Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Leading Holocaust Historian And Scholar To Deliver Lecture

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Leading Holocaust Historian And Scholar To Deliver Lecture

    LEADING HOLOCAUST HISTORIAN AND SCHOLAR TO DELIVER LECTURE

    Targeted News Service
    March 16, 2009 Monday 5:07 AM EST

    Clark University issued the following press release:

    Bauer will explore the view of the Holocaust as possibly the most
    extreme form of genocide, and he will assess comparisons between
    the Holocaust and recent genocidal situations. Bauer is Professor
    Emeritus of Holocaust Studies at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem,
    Academic Advisor to Yad Vashem, and a member of the Israel Academy of
    Science. He is also the Honorary Chairman of the International Task
    Force on Holocaust Education. He has authored 14 books and some 90
    articles on the Holocaust.

    Bauer's talk serves as the keynote address at the first-ever
    International Graduate Students' Conference. The conference was
    collectively envisioned by the Center's Ph.D. candidates to provide a
    forum for students from around the globe to present original research
    on the Holocaust and other genocides to an audience of peers and
    scholars. Their purpose is to foster an international community of
    future scholars.

    The conference also celebrates the centennial of Sigmund Freud's
    visit to Clark University, the sole American University where he
    lectured. Freud, who famously escaped Nazi persecution, delivered five
    lectures at Clark as part of a series that recognized the University's
    twentieth anniversary of graduate education. The doctoral conference
    honors Freud's visit and marks the Strassler Center's 10-year
    anniversary of offering doctoral education.

    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 genocides 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.

    Dedicated to teaching, research, and public service, the Center trains
    the next cadre of Holocaust historians and genocide studies scholars
    of the future, teachers, Holocaust museum directors and curators, and
    experts in non-governmental organizations and government agencies. The
    establishment of this Ph.D. program has been acclaimed by experts in
    the field as the most decisive step to date in furthering scholarship
    about the Holocaust and other genocides, particularly the Armenian
    Genocide.

    For more information about the lecture and the conference, call
    508-793-8897.
Working...
X