As the UN’s Summit of the Future commences on September 22, 2024, this forum asks global scholars of Holocaust literature alongside human rights advocates and UN practitioners to ponder the nexus between Holocaust literature and human rights, and the role this literature can play in promoting a “safer, more peaceful, more just, more equal, more inclusive, more sustainable, and more prosperous world.”
Panelists will discuss the role of Holocaust literature in educating about genocide, including its limitations, how this past might work to negotiate human rights difficulties in the present, and to ponder the role of Holocaust literacy in promoting an ethical society.
The forum is opportunity for those who work to promote human rights and prevent genocide and related crimes, to consider how literature helps in their day-to-day work, including fulfilling UN mandates. Similarly, it is opportunity for literature scholars to consider how aesthetics and cultural artefact play a role in informing and influencing practitioners who work in the international humanitarian sector.
The forum is to be equally shared between experts on literature and human rights, enabling a robust conversation that spans both the advantages and disadvantages of engaging with this body of literature.
The forum is supported by the Museum of Jewish Heritage, the UK Arts and Humanities Reseach Council, Washington University in St. Louis, and Leeds University.
Speaker Bios
Tabea Linhard is a Professor of Spanish, Global Studies, and Comparative Literature at Washington University in St. Louis. She received her PhD in from Duke University in 2001 and has been at Washington University since 2003. Her research focuses on displacement and asylum in the 1930s and 1940s, and she has published extensively on Migration and Refugee Studies, Spanish and Mexican literature and film, Memory Studies, Jewish Studies, and Mediterranean Studies. She is the author of three monographs, Unexpected Routes: Refugee Writers in Mexico (Stanford University, 2023), Jewish Spain: A Mediterranean Memory (Stanford, 2014), Fearless Women in the Mexican Revolution and the Spanish Civil War (U of Missouri, 2005), and two edited volumes, Mapping Migration, Identity, and Space (Palgrave, 2018) and Revisiting Jewish Spain in the Modern Era (Routledge, 2013).
Alice Wairimu Nderitu of Kenya is United Nations Under-Secretary-General and Special Adviser on the Prevention of Genocide. Ms Nderitu is a recognized voice in the field of peacebuilding and atrocity crimes prevention. As mediator of armed conflicts, she served as a member of the African Unions Network of African Women in Conflict Prevention and Mediation (Fem-Wise), the Women Waging Peace Network and Global Alliance of Women Mediators. She contributed to defining the role of women mediators, as one of the few women who are signatories to peace agreements as a mediator.
Ms. Savita Pawnday is the Executive Director of the Global Centre for the Responsibility to Protect. Established in 2008 with the support of international human rights leaders, including former UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan, as well as supportive governments and organizations such as Human Rights Watch and International Crisis Group, the Global Centre is the world’s leading research and advocacy organization for advancing the international norm of the Responsibility to Protect (R2P) at the United Nations and beyond. The Global Centre works to prevent mass atrocity crimes – genocide, war crimes, crimes against humanity and ethnic cleansing – throughout the world.
Dr. Kirril Shields is a Senior Director at the Asia-Pacific Centre for the Responsibility to Protect where here manages projects in the region that work to curb atrocity and human rights abuse. He works as an Expert Consultant for the UN Office on Genocide Prevention and R2P and has worked for the World Bank and the World Health Organisation in Mongolia. He is the current Editor-in-Chief of the international journal Genocide Studies and Prevention, and he writes on topics that include foreign affairs and regional politics. Working with organisations in the South-east Asian region, he leads the Centre’s training on the prevention of hate speech and disinformation, and he lectures at UQ on topics such as the literature, the Holocaust, the history of genocide, world affairs and politics, and humanitarianism.