Towards a new history of the Second World War?



Similar documents
Position paper Towards a new history of the Second World War?

Summer School for Research Masters Research School political history 2014 The Limits of Democracy

Political Science (MSc) Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam - Faculteit der Sociale Wetenschappen - M Political Science

Skills for a lifetime towards a future proof VET

Theme 6: State Building Participants. Coordinator: Ido de Haan (Utrecht University) Participants In alphabetical order

How To Become A Criminologist

Good to see you at the Amsterdam 2014 Conference of the International Federation for Public History!

Ethics in Dementia Care

Study Program Handbook International Relations: Politics and History

INTRODUCTION THE 2ND EUROPEAN YOUTH WORK CONVENTION

Master of European Studies: Transnational and Global Perspectives

Core Course Designation Proposal Historical Reasoning

Master of Science. in Engineering: Computer Science. Master in de ingenieurswetenschappen: werktuigkunde. Faculty of Engineering Science

Institute of Philosophy

Personal information. Institute of Political Science P.O. Box RB Leiden, The Netherlands +31 (0)

Employability of Engineering Graduates A Vision for the Future

International Relations / International Studies / European Studies

RECOMMENDATION CONCERNING THE PROTECTION AND PROMOTION OF MUSEUMS AND COLLECTIONS, THEIR DIVERSITY AND THEIR ROLE IN SOCIETY

Preface. A Plea for Cultural Histories of Migration as Seen from a So-called Euro-region

Summer Programme on International and European Environmental Law:

AFRICAN ECONOMIC CONFERENCE 2013

Master of Laws Advanced Studies in European Law Ghent University - Ghent - Flanders - Belgium

Teacher s Guide For. Ancient History: The Greek City-State and Democracy

2. Development of the EMPA programme

MASTER S DEGREE IN MEDIA STUDIES, ERASMUS MUNDUS MASTERS JOURNALISM AND MEDIA WITHIN GLOBALISATION: THE EUROPEAN PERSPECTIVE

For an accessible and useful programme for all local authorities in the period

Master of Science in Space Studies

Sustainability Strategy, Leadership & Management

International exchanges of ideas about taxation, c

Master of Law - Double Degree programme

OUR PAST THROUGH FILM

PhD in Information Studies Goals

THE DIPLOMA DISEASE. Does education suit its purpose? IMD Chemin de Bellerive 23 PO Box 915, CH-1001 Lausanne Switzerland

Doctorate in Cultural and Global Criminology G C. An Erasmus Mundus Joint Doctorate EÖTVÖS LORÁND UNIVERSITY

Call for Proposals. Living Knowledge Conference, Copenhagen, 9-11 April 2014

Masters in Transnational, Global and Spatial History

City Marketing in Amsterdam An organisation-based anthropological study of public-private partnership in the field of city marketing in Amsterdam

When students complete the Master of Arts in Political Science program, they should have:

10 th Benelux Congress of Zoology

Stakeholders meeting. Ethical protocols and standards for research in Social Sciences today

Master of Communication Studies New Media and Society in Europe

Shifting qualifications in journalism education in Europe and Russia

Study abroad at the Faculty of Theology and Religious Studies, KU Leuven

Studying the EU: Current and Future Challenges

Workshop on Methodological and Theoretical Perspectives in International Criminal Justice

EU decision making and negotiation techniques

LIVERPOOL HOPE UNIVERSITY

History. Programme of study for key stage 3 and attainment target (This is an extract from The National Curriculum 2007)

MASTER OF EUROPEAN POLITICS AND POLICIES

Netherlands School of Public Administration

The cavalry has arrived EU external representation in The Hague and at the OPCW

Chatham House Online Archive. Publications and meetings of the Royal Institute of International Affairs

Towards Collaborative Practice - European Conference on Youth Work, Social Innovation, and Enterprise

Contents Page. Programme Specification... 2

EU-US Open Skies: competition and change in the worldwide aviation market

Profession and Professional Work in Adult Education in Europe

Culture, Organization and Management (MSc) Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam - Faculteit der Sociale Wetenschappen - M Culture, Organization and

