Bildung & Karriere

Call for Papers: Childhood at War and Genocide

Children are the primary victims of wars, armed conflicts, and genocides. They perish first and in disproportionately large numbers. Wars and genocides also destroy the family and family bonds, and that is so strikingly visible in the case of child survivors who are impacted for life with painful memories of the loss of parents, childhood, and community, and of displacement. Thanks to the last two decades of historical, sociological, anthropological, literary, and ethnographic research, scholars now know much more about the world of thinking, being, and feeling of Jewish and non-Jewish European children and youth, alongside their daily experiences, both during and in the aftermath of the Second World War.

The conference organisers are interested in innovative contributions which tackle various historical and contemporary case studies of children and war and genocide. The organisers have three objectives. First, while the initial focus is on the Holocaust and the occupied European territories during the Second World War, we are also interested in taking a more global outlook at the experiences and representations of children who experienced, witnessed, and survived war and genocide during the twentieth and twenty-first century. Second, to explore similarities and differences in the experiences and life stories of displaced, orphaned, and also physically and mentally disabled young survivors of the Holocaust, and the genocides in Armenian, Rwandan, Cambodian, and Bosnian, among others. And third to examine the effect of war and genocide on children and childhood: on children’s emotions, needs and social identities; children’s social relations within family and friendship and long-life ties; and their role in the reconstruction of family in the aftermath of war and genocide.

The conference will take place at the Center for Holocaust Studies at the Leibniz Institute for Contemporary History (IfZ) in Munich on 24-26 October 2022. It will be conducted in English. Applicants should send an abstract (max. 350 words) and a short biography (max. 200 words) to zfhs@ifz-muenchen.de by 31 March 2022. The conference is hosted by the Center for Holocaust Studies at the Leibniz Institute for Contemporary History in cooperation with the Fritz Bauer Institute and the Institute of Advanced Studies at University College London.

Details regarding the conference and application can be found in the full Call for Papers.

Firmenkontakt und Herausgeber der Meldung:

Institut für Zeitgeschichte
Leonrodstraße 46 b
80636 München
Telefon: +49 (89) 12688-0
Telefax: +49 (89) 12688-191
http://www.ifz-muenchen.de/

Ansprechpartner:
Institut für Zeitgeschichte
Telefon: +49 (89) 12688-0
E-Mail: presse@ifz-muenchen.de
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