript of the discussion during the "Holocaust Education in Times of Russia’s War on Ukraine" roundtable is now in Ukrainian.
Feel free to check the article via the link🔗
Wishing you a Merry Christmas and festive season filled with love, hope, and the warmth of cherished connections. Thank you for being a part of our journey, and here's to a new year filled with continued learning, reflection, and meaningful conversations.
As we come together to celebrate the joy and warmth of Christmas, the Eastern European Holocaust Studies journal extends heartfelt wishes to all our readers, contributors, and supporters around the world.
In the paper, Aleksandra Urman, Mykola Makhortykh, Roberto Ulloa, Maryna Sydorova, and Juhi Kulshrestha discuss how the visual representation of the Holocaust by #AI changes over time.