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Full Description
The contributions in this volume reflect discussions and controversies during the Princeton University Conference on Polish-Jewish Studies (April 18-19, 2015). The debates examined the politics of history in Poland, as well as the scholarly and pedagogical need to move beyond national and diasporic narratives in researching and teaching Polish-Jewish subjects. They focused on the role and meaning of the POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews.
Contents
Contents: Geneviève Zubrzycki: Conference Report - Jan Grabowski: The Holocaust as a Polish Problem - Jan T. Gross: Jews as a Polish Problem; and Why Not - as a Part of Polish History? - Irena Grudzińska-Gross: Polishness in Practice - Joanna Tokarska-Bakir: Polin: «Ultimate Lost Object» - Konrad Matyjaszek: Wall and Window: the Rubble of the Warsaw Ghetto as the Narrative Space of the POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews - Piotr Forecki/Anna Zawadzka: The Rule of the Golden Mean - Elżbieta Janicka: The Embassy of Poland in Poland: The Polin Myth in the Museum of the History of Polish Jews as Narrative Pattern and Model of Minority-Majority Relations - Geneviève Zubrzycki: Problematizing the «Jewish Turn» - Karen Underhill: Toward a Diasporic Poland/Polin: Zeitlin, Sutzkever, and the Ghost Dance with Jewish Poland - Erica Lehrer: Public Pedagogy and Transnational, Transcultural Museums.



