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Michal Kowalski's reply to the article by Jan Grabowski and Katarzyna Markusz
Michal Kowalski, author of the chapter titled “I think Jews will be taken to Treblinka. It's better for you to stay at home.’ Polish residents of towns around Treblinka as Holocaust witnesses. A Local Study”, which appeared in the volume "Oto widać i oto słychać" responds to an article by Prof. Jan Grabowski and Dr. Katarzyna Markusz from the Jewish.pl portal.
POLIN AWARDS 2024
Honorable award in the POLIN 2024 AWARDS competition for Center member Dr. Karolina Panz
Live stream - European Holocaust Research Infrastructure Academic Conference
Live straeam - European Holocaust Research Infrastructure Academic Conference
European Holocaust Research Infrastructure Academic Conference
The European Holocaust Research Infrastructure Academic Conference "Researching the Holocaust in the Digital Age" begins tomorrow. Direct participation only for participants who have pre-registered. Tomorrow, from 10.00 am, we will make available a live vieo stream.
Invitation to submit proposals to the >Materials
Invitation to submit proposals to the "Materials" section for the 20th anniversary issue of our journal
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Polish Center for Holocaust Research Nowy Swiat St. 72, 00-330 Warsaw; POLAND; Palac Staszica room 120 e-mail: centrum@holocaustresearch.pl
European Holocaust Research Infrastructure Academic Conference
European Holocaust Research Infrastructure Academic Conference17.06.2024 13:49:45
The European Holocaust Research Infrastructure Academic Conference "Researching the Holocaust in the Digital Age" begins tomorrow. Direct participation only for participants who have pre-registered. Tomorrow, from 10.00 am, we will make available a live vieo stream.
EHRI Academic Conference Warsaw 2024 | Follow the Live Stream on 18 June
EHRI Academic Conference
Researching the Holocaust in the Digital Age
18 June 2024
Polish Center for Holocaust Research, Staszic Palace
Nowy Swiat 72, Warsaw, Poland
The registration for this conference is closed.
Organized by EHRI partners including the Polish Center for Holocaust Research
The conference will be live-streamed – more details about this will follow on this webpage close to or on the day of the conference.
On Tuesday 18 June 2024, the European Holocaust Research Infrastructure (EHRI) project will convene the international academic conference “Researching the Holocaust in the Digital Age” at the Polish Academy of Sciences in Warsaw.
PROGRAMME
09:15 – 10:00 Coffee and Registration
10:00 – 10:05 Welcome by Barbara Engelking, Director of the Polish Center for Holocaust Research in Warsaw
10:05 – 10:20 The European Holocaust Research Infrastructure (EHRI), introduction by EHRI Co-Director, Karel Berkhoff
10:20 – 12:00 Session 1 - New Digital Research Methods and Innovations
Chair: Michal Frankl, Masaryk Institute and Archives, Czech Academy of Sciences, Czechia
- 10:20 – 10:40 Reference and Information Services in Yad Vashem Archives - Opportunities and Challenges of the Digital Era - Yael Robinson Gottfeld, Yad Vashem, Israel
- 10:40 – 11:00 Cartographic Representation of the Krakow Ghetto: A Distorted Image of Tragedy - Stanislaw Szombara, AGH University of Science and Technology and Alicja Jarkowska, Jagiellonian University, Poland
- 11:00 – 11:20 Streamlining the Creation of Holocaust-related Digital Editions with Automatic Tools - Floriane Chiffoleau and Sarah Beniere, Inria, France
- 11:20 – 12:00 Querying the Archive: Relational Database Design and the Study of Holocaust-Era Materials - Emily Klein, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
- 11:40 – 12:00 Q & A
12:00 – 13:30 Lunch and Poster Presentations*
13:30 – 15:00 Session 2 - Exploring the Use of Digital Techniques in Holocaust Research
Chair: Rachel Pistol, King’s College London, UK
- 13:30 – 13:50 Interacting with Restless Archive: Sustainability and Archival Aggregation in Long-Form Digital Storytelling Platforms - Simone Gigliotti, Royal Holloway, University of London, UK
- 13:50 – 14:10 Unveiling Patterns: Exploring Socio-Demographic Characteristics as Predictive Factors for Deportation of Jews Registered in Bruxelles in 1940, Using Binary Logistic Regression - Adina Babeş-Fruchter, KU Leuven, Belgium
- 14:10 – 14:30 Natural Language Processing Meets Holocaust Research - Martin Wynne, University of Oxford, UK
- 14:30 – 14:50 Digital Heritage Related to Nazi Persecution: Reactualisation of Collective Memory of the Holocaust through a Virtual Interactive Exploration Platform - Aliisa Råmark and Héctor López-Carral, Radboud University Nijmegen, The Netherlands
- 14:50 – 15.10 Q & A
15:10 – 15:40 Tea and Coffee Break
15:40 – 17:20 Session 3 - Exploring the Use of Digital Techniques in Holocaust Research
Chair: Karel Berkhoff, NIOD Institute for War, Holocaust and Genocide, The Netherlands
- 15:40 – 16:00 Integrating Citizen Science in the Digital Age as a Sustainable Innovation in Holocaust Research: Participatory Research, Presentation and Transformation - Inka Engel, University of Koblenz, Germany
- 16:00 – 16:20 Digital Humanities and Multiscalar Approaches to the Holocaust: The Case of the Brest-Litovsk Ghetto - Boris Czerny, Université de Caen-Normandie, France
- 16:20 – 16:40 Mass Grave Investigations of Holocaust Victims in the Digital Age: Strategies for Searching in Ukraine - Daria Cherkaska, Staffordshire University, UK
- 16:40 – 17:00 Memory Wars and Digitized Denialism: The Rehabilitation of a Romanian War Criminal - Adina Marincea, "Elie Wiesel National" Institute for Studying the Holocaust in Romania, Romania
- 17:00 – 17:20 Q & A
17:20 – 17:30 Closing Remarks
17:30 – 18:00 Drinks
18:00 - 20:00 Buffet Dinner
* Poster Presentations:
- What Are Good Examples of the Opportunities for Holocaust Research in the Digital Age? The Example of Visual History Archives – Alessandro Matta, Sardinian Shoah Memorial Association, Italy
- "The Sunflower": Narrating the History of Wiesenthal's Book Through a Digital Online Edition – EHRI-Team (VWI), Vienna Wiesenthal Institute for Holocaust Studies, Austria
- Knowledge Modelling with Holocaust Testimonies – Isuri Anadhuri, University of Lancaster, UK
- Repurposing Holocaust-related digital scholarly editions to develop multilingual domain-specific named entity recognition tools – Maria Dermentzi, King’s College London, UK, and Hugo Scheithauer, Inria, France
- Project "Evaluating and Publishing Files on Compensation Cases" (https://kittl.arbeiterarchiv.de) – Steffen Müller, Bundesarchiv, Germany
- Tracing the ways of Jewish removal goods seized and auctioned in Hamburg and Bremen – The Lost Lift Database – Jacqueline Malchow, German Maritime Museum, Germany
- The Language of Emotions in a Digital Project about the Holocaust – Pawel Rams and Agnieszka Zalotynska, Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland
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