Crossing the Line

September 12, 2019 - 4:30pm to 6:00pm

Professor Natalia Aleksiun, professor of Modern Jewish History at Touro College,

Violence against Jewish Female Students in Interwar Poland and  the New Model of Antisemitism

Graduate School of Jewish Studies, in New York will visit Pitt for a lecture titled “Crossing the Line: Violence against Jewish Female Students in Interwar Poland and the New Model of Antisemitism"on Thurs., Sept. 12.

Aleksiun studied East European and Jewish history in Poland, where she received her first doctoral degree in history from Warsaw University, with a dissertation that resulted in her first book, “Where to? The Zionist Movement in Poland, 1944-1950.” She received a second doctoral degree in Jewish Studies at New York University. Dr. Aleksiun has been a fellow at the Institute of Contemporary History in Munich, Germany; the Herbert D. Katz Center for Advanced Judaic Studies, University of Pennsylvania; a Senior Fellow at the Vienna Wiesenthal Institute for Holocaust Studies, Vienna; a Yad Hanadiv Postdoctoral Fellow in Israel; Pearl Resnick Postdoctoral Fellow, at the Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies, USHMM, Washington D.C., and the Imre Kertesz Kolleg in Jena, Germany.

She has published widely in Yad Vashem Studies, Polish Review, Dapim, East European Jewish Affairs, Studies in Contemporary Jewry, Polin, and Gal Ed, as well as other scholarly journals. Her second book, Conscious History: Polish Jewish Historians before the Holocaust is forthcoming (Littman Library of Jewish Civilization, 2019). She has co-edited two volumes of Polin, (v. 20, devoted to the memory of the Holocaust, and v. 29, on Jewish historiography in Eastern Europe). Dr. Aleksiun is currently working on a book about the so-called cadaver affair at European universities in the 1920s and 1930s and on a project dealing with daily lives of Jews in hiding in Galicia during the Holocaust.

Location and Address

Cathedral of Learning, 501