AFFILIATED PROGRAMS | History, Memory and Politics of the Past Project
History is alive as almost never before in international affairs. War crimes tribunals, truth commissions and other attempts to expose, and deal with the past are proliferating. The History, Memory, and the Politics of the Past Project will explore how various countries have approached and/or are now dealing with difficult aspects of their past. The Project covers all the regions of the world and different time periods in the recent history. It includes a lecture and film series, conferences, and other related events. The lecture series features speakers from GW, the Washington area, the broader US, and beyond. We often co-sponsor events with the National Security Archive and with the Sigur Center’s Project on Memory and Reconciliation in East Asia.
Two of the Institute’s faculty members are currently focusing their research in this field. Professor Hope M. Harrison of the History Department is working on a book examining political and popular debates in Germany about how to depict and commemorate the history of the Berlin Wall. She also teaches a master’s course, Hist. 251, on the uses and misuses of history in international affairs. Professor Mary Beth Stein of the Department of Romance, German and Slavic Languages and Literatures is researching individual memory and public history at Berlin’s Hohenschoenhausen Memorial Museum (the main prison of the former East German secret police, or Stasi).
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