"What's New, What's Next?" – nagrania sesji
fot. Muzeum Historii Żydów Polskich
Zapraszamy do obejrzenia materiałów wideo z międzynarodowej konferencji online "What’s New, What’s Next? Innovative Methods, New Sources, and Paradigm Shifts in Jewish Studies", organizowanej przez Muzeum POLIN w dniach 3-7 października 2021.
Podczas wydarzenia badacze i badaczki z różnych dyscyplin: antropologia, socjologia, historia, studia nad pamięcią, muzeologia, historia sztuki i politologia zastanawiali się, jakie jest miejsce współczesnej judaistyki w kontekście dzisiejszych studiów humanistycznych i społecznych.
Poniżej relacje z wykładów specjalnych, paneli dyskusyjnych i sesji przeprowadzonych podczas konferencji.
Wykłady specjalne >>
- The Beauty of Small Differences: About Jewish Studies and Jewish Area Studies
- Exploring Jewish History in the Digital Age
- Beyond Traditional Methods: What is New and What is Next in Jewish Studies – Five Thoughts
- What's Next in Jewish Studies: Prospects and Challenges
Panele dyskusyjne >>
- Creating a Legacy: The Impact of Philanthropy on Jewish Studies in Poland
- The Future of Museum Architecture
Sesje >>
- 1. Narratives of Conversion and Belonging in Jewish and Polish History
- 2. New Paradigms, Methodologies, and Sources for the History of Hasidism
- 3. Historians of Societies in Turmoil: Cultural Memory and Politics of Memory
- 4. Between Memory and Education: Challenging Holocaust Transmission and the Fight against Antisemitism
- 5. Exhibiting Loss: Discovering New Museum Possibilities
- 6. Inside the Eruv: Inclusive Approaches to Haredi Language, Religion, and Culture
- 7. The Corporeal Turn: Cookbooks, Food, and Embodied Memory
- 8. Reconsidering the Spatial Turn in Jewish Studies: A Relational Approach
- 9. Multilingual Jewish Popular Culture from the end of the 19th Century until 1939: Routes to Modernity
- 10. Focusing on Families: What Does Polish Jewish History Have to Gain?
- 11. New Interactive Internet Approaches to Studying Eastern European Jewish Music
- 12. Approaches to Jewish Architecture: From Nationalism to Post-Modernism
- 13. City, School, and Family: Exploring New Sources for the History of Galician Jews
- 14. Ilanot: Kabbalistic Iconotexts and New Frontiers of Digital Humanities
- 15. Looking At, Looking Away: The Testimonial Agency of Holocaust Photography
- 16. Fin-de-Siècle Łódź: Jews, Patrons, and the Art of Samuel Hirszenberg
- 17. Transregionalism, Local Identities, and Jewish Geography in Early Modern Ashkenaz
- 18. Jews and Conversion in Eastern Europe: New Approaches, Methodologies, Sources
- 19. Polish Jews: Towards a New Past
- 20. The Network of Inns in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania in the 18th century: A Spatial Humanities Approach to Jewish Socio-Economic Activities in Early Modern History
- 21. Mobility and Migration in German-Jewish Photography during the National Socialist Era