Published on Wednesday, March 20, 2024
Abstract
The workshop’s purpose is to examine the literary, artistic, musical and cinematographic responses to the rise of anti-Semitism in the 1930s, which led to the systematic persecution and extermination of Europe’s Jews. It will focus on the period before as well as after the war. This will allow to consider, on the one hand, the capacity of literature (and other media) to project an aftermath as a consequence of ongoing events, and on the other hand the aftermath as it was felt in the years following the Shoah.
Announcement
Presentation
„[…] die Verzweiflung über Deutschland berghoch auf meiner Brust. Die Frage ist: Überlebt man’s? “ (« […]the despair of Germany weighs heavily on my chest. The question is: will we survive? »). The author of this lines, Jacob Wassermann, was one of the many German writers whose books were burned by the Nazis. He died in exile in Altaussee, Austria, in 1934, before it was annexed by Nazi Germany. In 1933, he wrote Selbstschau am Ende des sechsten Jahrzehnts, which indicted German anti-Semitism.
The workshop’s purpose is to examine the literary, artistic, musical and cinematographic responses to the rise of anti-Semitism in the 1930s, which led to the systematic persecution and extermination of Europe’s Jews. The study will be focused on the period before the war, as well as after the war. This will allow us to consider, on one hand, the capacity of literature (and other media) to project an aftermath as a consequence of ongoing events, but also the aftermath as it was felt in the years following the Shoah. Thus, Georges Duhamel discussed the extermination of European Jews in his 1938 article. Likewise, Klaus Mann criticized the attitude of European democracies towards Hitler, whom he called “the scarecrow assassin” in the early 1930s. Mann emphasized the need to “reject” the “psychology” of “these people” and not to try to “understand” them (1931). In the aftermath of World War II, Vladimir Nabokov reflected on Holocaust denial in Western society during his exile (April 1945). Paul Celan composed Der Sand aus den Urnen (The Sand from the Urns), published in Vienna in 1948, invoking the victims of the camps. Meanwhile, Boris Slutsky, who was born in Ukraine, wrote his poems about the Shoah immediately after the war. During the war years, Ilia Erenburg and Il'ia Sel'vinskii had already written about the subject. These issues lead us to an aftermath in the sense of the aftermath of Auschwitz. While this aspect has been researched by scholars from various fields, there remain gaps, specifically in connection with the Soviet and post-Soviet space. What was the response or capability of writers who were subjected to censorship during the Stalinist and post-Stalinist regimes? How do authors depict the re-emergence of anti-Semitism in the Soviet Union and European countries in the decades before and after the Second World War in their literary (artistic) works? This workshop aims to raise initial questions on a vast subject that is still very under-explored in certain areas and from certain perspectives, such as minor literature and forgotten writers.
The workshop will be held in a hybrid format. For more information, please contact the oganisers: atinati_mamatsashvili@iliauni.edu.ge
Programme
9h00 – 9h15 Opening
- Marianne Windsperger (Wiener Wiesenthal Institut für Holocaust-Studien)
- Anke Bosse (Universität Klagenfurt, Musil-Institut/Kärntner Literaturarchiv)
- Atinati Mamatsashvili (Ilia State University / Wiener Wiesenthal Institut für Holocaust-Studien
9h15 – 10h15 Session 1 – Facing the Holocaust – facing the History
Moderator: Anke Bosse
- Maxim D. Shrayer (Boston College) – The 1943 Krasnodar Trial and the Trials of Ilya Selvinsky's Poetic Reportage
- Olaf Terpitz (University of Graz) – Babi Yar as Prism
10h15 – 11h15 Session 2 – Denouncing through the language, through poetic writing
Moderator: Elana Shapira
- Arvi Sepp (Vrije Universiteit Brussels) – Jewish Language Criticism in 1933: Victor Klemperer’s and Karl Kraus’ early discursive analysis of anti-Semitism in the Third Reich
- Anke Bosse (Universität Klagenfurt, Musil-Institut/Kärntner Literaturarchiv) – Paul Celan, survivor of the « bloodlands » : a poet and his poetry in transition
11h15 – 11h45 Coffee Break
11h45 – 12h45 Session 3 – Places, Spaces and Memory
Moderator: Olaf Terpitz
- Alexandra Birch (Wiener Wiesenthal Institut für Holocaust-Studien) – Beregovsky, Weinberg, and Shostakovich: Negotiating Jewishness in the USSR
- Rafi Tsirkin-Sadan (The Open University of Israel) – Place and Memory in Grigorii Kanovich’s Devil’s Spell
12h45 – 14h30 Pause
14h30 – 15h30 Session 4 – Literary representations of destruction and anti-Semitism
Moderator: Marianne Windsperger
- Elana Shapira (University of Vienna / University of Applied Arts Vienna) – Antisemitism and the “Shock of Bodily Intimacy” in Viennese Literature and Art of the Early 20th Century
- Atinati Mamatsashvili (Ilia State University / Wiener Wiesenthal Institut für Holocaust-Studien) – The Inhabited Space as an Altered Space (Jacob, Frenkel)
15h30 – 16h Coffee Break
16h – 17h30 Session 5 – ‘Alternative temporalities’ – the present, the past, the aftermath
Moderator: Bela Tsipuria
- Enikő Darabos (Sigmund Freud Private University Vienna) – Body and Trauma in ‘Parallel Stories’ from Péter Nádas
- Harriet Murav (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign) – A Reprieve from Aftermaths: David Hofshteyn’s ‘And again a world’
- Marat Grinberg (Reed College) – Writing Science Fiction in the Aftermath of Babyn Iar and Auschwitz: from Stanislaw Lem to Ariadna Gromova
Organisers
- Anke Bosse (Universität Klagenfurt/Musil-Institut/Kärntner Literaturarchiv)
- Atinati Mamatsashvili (Ilia State University / Wiener Wiesenthal Institut für Holocaust-Studien)
Scientific committee
- Anke Bosse (Universität Klagenfurt/Musil-Institut/Kärntner Literaturarchiv)
- Mzaro Dokhtourishvili (Ilia State University)
- Atinati Mamatsashvili (Ilia State University / Wiener Wiesenthal Institut für Holocaust-Studien)
- Arvi Sepp (Vrije Universiteit Brussel)
- Bela Tsipuria (Ilia State University)
- Marianne Windsperger (Wiener Wiesenthal Institut für Holocaust-Studien)
Subjects
- Thought (Main category)
- Periods > Modern > Twentieth century
- Periods > Modern > Twentieth century > 1939-1945
- Zones and regions > Europe
- Periods > Modern > Twentieth century > 1945-1989
Places
- Wiener Wiesenthal Institut für Holocaust-Studien - Rebensteig 3, Wien, Austria
Vienna, Austria (1010)
Event attendance modalities
Hybrid event (on site and online)
Date(s)
- Friday, March 22, 2024
Attached files
Keywords
- littérature, Europe, URSS, antisémitisme, Shoah
Contact(s)
- Atinati Mamatsashvili
courriel : atinati_mamatsashvili [at] iliauni [dot] edu [dot] ge
Reference Urls
Information source
- Atinati Mamatsashvili
courriel : atinati_mamatsashvili [at] iliauni [dot] edu [dot] ge
License
This announcement is licensed under the terms of Creative Commons CC0 1.0 Universal.
To cite this announcement
« Europe and the USSR. Literature in the face of the persecution and extermination of the Jews », Study days, Calenda, Published on Wednesday, March 20, 2024, https://doi.org/10.58079/w1r1