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Acclaimed Scholar Bloxham To Lecture On Holocaust, Violent Tradition

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  • Acclaimed Scholar Bloxham To Lecture On Holocaust, Violent Tradition

    ACCLAIMED SCHOLAR BLOXHAM TO LECTURE ON HOLOCAUST, VIOLENT TRADITIONS IN EUROPE

    Targeted News Service
    October 7, 2008 Tuesday 1:36 AM EST

    Clark University issued the following press release:

    The Clark University Modern History Colloquium and The Strassler
    Family Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies will present
    "Integrating the Holocaust into a European History of Violence,"
    a talk by acclaimed scholar Donald Bloxham on Wednesday, October 22,
    at 4 p.m. in the Rose Library at the Cohen-Lasry House, 11 Hawthorne
    Street, Clark University Campus.

    In his talk, Bloxham will discuss the moving away from the metaphysical
    questions of the uniqueness of the Holocaust and will consider the
    Holocaust in the context of a violent continent-Europe in the first
    half of the 20th century-and will examine ways in which it fits and
    does not fit into broader patterns of genocide and ethnic cleansing.

    Bloxham is a professor of modern history at the University of Edinburgh
    in Scotland. He recently spent a year with the United States Holocaust
    Memorial Museum in Washington, DC conducting research for a book-length
    project entitled "The Final Solution: A Genocide and its Contexts"
    and was the Maurice C. Shapiro Senior Scholar-in-Residence.

    Bloxham, 34, is the youngest full professor of history in the United
    Kingdom. Prior to his appointment to the University of Edinburgh
    faculty, Bloxham was research director of London-based charity the
    Holocaust Educational Trust. In 2007, his book "The Great Game of
    Genocide: Imperialism, Nationalism, and the Destruction of the Ottoman
    Armenians" was awarded the Raphael Lemkin Award by the International
    Association of Genocide Scholars.

    This event is free and open to the public. For more information,
    contact 508-793-8897.

    The mission of the Strassler Family Center for Holocaust and Genocide
    Studies reaches beyond the boundaries of the University: to educate
    professionals of many fields about genocide and the Holocaust; to
    provide a lecture series free of charge and open to the public; to use
    scholarship to address current problems stemming from the murderous
    past; and to participate in the public discussion about a host of
    issues ranging from the importance of intervention in genocidal
    situations today to the significance of state-sponsored denial of
    the Armenian genocide and the well-funded denial of the Holocaust.
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