Programme of the international conference

HVA, Hogeschool van Amsterdam, The Netherlands

Reflection from the higher education institutions point of view: Accreditation and quality culture Dr. Andrée Sursock European University Association

Council of Europe Partial Agreement on Youth Mobility through the Youth Card and European Youth Card Association EYCA September 2015

BA (Hons) Photography course content

Georgia Institute of Technology School of History, Technology, and Society HTS 1031 EUROPE SINCE THE RENAISSANCE

COURSE F: ADVANCING PROJECT MANAGEMENT IN ORGANISATIONS

Bridges in education: primary education Artevelde University College, Gent, Belgium

Master of Science in Psychology: Theory and Research

Multi-level governance and employment policy

Executive Course Foresight: Exploring the Future, Shaping the Present

Hollywood, Superheroes and IR: The Crisis of Security Concepts and Why Metropolis and Gotham Are Not Lost Yet

Graduate and doctoral programmes in Economics and Business

AN ROINN OIDEACHAIS AGUS EOLAÍOCHTA THE JUNIOR CERTIFICATE CIVIC, SOCIAL AND POLITICAL EDUCATION SYLLABUS

Undergraduate Politics and International Relations

Political Science (MSc) Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam - Faculteit der Sociale Wetenschappen - M Political Science

How To Understand The Relationship Between The Law And The Law In European Culture

MA Public History. Masters Degree

Call for proposals to host. the. ECSITE ANNUAL CONFERENCE 2018 or ECSITE ANNUAL CONFERENCE 2019

ACT. Recommendations A VISION TOWARDS A NEW RENAISSANCE LEADING ENABLING TECHNOLOGIES FOR SOCIETAL CHALLENGES. italia2014.eu

Geneva CUSD 304 Content-Area Curriculum Frameworks Grades 6-12 Social Studies

Justice and Priority Setting in Health Care

Structure and Dynamics of the World System of Translation

Online Course Syllabus HS224 History of the United States Since 1865

How To Understand The Effectiveness Of The International Criminal Court

GRADUATE PROGRAM. MA-program GLOBAL VISUAL COMMUNICATION (GVC) PhD-program VISUAL COMMUNICATION AND EXPERTISE (VisComX)

THE CULTURE OF INNOVATION AND THE BUILDING OF KNOWLEDGE SOCIETIES. - Issue Paper -

Compulsory for Environmental History Postgraduate Programme. Weekly contact: Individual supervision. Coursework (Dissertation) = 100%

Master in Digital Humanities

Ethics in the Qualifying Law Degree

GRADUATE INSTITUTE OF INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS AND STRATEGIC STUDIES

History/Political Science

THE DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL AND BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES POLITICAL SCIENCE PROGRAM HANDBOOK

Specialisation International Law

How To Study Political Science At Pcj.Edu

COURSE SYLLABUS. Contact information: 3rd period conference

The Human Right to Science: New Directions for Human Rights in Science

INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS MANAGEMENT

SCHOOL OF HUMANITIES HISTORY DISCIPLINE GROUP HONOURS IN HISTORY 2016 INFORMATION FOR PROSPECTIVE STUDENTS

REPORT. Public seminar, 10 November 2010, p.m. Concordia Theatre, The Hague

Invitation to. Moving Mediation. From mediation to a customized approach. Thursday 19 November 2009 The Kurhaus, The Hague

Programme Specification

Transcription:

