Print

Print


INSTITUTE OF MODERN LANGUAGES RESEARCH
School of Advanced Study * University of London


Research Centre for German & Austrian Exile Studies Triennial International Conference

Emigration from Nazi-Occupied Europe to British Overseas Territories after 1933

Wednesday, 13 - Friday, 15 September 2017

Venue: University of London, Senate House, Malet Street, London WC1E 7HU

Panels and Speakers:
*       India: Atina Grossmann (New York), Margit Franz (Graz), Jyoti Sabharwal (New Delhi)
*       British Ceylon / British West Indies: Sebastian Musch (Marbach), Joanna Newman (London)
*       Canada: Patrick Farges (Paris), Andrea Strutz (Graz)
*       New Zealand: Monica Tempian (Wellington), Paul Weindling (Oxford), Gerrit-Jan Berendse (Cardiff)
*       Australia: Helga Schreckenberger (Birmingham, VT), Philipp Strobl (Melbourne), Veronika Zwerger / Ursula Seeber (Vienna)
*       Singapore and Shanghai: Albrecht Dümling (Berlin), Brigitte Mayr / Michael Omasta (Vienna)
*       Palestine: Irene Messinger (Vienna), Rony Alfandry (Ramat Gan)
*       Africa: Shirli Gilbert (Southampton), Sarah Schwab (Constance), Jutta Vinzent (Birmingham), Frank Shapiro (Ramat Gan), Nadav Heidecker (Haifa)

Evening at the Wiener Library:
Testimonies of Exile in British Territories Overseas and World Jewish Relief
Speakers: Lilian Kauders (Vienna), Peter Fraenkel (London), Lilian Levy (London)

Programme / Further details<http://www.sas.ac.uk/events/event/6784>

Advance registration required (GBP 60.00 for all three days; GBP 35.00 for one day)
Online registration now open at: http://www.sas.ac.uk/events/event/6784
Closing date: 25 August 2017



Jane Lewin
IMLR Trusts Administrator/Events Manager
Institute of Modern Languages Research
University of London School of Advanced Study
Room 239, Senate House
Malet Street, GB- London WC1E 7HU
Telephone 0044 (0)20 7862 8966
Website http://modernlanguages.sas.ac.uk

The University of London is an exempt charity in England and Wales. We have cut carbon emissions from University buildings by 32% and are committed to cutting emissions by 43% by 2020. Please think before you print.