History and Responsibility: Hebrew Literature and 1948

History and Responsibility: Hebrew Literature and 1948

Monday, June 13, 2011
12:00 AM - 12:00 AM
(Pacific)
Stanford Humanities Center
Speaker: 
  • Anita Shapira,
  • Dan Miron,
  • Hannan Hever,
  • Chana Kronfeld,
  • Todd Hasak-Lowy,
  • Uri S. Cohen,
  • Michal Arbell,
  • Anat Weisman,
  • Shira Stav,
  • Michael Gluzman,
  • Lital Levy,
  • Gil Hochberg,
  • Shaul Setter

The Europe Center announces the international conference, “History and Responsibility: Hebrew Literature and 1948” which will take place at Stanford University on June 13-14, 2011. The aim of this conference is to consider some six decades of literary reflection on the 1948 Middle Eastern war, an event that resulted with the establishment of Israel on the one hand, and with the birth of the Palestinian refugee problem, the Nakba on the other hand.

In recent decades there has been extensive discussion of 1948 in historiography. Many novels, films, journals, exhibitions, anthologies and political essays of recent years also display a keen interest in revisiting 1948. It is our wish to address this context from the perspective of literary studies, and to do so with a strong emphasis on maintaining a theoretical, comparative dimension, i.e. raise questions that result from recent theoretical debates on historical representation, postcolonial discourse, literature and philosophy, literature and ethics, and so forth.   

The conference thus wishes to discuss different forms of literary engagement with the past (poetry, drama and prose); the literary relation to ethical and political questions surrounding 1948; changes in the literary dealing with 1948 from the late 1940s to the present; as well as public debates surrounding the literary engagement with 1948.

This conference is sponsored by The Europe Center, with co-sponsors The Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies, the School of Humanities and Sciences, The Taube Center for Jewish Studies, the Division of Literatures, Cultures, and Languages, The Department of Comparative Literature at Stanford University, the Center for Ethics and Society, along with The Hebrew University, Jerusalem.

A full conference schedule can be found here.