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- United in Diversity – An Interdisciplinary Study of Contemporary European Jewry and its Reflection
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- Weimar's Republicans: German Jews in Democratic and Pacifist Organizations of the Interwar Period (1918 -1933)
- Max Brod's Late Years (1939-1968): Departure into Exile
- History of the German-Jewish Diaspora
- Settling with RASSCO: Transfer Paths of the German Aliyah to Palestine-Eretz Israel (1933-1948)
- Euphony: Jews, Muslims and Roma in the 21st Century Metropolises
- United in Diversity – An Interdisciplinary Study of Contemporary European Jewry and its Reflection
- The Radical Right in Germany, 1945-2000
- Struggling with Justice: Antisemitism as a Judicial Challenge
- Pilot Project "Jewish Life in Potsdam"
- Jewish History online
- Hakhshara as a Place of Remembrance
- National Socialist Book Burnings 1933
- Jewish [hi]stories in the GDR
- ArchivedMemory online
- Emil Julius Gumbel Research Department
- Previous Projects
United in Diversity – An Interdisciplinary Study of Contemporary European Jewry and its Reflection
Society and the PresentResearch: Olaf Glöckner, in cooperation with the Centre for the Study of the Holocaust and Jewish Literature (Charles University Prague), the Kantor Center for the Study of Contemporary European Jewry (Tel Aviv University) and the Comenius University Bratislava (Institute for History).
Duration: 2018-2022
Funding: EU-Programm Erasmus Plus
This interdisciplinary, international study examines at the interface of contemporary history and the present how the relationships between Jews and non-Jews are being redesigned in various countries in Central and East Central Europe, especially in metropolitan areas. The changing history of Christian-Jewish relationships is examined, as is the processing of the Second World War and the Shoah in art and literature. The empirical part, which is methodologically based on the evaluation of narrative and problem-focused interviews among Jews and non-Jews in five different countries (Hungary, Czech Republic, Poland, Slovakia, Germany), focuses on intercultural perceptions, Jewish participation in social modernization processes, Israel-Diaspora bindings and collective identity courses within and outside of religious communities.