Spring conference Towards a new history of the Second World War? 21 April 2015, Royal Library The Hague. Register at info@knhg.nl 70 Years after the end of the Second World War, research into its history continues to blossom, grow and diversify, both in academia and the larger public arena. In both Belgium and the Netherlands the historiography of the Second World War is well-established, strongly institutionalized, supported by a plethora of highly diverse local initiatives in museums, memorials and heritage centres and accepted as an essentially legitimate endeavour by the larger public, policy makers and funders. This success however also poses fundamental questions on the future of The History of the Second World War as an academic (sub-)specialism in the twenty-first century. The 2015 Spring conference of the Royal Netherlands Historical Society, organised in collaboration with CegeSoma and NIOD ( the Belgian and Dutch study centres originally founded for the study of the Second World War), wants to stimulate the debate about the future of the specialisation. Are new orientations and methodological innovations required? How will the field connect to current trends in representations of the past in digital forms, in museums and archives? Should researchers leave the comfort zone of their own specialisations and relate to other fields and disciplines in order to deal with the `big issues of the history of the Second World War? Provocative statements on the present state of the historiography of the Second World War within the larger perspective of current historical cultures will be offered in a position paper. This position paper will be pre-circulated amongst all participants and offer a starting point for the keynote address by Martin Conway. He will place the Second World War historiography in the Low Countries in an international context and relate it to broader fields of War Studies. The keynote will also provide a link to the four individual sessions. The four sessions will each take one specific angle to stimulate debate amongst three or four Dutch and Belgian speakers, followed by a plenary discussion. This conference aims to provide a fundamental reflection on the agenda of Second World War-historiography in the Low Countries for the first quarter of the twenty-first century. The entrance fee (including coffee, thee, lunch and drinks afterwards) is 30,- for members KNHG, 15,- for students (members). Non-members pay 50,- and students (non-members) pay 30,-. The amount can be wired to IBAN NL25 INGB 0006 9343 91 (BIC INGBNL2A), KNHG, The Hague.

Programme 9.30-10.00 Welcome 10.00-10.15 Introduction Susan Legêne, day chair Royal Netherlands Historical Society and VU University Amsterdam 10.15-11.00 Keynote lecture The History of the War is over but Histories of War remain Martin Conway - University of Oxford Discussion 11.00-11.30 Coffee 11.30-12.30 Session 1 Frameworks Hinke Piersma - NIOD Institute for War, Holocaust and Genocide, Studies, Amsterdam 12.30-13.30 Lunch break 13.30-14.30 Session 2 Research agendas: questions or answers? Nico Wouters - CegeSoma Centre for Historical Research and Documentation on War and Contemporary Society, Brussels and University of Antwerp 14.30-15.30 Session 3 Representing a past war for whom? Kees Ribbens - NIOD Amsterdam and Erasmus University Rotterdam 15.30-16.00 Tea 16.00-17.00 Session 4 Interacting with Collections Rudi Van Doorslaer - CegeSoma Brussels and Ghent University 17.00-17.30 Closing remarks Peter Romijn - NIOD Amsterdam and University of Amsterdam 17.30-18.00 Drinks

Outlines sessions Session 1 Frameworks Hinke Piersma - NIOD Amsterdam Marnix Beyen University of Antwerp Geraldien von Frijtag Drabbe Kunzel Utrecht University Remco Raben Utrecht University The history of the Second World War continues to be subject of fierce polemics among professional and lay historians, as it confronts national and/or local narratives and creates collective identities for social communities which are tied to a common past. To understand how war-history works, a comparative look across Belgo-Dutch borders can be illuminating, both in content (which themes, which perspectives etc.) and in methodology. Concerning the content, we will discuss the dynamics between political culture and the historiography in the Netherlands and Belgium from 1945 onwards. Which topics are/were controversial and how do/did they relate to their specific national or local background. Defining convergent and divergent trends between both countries might open new perspectives on how the history of WW II functions within its specific time and place. Such a contextual approach has methodological consequences too. How, for instance, does the successful field of transnational justice relates to the political history which explored (and explores) regime changes? Should we embrace the judicialisation of history? And will newly defined disciplines from which transnational justice is just one, help historians to come out of their methodological box to be ready for the history of WW II in the 21st century? Session 2: Research agendas: questions or answers? Nico Wouters - CegeSoma Brussels and University of Antwerp Bruno De Wever - Ghent University Ilse Raaijmakers - Arq Psychotrauma Expert Group Diemen The most critical point of view possible at this time is that the current academic discipline of WWII is developing towards being an applied science at best: purely catering to societal interests and dominated by actors from outside the academic discipline. A harsh assessment would be that the field has no longer sufficient legitimacy as such, and thus may be a victim of its own success? It may now have reached the point that it is unable to innovate its own particular set of questions, approaches and separate longer term goals. This sessions tackles the questions WWII historians ask: which questions and approaches should define the new research agenda, to which purpose, and what kind of answers do we expect them to provide?

