Trauma, Privilege and Adventure in the “Orient”: A Refugee Family Archive

Leo Baeck Institute London

08-03-2018 • 1 hr 51 mins

Prof Atina Grossmann

(The Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art)

6.30pm, 8 March 2018

The talk examines, through the intimate – yet also distant – lens of family history, the ambivalent and paradoxical experiences, sensibilities, and emotions of bourgeois Berlin Jews who found refuge and romance in the ‘Orient’ of Iran and India after 1933. Drawing on an extensive collection of family correspondence and memorabilia from Iran and India (1935-1947), Grossmann probes her own parents’ understanding of their unstable position as well as the perils and pleasures of writing a ‘hybrid’ border-crossing family story folded into a larger historical drama of war, Holocaust, and vulnerable Empires.

Atina Grossmann is Professor of History at the Cooper Union in New York City. Publications include Jews, Germans, and Allies: Close Encounters in Occupied Germany (2007), and Wege in der Fremde: Deutsch-jüdische Begegnungsgeschichte zwischen New York, Berlin und Teheran (2012). Her current research focuses on ‘Remapping Survival: Jewish Refugees and Lost Memories of Displacement, Trauma, and Rescue in the Soviet Union, Iran, and India’, as well as the entanglements of family memoir and historical scholarship.

You Might Like

The Jordan B. Peterson Podcast
The Jordan B. Peterson Podcast
Dr. Jordan B. Peterson
The Daily Stoic
The Daily Stoic
Daily Stoic | Wondery
Two Mr Ps in a Pod(Cast)
Two Mr Ps in a Pod(Cast)
Two Mr Ps in a Pod(Cast)
Coffee Break French
Coffee Break French
Coffee Break Languages
Coffee Break Spanish
Coffee Break Spanish
Coffee Break Languages
Am I the Genius?
Am I the Genius?
youtube.com/@amithegenius
Coffee Break Italian
Coffee Break Italian
Coffee Break Languages
Motivational Speeches
Motivational Speeches
Motivational Speeches
Andrew Tate
Andrew Tate
Andrew Tate
Do The Work
Do The Work
Do The Work