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The Parkes Institute

3rd International Parkes Institute Graduate Conference Event

Date:
26 - 27 June 2023
Venue:
Avenue Campus, TV

For more information regarding this event, please email parkes@soton.ac.uk .

Event details

Register now for the upcoming Third Parkes Institute International Summer Graduate Conference, organised by the Parkes Institute for the TV of Jewish/non-Jewish Relations, TV and the Institute of Historical Research at the School of Advanced TV, University of London. The conference will take place on 26-27 June 2023 at Avenue Campus, TV.

The two-day conference will provide the opportunity for postgraduate students and early career researchers from around the world to network and present their research among fellow academics. The conference, entitled ‘Experiencing and Imagining Jewish/non-Jewish Relations’, will feature a wide range of papers from scholars across a variety of disciplines. The papers, temporally and spatially diverse in outlook, cover the fields of history, literature, art, film, and music amongst others. The programme also includes professionalisation workshops delivered by colleagues from the IHR alongside Parkes Institute staff, alumni and colleagues, on the topics of ‘Academic Careers’, ‘Alternative-Academic Career’, and ‘Monograph Proposals’.

The conference is generously supported through the TV by the Parkes Institute, funds from Research England for the enhancement of the History Departmental research culture, and the CMRC Medieval Studies Fund. And through the IHR’s George Weidenfeld fund for Jewish History which focusses on Jewish cultural, social, and intellectual history and achievements.

Conference Programme

Monday 26 June 2023

9-9.30am | Registration

9.30-10am | Opening Remarks

  • Claire Le Foll, Director of the Parkes Institute (TV)
    Scott Soo, Parkes Institute Postgraduate Lead (TV)
    Catherine Clarke, Director of the Centre for the History of People, Place and Community (Institute for Historical Research)
    Ryan Bishop, Director of Graduate Studies for Arts and Humanities (TV)
    Bryony Whitmarsh, Associate Dean International (TV)

10-11.30am | Panel 1: Jewish/non-Jewish Spaces
Chair: Emily Bolton (TV)

Franziska Kleybolte (University of Münster), The Christian Appropriation of Medieval Iberian Synagogues. A History of Entanglement and Disentanglement

Pelia Werth (John Hopkins University), Sharing the Sacred: Jewish Pilgrimage to the Holy Land and Interfaith Relations, c. 1100-1300

Selvihan Kurt (Istanbul Technical University), The Jewish Cemeteries in Izmir During the Nineteenth and the Early Twentieth Centuries

11.30-11.45am | Break

11.45am-12.45pm | Professional Development Workshop 1: Alt-Academic Careers

  • Rachel Delman, TORCH Heritage Partnerships Coordinator (University of Oxford)
  • James Bulgin, Head of Public History (Imperial War Museums)
  • Joanna Newman MBE, Chief Executive (Association of Commonwealth Universities)

12.45-1.30pm | Lunch

1.30-2.30pm | Panel 2: Aid, Rescue and Humanitarianism
Chair: Charlie Knight (TV)

Nicola Woodhead (TV), The Kindertransport Reimagined

Magdalene Klassen (John Hopkins University), “More Looking After than they Require”: London’s Interconfessional Network of Assistance for Young Women Travellers in the 1890s

2.30-3.30pm | Professional Development Workshop 2: Academic Careers

  • Simon Trafford, Director of Studies (Institute for Historical Research)
  • Edward Armston-Sheret, Alan Pearsall Fellow in Naval and Maritime History (Institute for HistoricalResearch)
  • Maja Hultman, Postdoctoral Researcher (University of Gothenburg)
  • Helen Spurling, Deputy Head of School, Humanities (TV)

3.30-3.45pm | Break

3.45-4.45pm | Panel 3: Identities in the Contemporary World
Chair: Joseph Finlay (TV)

Max Munday (Sheffield Hallam), Moving within and between Jew-ish bodies: art practice-based approaches to lives across time

Magdalena Dziaczkowska (Lund University), Images of romantic relationships between Jews and Catholics in interwar Poland in oral histories from the Grodzka Gate – NN Theatre Centre in Lublin.

4.45-5pm | Break

5pm | Roundtable

Tuesday 27 June

9-10.30am | Panel 4: Actioning Interfaith in the Modern World
Chair: Nicola Woodhead (TV)

Jemima Jarman (Birkbeck, University of London), Missionary-Jewish Encounters in 19th c London

Konrad Bohleke (University of Sydney), The New South Wales Council of Christians and Jews 1942-1945: Key Activities and Achievements

Barnabas Balint (University of Oxford), ‘God made a miracle’: Christian Rescuers during the Holocaust in Hungary

10.30-11.30am | Professional Development Workshop 3: Monograph Proposals

  • Emma Gallon, Books Manager (University of London Press)
  • Neil Gregor, Professor of Modern European History (TV)
  • Catherine Clarke (Institute for Historical Research)

11.30-11.45am | Break

11.45am-12.45pm | Panel 5: Literary Representations of Jewish/non-Jewish Relations
Chair: Claire Le Foll (TV)

Marina Mayorski (University of Michigan), The Return to Sepharad: The Multilingual Trajectories of the Jewish Historical Novel in the Modern Era

Olga Petrova (Central European University), Crossing the Great Chasm? Jewish-Ukrainian Rapprochement in the Ukrainian Revolution of 1917-1920

12.45-1.30pm | Lunch

1.30-2.30pm | Panel 6: Interfaith Dialogues
Chair: Hannah Capey-Allcock (TV)

Netta Schram (The Hebrew University of Jerusalem), “The abyss that separates us”? Y. Leibowitz and M. Dubois on Judaism and Christianity

Shannon Quigley (University of Haifa), When Women Entered the Conversation: Post-Shoah Jewish-Christian Dialogue and the Religious Thought of Women

2.30-2.45pm | Break

2.45-4.15pm | Panel 7: Jews and the Arts
Chair: Emily-Rose Baker (TV)

Débora Kantor (University of Buenos Aires/CONICET), Way of a Jewish Gaucho: Taking Alberto Gerchunoff´s The Jewish Gauchos to the screen in 1970s Argentina

Rachel Coombes (University of Oxford), Sociability and the Sociétés: negotiating Franco-Jewish musical and artistic expression in 1920s Paris

Katie Power (TV), “Sacred is our duty”: London’s New Yiddish Theatre, 1943-49

4.15-5.15pm | Panel 8: Jewish Spaces in Heritage and Memory
Chair: Scott Soo (TV)

Molly Theodora Oringer (University of California, Los Angeles), Jewish Sidon: Memory, Displacement, and Absence in a South Lebanese City

Zuzanna Światowy (Technische Universität Braunschweig), Whose heritage is it? Approach of Jewish and non-Jewish actors to the saved legacy in 20th anniversary of the Foundation for the Preservation of Jewish Heritage in Poland

5.15pm | Closing Remarks

  • Charlie Knight (TV)
  • Hannah Capey-Allcock (TV)

Click here to view the programme as a PDF.

Registration Information

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