How exactly do we assess the interconnectedness? of present-day and future social demand (in its broadest sense) for our work on the one hand, and the advancement of academic research on the other? Is the current situation really fundamentally different than the one during the golden era of WWII-historians in the 1960s- 1980s? From the beginning, the institutionalization of the production of narratives on the Second World War has served purposes of fostering fundamental moral and political notions (democracy, freedom, human rights, nationhood). This may have changed over time, but has not exactly diminished. If we accept that a critical stance towards current fields such as memory education or commemorative policies and memory legislation is required, in what concrete ways should such a critical position reflect on the kind of questions we ask in our fundamental research? Does the field need new paradigms and if so, should such a paradigmatic shift constitute a move inward free from any short-term societal demands or on the contrary a bold move outward (towards non-academic actors or transnational history). In this context, the recent Cambridge History Manifesto might be an interesting point of departure for debate. Herein, a return of the longue durée and grand narratives approach is defended, albeit in the explicit support of a more public role of the historian. May the programmatic purpose of presenting well-informed disruptive narratives be the challenge that WWII history needs? Or, on the contrary, would this flight into the longue durée (cf. Fernand Braudel) lead to total detachment from the manifold WWII-histories that develop outside of the academic field and to detached specialism? Session 3: Representing a past war for whom? Kees Ribbens - NIOD Amsterdam and Erasmus University Rotterdam Judith Keilbach Utrecht University Chantal Kesteloot CegeSoma Brussels Roel Vande Winkel University of Leuven World War II continues to play an intriguing role in contemporary societies across Western Europe. Seventy years after the end of this conflict, the need for experiences and stories, for discoveries, revelations and interpretations is still strong. Numerous post-war conflicts and other historical developments, from the Cold War to the fall of the Berlin Wall, and from Decolonization to the War on Terror, have not led to a noteworthy decline of this historical public interest (other significant developments may even have contributed to an increased interest in certain aspects). The impact of these post-war political developments on the content and imagination of the war was perhaps as limited as the influence historians had on the representation of World War II. To what extent does the historians familiarity with text, their pursuit to follow the sources as closely as possible, yet a rather distant focus on often larger-scale issues match

with the public need for war representations? Is the increased dominance of the visual, the need to experience (the recreation of) the war, to see it from an individual perspective, still compatible with academic historiography? Both old and new media, and visual media - from comics to games - in particular, are breaking new grounds here. But their popularity raises two key questions: What have we gained analytically from these new dominant forms of public history? And has this resulted in a new hermeneutics that connect the audience(s) more profoundly with the past, leading to a better understanding? Session 4: Interacting with Collections Rudi Van Doorslaer - CegeSoma Brussels and Ghent University Charles Jeurgens - Leiden University Karel Dibbets - University of Amsterdam Veerle Vanden Daelen - CegeSoma (EHRI) and University of Antwerp These last two decades, the professional disclosure of WWII-related archives documental as well as audio-visual has been revolutionized. Classic academic archival research and archival institutes such as NIOD, CegeSoma and the Belgian and Dutch National Archives are active players in innovating practices of digitization and as such giving shape to the new research perspectives that result from it. In this session, we want to reflect on the future consequences of these rapid changes. - Will the disclosure of archives become transnational by definition and what are, in this perspective, the lesson s learned from EHRI? - In light of the enormous public investment in WWII-history : how (and to what extent) can professional institutes integrate users perspectives and participation? - Will the Digital Turn make any national framework obsolete in the near future? Will it even replace national WWII-chronologies, making the end of the Chinese Civil War in 1949 a more acceptable terminus ad quem than 1945? What about the reunification of Germany in 1989-90? - Is there still a need for institutes such as CegeSoma or NIOD, national centres for war-studies, that combine an archival and documentation function with a research agenda? Does the digital revolution itself necessitate a newly defined relationship with other (larger) institutes or networks in both countries?