About this Event
3550 Trousdale Parkway, Los Angeles, CA 90089
https://dornsife.usc.edu/cagr/2024/02/02/the-holocaust-an-unfinished-history/Annual Sara and Asa Shapiro Scholar Lecture
A public lecture by Dan Stone (Professor of Modern History and Director of the Holocaust Research Institute at Royal Holloway, University of London)
2023-2024 Sara and Asa Shapiro Scholar in Residence
Organized by the USC Dornsife Center for Advanced Genocide Research and USC Shoah Foundation
In this distinguished lecture, Dan Stone will discuss his recent book in which he addresses several misconceptions that remain prevalent concerning the history of the Holocaust. These include: the fact that the Holocaust concerns “Germans” and “Jews”; the role played by resistance to Nazi rule; and the equation of the Holocaust with the Nazis’ concentration camp system. Instead, Stone stresses the continent-wide focus of the Holocaust, both where the victims are concerned and with respect to the vast scale of collaboration of all sorts, from state-led, as in Romania, to individual acts of theft and venality, across Europe; and the fact that the murder of the Jews had very little to do with concentration camps until the final stages of the war.
In tackling these topics, Stone will consider the significance of Nazi ideology and how it should be conceived; the different roles played by non-German actors; and the fact that the Holocaust did not simply “end” in 1945. Indeed, the fact that the history of the Holocaust is unfinished is clearer today than ever.
This lecture will be followed by a lunch hosted by USC Shoah Foundation. Advanced RSVP for the lunch (via the registration form above) is required. Space is limited.
Dan Stone is Professor of Modern History and Director of the Holocaust Research Institute at Royal Holloway, University of London. He is the author or editor of more than 20 books, including, most recently: Fate Unknown: Tracing the Missing after World War II and the Holocaust (OUP, 2023) and The Holocaust: An Unfinished History (Penguin, 2023 / Mariner, 2024). He has also co-edited, with Mark Roseman, volume 1 of the Cambridge History of the Holocaust (forthcoming 2025). He recently completed a book about psychoanalysis and Holocaust survival and is now working on a history of the Holocaust in Romania.
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