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PY3067 Social Memory
CM/PO5025 Communications & the Global Public Sphere
This trip focuses on the Shoah. It also studies social and public memory, examining how historical events are represented in public sites, museums, monuments and memorials. Study history tourism and the meaning of historical sites for visitors. How is history told and to what end? What effect do these representations ( and preservations) have on the personal meaning of history? How do such representations influence 鈥榩ublic opinion鈥 and perceptions of the city and the state on both local and international levels? From the perspective of Transitional Justice, the trip to Auschwitz and Krakow addresses issues of social construction following mass atrocity, examining how monuments to the Holocaust such as Auschwitz and the Schindler museum as well as the revival experienced in the past two decades of the traditionally Jewish quarter of Krakow (populated almost exclusively now by non-Jews) is evidence of 鈥渢ruth telling鈥 or 鈥渏ustice.鈥
Led by Professors Charles Talcott & Brian Schiff
Sign up on your student portal during drop/add week.
Cost: 650鈧 (includes round-trip air transportation, hotel accommodations with breakfast, on-site transportation, guided visits, professors鈥 trip costs, and VAT)
Last day to register/cancel: September 12
Late cancelation fee: 650鈧
Payment for study trips must be made no later than September 24 for the Fall 2021 semester. Any听concerns in this regard should be addressed to the Cultural Program & Student Accounting Services.