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February 21 Plenary Address | 8:00 pm Hillel, All Purpose Room The Trials of John Demjanjuk: Memory and History in Holocaust Prosecutions Lawrence Douglas, Amherst College February 22 Roundtable 1 | 9–10:30 am Holocaust Justice: Judicial Processes and Their Evolution The Politics of War Crimes Trials, 1945-Present Devin Pendas, Boston College Rough Justice and the American Approach to War Crimes Prosecution: Dachau, Guantanamo Bay, and the Nuremberg Exception Tomaz Jardim, Ryerson University Judging from Without: Public Pressure and Postwar Justice JonDavid Wyneken, Seattle University Roundtable 2 | 11–12:30 pm Holocaust Justice and Historical Narrative The Witness as Professional: Theresienstadt Survivors Speaking Before Czechoslovak, Austrian, and Western German Justice, 1945-1968 Anna Hajkova, University of Warwick The Holocaust and “Public Education” in Soviet War Crimes Trials Alexander Prusin, New Mexico Tech Airbrushing the Past: Mykola Lebed, the Nazis, and the CIA Per Anders Rudling, Lund University Roundtable 3 | 1:30–3:00 pm The Cultural Meaning of Holocaust Justice The Morality of Evil: Defense Strategies of German Perpetrators Kerstin von Lingen, Universität Heidelberg Criminal Trials as Rituals of Purification Katherina von Kellenbach, St. Mary’s College of Maryland After the Trial/Before the Law: The Poetics of Justice in Eichmann in Jerusalem Eric Kligerman, University of Florida Roundtable 4 | 3:30–5:00 pm New Approaches to Holocaust Restitution Historical Perspectives on Holocaust Reparations Regula Ludi, Universität Bern The Trains of the Shoah Still Running: Holocaust Restitution Litigation in the US Michael Bazyler, Chapman University Evening Presentation | 6–7:30 pm Harn Gallery Auditorium The Beethoven Frieze: One Man’s Quest to Recover Gustav Klimt’s Monumental Masterpiece Sophie Lillie, Independent Scholar, Vienna Made possible through a special gift by Norman and Irma Braman with additional funds from the Braman Chair in Holocaust Studies and the Harry Rich Endowment at the Center for Jewish Studies. All sessions are free and open to the public WWW. JST . UFL . EDU WRITING RETRIBUTION HOLOCAUST JUSTICE AND ITS MEANING A CONFERENCE FEBRUARY 21-22 2015 ‚  All workshops are located in the Smathers Library Judaica suite
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WRITING RETRIBUTION HOLOCAUST JUSTICE AND …...The Politics of War Crimes Trials, 1945-Present Devin Pendas, Boston College Rough Justice and the American Approach to War Crimes Prosecution:

Aug 08, 2020

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Page 1: WRITING RETRIBUTION HOLOCAUST JUSTICE AND …...The Politics of War Crimes Trials, 1945-Present Devin Pendas, Boston College Rough Justice and the American Approach to War Crimes Prosecution:

F e b r u a r y 2 1

Plenary Address | 8:00 pmHillel, All Purpose Room

The Trials of John Demjanjuk: Memory and History in Holocaust Prosecutions Lawrence Douglas, Amherst College

F e b r u a r y 2 2

Roundtable 1 | 9–10:30 am

Holocaust Justice: Judicial Processes and Their Evolution

The Politics of War Crimes Trials, 1945-Present Devin Pendas, Boston College

Rough Justice and the American Approach to War Crimes Prosecution: Dachau, Guantanamo Bay, and the Nuremberg Exception Tomaz Jardim, Ryerson University

Judging from Without: Public Pressure and Postwar Justice JonDavid Wyneken, Seattle University

Roundtable 2 | 11–12:30 pm

Holocaust Justice and Historical Narrative

The Witness as Professional: Theresienstadt Survivors Speaking Before Czechoslovak, Austrian, and Western German Justice, 1945-1968 Anna Hajkova, University of Warwick

The Holocaust and “Public Education” in Soviet War Crimes Trials Alexander Prusin, New Mexico Tech

Airbrushing the Past: Mykola Lebed, the Nazis, and the CIA Per Anders Rudling, Lund University

Roundtable 3 | 1:30–3:00 pm

The Cultural Meaning of Holocaust Justice

The Morality of Evil: Defense Strategies of German PerpetratorsKerstin von Lingen, Universität Heidelberg

Criminal Trials as Rituals of PurificationKatherina von Kellenbach, St. Mary’s College of Maryland

After the Trial/Before the Law: The Poetics of Justice in Eichmann in Jerusalem Eric Kligerman, University of Florida

Roundtable 4 | 3:30–5:00 pm

New Approaches to Holocaust RestitutionHistorical Perspectives on Holocaust ReparationsRegula Ludi, Universität Bern

The Trains of the Shoah Still Running: Holocaust Restitution Litigation in the US Michael Bazyler, Chapman University

Evening Presentation | 6–7:30 pmHarn Gallery Auditorium

The Beethoven Frieze: One Man’s Quest to Recover Gustav Klimt’s Monumental MasterpieceSophie Lillie, Independent Scholar, Vienna

Made possible through a special gift by Norman and Irma Braman with additional funds from the Braman Chair in Holocaust Studies and the Harry Rich Endowment at the Center for Jewish Studies.

All sessions are free and open to the public

www.jst.ufl.edu

W R I T I N G R E T R I B U T I O N

H O L O C A U S T J U S T I C E A N D I T S M E A N I N G

A CONFERENCE

FEBRUARY 21-222015

‚ All workshops are located in the Smathers Library Judaica suite

Page 2: WRITING RETRIBUTION HOLOCAUST JUSTICE AND …...The Politics of War Crimes Trials, 1945-Present Devin Pendas, Boston College Rough Justice and the American Approach to War Crimes Prosecution:

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