Reconstituting a Traumatized Community
The German-Speaking Refugees of the 1930s and their Legacy to
A Workshop and Public Discussion at the
10
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This event marks the completion of the project to create a database of ‘British Archival Resources Relating to German-Speaking Refugees, 1933-1950’ (BARGE), undertaken by researchers at the University of Sussex Centre for German-Jewish Studies and funded by Arts and Humanities Research Council. The aim of the Workshop is to promote further discussion and research about processes of acculturation and the contribution of the refugees to all aspects of public life. The evening Public Discussion will consider whether the study of past experiences of immigration and integration may shed light on the very topical issues of cultural diversity and social cohesion in multi-ethnic Britain.
13.30: welcoming tea, coffee and soft drinks
‘Refugee Archives: Theory and Practice’, presented by Dr Andrea Hammel (
The BARGE database: online presentation by Ms Samira Teuteberg (
15.00: ‘Reconstituting a Traumatized Community’: a reassessment of the problems of acculturation by Dr Marion Berghahn, author of the recently republished sudy Continental Britons (followed by a discussion)
16.30: ‘The Impact of Refugee Scientists’: a paper by Professor Gustav Born FRS, author of The Born Family in Göttingen and Beyond (followed by a discussion)
17.00: ‘Doctors and Nurses: Contrasting Responses to the Refugee Crisis of the 1930s’: a paper by Prof Paul Weindling (
19.00: Immigration, Diversity and Integration: Past Experience and Present Trends Public Discussion, chaired by Professor Christian Wiese (Director of the Centre for German-Jewish Studies), with a panel of invited speakers, including Prof. Tony Kushner (University of Southampton) and Prof Stephen Castles (University of Oxford), followed by a Drinks Reception
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