Events | Archives in / of Transit: Historical Perspectives from the 1930s to the Present

Villa Aurora | June 29, 2024 | 10:00 AM (PDT)

June 29, 2024, 10 a.m. (PT) | Villa Aurora Los Angeles

On the occasion of the workshop "Archives in / of Transit: Historical Perspectives from the 1930s to the Present," Villa Aurora is hosting a series of panels for invited workshop participants on the topics "Solidarity, Gender, and Activism," "Collections and Agency" and "War and Violence."

 

German loot stored in church at Ellingen, Germany found by troops of the U.S. Third Army, April 24 1945, source: Wikimedia Commons

The workshop "Archives in / of Transit: Historical Perspectives from the 1930s to the Present" explores new ways of thinking about archives, archival records, and other artifacts historians might use as primary sources to gain deeper insight into the history of migrants in transit and the knowledge they possessed, produced, transmitted, or lost. With a starting point in the history of Jewish migration from National Socialist-occupied areas, the workshop broadens out to investigate the experiences of refugees and migrants fleeing genocide, armed conflict, and persecution throughout the twentieth century. Specifically, it uses the idea of “lost knowledge” (Steinberg/Strobl) to ask how migrants who leave their homes try to convey both the sense of loss and the disorientation that accompany the navigation of new lived realities—from the geographical to the socio-cultural, political, and beyond—in correspondence or other materials that capture any aspect of their flight and migration.

The workshop is convened by the German Historical Institute Washington; USC Shoah Foundation; Holocaust Research Institute, Royal Holloway; University of London; Queen Mary, University of London; and the Wiener Holocaust Library, London. Partners of the event are USC Dornsife Center for Advanced Genocide Research; Thomas Mann House, Los Angeles; Villa Aurora, Los Angeles; and Feuchtwanger Memorial Library, University of Southern California, Los Angeles.

The full program of the closed workshop can be found here.

Attendance


Please RSVP here. Tickets are extremely limited and distributed by a "first come, first serve" principle.


This event is convened by the German Historical Institute Washington; USC Shoah Foundation; Holocaust Research Institute, Royal Holloway; University of London; Queen Mary, University of London; Wiener Holocaust Library, London & Villa Aurora & Thomas Mann House Los Angeles.

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