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dc.contributor.authorBarrett, Jennifer
dc.contributor.authorAlba, Avril
dc.contributor.authorMoses, Dirk
dc.date.accessioned2025-10-17T04:46:43Z
dc.date.available2025-10-17T04:46:43Z
dc.date.issued2025en
dc.identifier.urihttps://www.jstor.org/stable/jj.14308242
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/2123/34410
dc.description.abstractInterrogates the global, and often controversial, phenomenon of Holocaust and human rights museums Spanning six continents—Europe, Australia, Africa, Asia, North America, and South America—this edited collection offers a comparative, transnational study of Holocaust and human rights museums that foregrounds the overlapping and often contested work these institutions do in narrating and memorializing histories of genocide and human rights abuses for a public audience. Museums that link the Holocaust with social justice, human rights, and genocide prevention have been founded in many countries—for example, the Kazerne Dossin Memorial Museum in Belgium, the Anne Frank House in the Netherlands, and the Johannesburg Holocaust and Genocide Centre in South Africa—making Holocaust and human rights museums a global phenomenon. It is not uncommon for these institutions to court controversy by linking the Holocaust to human rights issues in their locales and abroad. Some begin from a “Holocaust core” and extrapolate from this history to address broader concerns, while others integrate the Holocaust as “a” or, at times, “the” case study par excellence of human rights abuses. Other institutions that may not explicitly focus on the Holocaust continue to engage these representational practices to highlight other instances of genocide and human rights abuses. The case studies in this book illuminate the convergences between Holocaust and human rights museums in their demands for social justice and reparation, educational and activist purpose, design principles, and curatorial choices. But it also shows how these museums can also be sites of contestation around how stories of suffering, courage, and survival are told; whose stories are prioritized; and who is consulted. Although Holocaust museums were once the most influential form of representation of human rights issues in the international museum and heritage fields, they are now in dialogue—visually, spatially, methodologically—with museums and memorial sites concerned with human rights more broadly. Interrogating debates in both museology and Holocaust memory studies, this volume reveals how institutions dedicated to these concerns have become active and influential contributors to local, national, and transnational dialogues about human rights.en
dc.language.isoenen
dc.publisherUniversity of Pennsylvania Pressen
dc.relation.ispartofThe Holocaust Museum and Human Rights: Transnational Perspectives on Contemporary Memorialsen
dc.rightsCopyright All Rights Reserveden
dc.titleINTRODUCTION The Holocaust and Human Rights: Transnational Perspectives on Contemporary Memorial Museumsen
dc.typeBook chapteren
dc.subject.asrc430202en
dc.identifier.doi0.2307/jj.14308242.3
dc.relation.arcLP140100795
usyd.facultySeS faculties schools::Faculty of Arts and Social Sciencesen
usyd.departmentHebrew, Biblical and Jewish Studiesen
usyd.citation.spage1en
usyd.citation.epage28en
workflow.metadata.onlyYesen


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