András Kovács - Michael
L. Miller:
Introduction
Public Lectures
Shlomo Avineri:
Prague 1744 – Lake Success
1947: Statecraft without a State
Wolfgang Benz:
The
World of National Socialist Camps: Places of Exclusion,
Discrimination, Extermination
Nicholas de Lange:
Research
on Byzantine Jewry: The State of the Question
Sidra Dekoven Ezrahi:
The Tragical Comedy of Impersonation:
Jews, America and the Twentieth Century
László Karsai:
Could the Jews of Hungary
have survived the Holocaust? New Answers to an Old Question
Andrei S. Markovits:
“Twin brothers”:
European Antisemitism and anti-Americanism
Paul B. Miller:
The (Non) Bombing of Auschwitz:
Perks and Perils in Counterfactual History
Guy Miron:
Between “Center” and “East”
– The Special Way of Jewish Emancipation in Hungary
Jacques Picard:
Neutral
Switzerland, National Socialist Past, and the Legacy
of History
Frank Stern:
The “Semitic” Gaze from the
Screen: German and Austrian Cinematic Discourse between
Antisemitism and Philosemitism
Conference
Conference Program:
“Jews and the Legacies
of Empire” (May 29–31, 2005)
Miklós Konrád:
Jewish Perception of Antisemitism
in Hungary before World War I
Mária M. Kovács:
The Case of the Teleki
Statue: New Debates on the History of the Numerus Clausus
in Hungary
Research Project “The
Communist Party State and the Jews: Exploration and
Study of Sources”
András Kovács:
Overview of Project, The
Eichmann Trial: 12 Documents from the Hungarian Archives
(1960–1961)
Marie Crhová:
Israel in the Foreign and
International Politics of the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia
in the 1960s and Beyond
Appendices
Jewish Studies Lecture
Series, 2003–2005
Courses Offered in the
Jewish Studies Specialization, 2003–2005
MA Theses in Jewish
Studies, 2003–2005
4. Contributors