(Re)Framing Gender: Representations of Women's Bodies in Holocaust Photographs
A public lecture by Dorota Glowacka (Professor of Humanities, University of King's College, Halifax, Canada)
Center Visiting Scholar, April 2023
(Join us in person for this lecture or attend virtually on Zoom)
Organized by the USC Dornsife Center for Advanced Genocide Research
My Name Is Sara Film Screening and Panel Discussion at USC
Call for Papers: INoGS 2024 Conference on Genocide and Survivor Communities
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Call for Papers
INoGS 9th International Conference
Genocide and Survivor Communities: Agency, Resistance, Recognition
June 23-26, 2024
University of Southern California Los Angeles
On the ancestral and unceded territory of the Tongva and Kizh Nation peoples
The Testimony of the Multitude: Computational Analysis of the USC Shoah Foundation Archive
In recent decades, enormous efforts have been made to gather the testimonies of the last living Holocaust survivors. The challenge we face today is attending to all those thousands of human stories, which despite being safely stored in archives, may nevertheless disappear into oblivion. The challenge is at once ethical and technological: how to listen to thousands of testimonies as an integral body of voices and stories rather than a collection of fragmentary items in a database.
How Neuroscience Can Help Us Reimagine Learning About the Holocaust
Join us on campus or on Zoom on March 28, 2023 at 4:30 PM PST for this special public convening featuring a keynote by distinguished scholar Mary Helen Immordino-Yang, in recognition of the Mickey Shapiro Endowed Chair in Holocaust Education Research at the University of Southern California. The event will be moderated by Dr. Ishwar K. Puri.
If These Bones Could Speak: Early Armenian Pilgrimages to the Killing Fields of Dayr al-Zur
In this presentation, Elyse Semerdjian will outline the earliest Armenian pilgrimages to the killing fields of Dayr al-Zur in the Syrian Desert. It is there that Armenians interacted with the remains of Armenians murdered during the Armenian Genocide (1915-1918) in acts of remembrance. Semerdjian will discuss the origins of the now-destroyed Armenian Genocide Memorial in Dayr al-Zur and the ritual and collection habits of pilgrims that enact what she calls bone memory.
In Memoriam: Kim Simon
The USC Dornsife Center for Advanced Genocide Research mourns the death of Kim Simon who for the last decade served as Managing Director of the USC Shoah Foundation. She passed away on February 28, 2023.