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Call for Papers

Theme: Prevention of Mass Violence and Promotion of Tolerance
Subtitle: Lessons from History
Type: International Multidisciplinary Conference
Institution: Department of History, Presidency University
Location: Kolkata (India)
Date: 27.–28.2.2017
Deadline: 15.12.2016

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It is a call for papers and posters from different academic
disciplines to help us draw lessons from history as to how mass
violence can be prevented and tolerance can be promoted. History
testifies to the fact that mass violence is as old as human
existence. Almost every episode of mass violence has been followed by
efforts aimed at preventing its reoccurrence, yet we have miserably
failed in achieving that. It is an invitation to explore why we
failed and how lessons from history could help us succeed in this
endeavour of ours. We are particularly interested in the subthemes
mentioned below but open to anything whatsoever relevant to the broad
theme of the conference.

Subthemes

- Absence of Genocide/Holocaust Studies in countries worst affected
  by mass violence
- Role of Genocide/Holocaust Studies in the Prevention of Mass
  Violence
- The Contested Field of the History of Genocide
- The Demand for Apology and its Refusal
- Resistance to Holocaust Studies
- Hurdles and Obstacles in raising Holocaust Awareness in Asia, North
  Africa and Eastern Europe
- Genocide/Mass Violence as depicted in Cinema and Literature and its
  reception
- Debate on the Prohibition of Hate Speech v/s Freedom of Speech
- Comparison between societies with Holocaust education and those
  without it
- Political Response to Genocide/Holocaust Studies
- Failure to recognize the warning signs
- Judicial Response to Mass Violence: Failure and Success
- State’s Response to Mass Violence: Failure and Success
- The Clash between Academia and State on the issue of Mass Violence
- The Distortion of History for instigating Mass Violence
- Selective Amnesia in Historical Studies of Genocide/Mass Violence
- Sanitization of History
- Coming to terms with the History of Genocide/Mass Violence
- History of Interfaith and Cross-cultural understanding as
  deterrents for Mass Violence
- Non-State Actors as Perpetrators and Preventers of Mass Violence
- The Scholarly Debate on Nomenclature
- The Centrality of the Holocaust
- The Uniqueness and/or the Universality of the Holocaust
- Holocaust as a point of reference
- Absence of Holocaust Studies in South Asia
- Conflicting Historical Narratives
- History of Denial
- Gender in Mass Violence/Genocide

Registration Fee:

- Foreign Participants: US $100/-
- Indian Participants: Rs. 2000/-

In lieu of the registration fee the participants will get lunch
during the two days of the conference and a conference kit.
Participants are expected to make their own arrangements for
accommodation.

Some of the confirmed participants of the conference are the
following: Mehnaz M Afridi, Michael Barenbaum, Vian Dakhil, Charles
Ehrlich, Reuven Firestone, Edward Mortimer, Dina Porat, David Rosen,
Suzanne Rutland, Robert Satloff, and Sarva Daman Singh.

Key Dates:

- Deadline for the Submission of Abstract as a Word file (300
  words)/Poster (PDF) with a biographical profile (100 words): 15
  December, 2016
- Date of the Notification of Acceptance: 22 December, 2016
- Deadline for the submission of complete paper (10,000 - 12,000
  words): 15 February, 2017

It is planned to publish a collection of selected papers presented at
the conference.


Contact:

Dr Navras Jaat Aafreedi
Department of History
Presidency University
Kolkata, India
Email: [email protected]




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