POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews would like to invite you to propose papers for the international conference

Biographies and Politics: Involvement of Jews and Activists of Jewish Origin in Leftist Movements in 19th- and 20th- Century Poland

1-2 December 2019 
POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews

 

The conference is jointly organized by the POLIN Museum and our partners, the Aleksander Brückner Center for Polish Studies, the Centre for Hebrew and Jewish Studies of the University of Oxford, and the University College London.

POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews especially invites scholars focusing on biographical research on Jews and activists of Jewish origin in leftist movements in 19th and 20th century Poland.

The involvement of the Jews of Poland in leftist political movements in 19th- and 20th-century Poland is a complex and challenging topic. Bundism or Labor Zionism openly combined Jewishness with leftist ideology. The situation is more complicated with actors of Jewish background in non-Jewish organizations, who at least partly did not consider themselves to be Jewish but were regarded as such by others. On another level, we cannot speak unequivocally about “Polish Jews” or “Poland” in the imperial era of the long nineteenth century, as other affiliations were also possible.

Nevertheless, the presence of Jews or actors of Jewish descent in these movements (social democrats, communist, leftist Zionists etc.), especially the prominent position some “Jews” held in the revolutionary movement and state socialism, has been an issue of public debate ever since. On the one hand, the myth of communist Jews as “Jewish perpetrators” was often and still is used to stir up anticommunist or nationalist sentiments. On the other hand, especially in western historiography the dominant narrative on the role of “Jewish” actors in leftist movements is one of an often disappointed struggle for political and social equality. It focusses on the failure of Jewish revolutionaries and Jewish communists as victims of Stalinism and communist regimes in East and East Central Europe. The persistence of these contrasting views deserves a thorough discussion and deeper academic reflection.

In the conference Organizers will reach beyond such schematic conceptions. Instead they want to outline the actual involvement of Jews and activists of Jewish origin in the leftist movements of the 19th and 20th centuries from the perspective of individual motivations, ideological choices and personal biographies. To explore the different paths which led Jewish individuals to engage in leftist parties and organizations, we suggest approaching the topic from a biographical perspective. They thus invite scholars to present their findings on the formation of Jewish political identities based on biographical sources, especially ego-documents like diaries, personal letters, memoirs or oral testimonies.

Possible questions to be addressed might be:
– Was being Jewish an important factor in choosing a specific political path?
– Which other factors led Jews and people of Jewish origin to affiliate with a particular political group?
– How did their leftist involvement influence their attitude towards imperial settings, occupying powers, internationalist movements, as well as Poland and Polish identity?
– How did they assess their leftist engagement later in their lives?

Answers to these and other questions will shed new light on the character of Polish Jews’ involvement with the left.

Proposed issues:
1. Biographies: individual and collective paths of Jewish leftists, circumstances of social and political involvement in leftist movements and organizations, self-perceptions, alternatives to leftist engagement, entangled ideologies (e.g. leftists Zionists), generational transmission of ideologies;
2. Methodologies: biographical approach, gender history, oral history, and others;
3. Ideologies: attractive leftists ideas for Polish Jews (socialism, communism, labor Zionism etc.);
4. Historical culture and politics of history: Perceptions and instrumentalizations of “Jewish” leftist biographies

The Organizers kindly ask you to submit abstracts via electronic application form no later than 31 May 2019.

For additional questions please contact at: geopconference@polin.pl

Academic Committee:
Dr François Guesnet, UCL
Prof. Yvonne Kleinmann, Aleksander Brückner Zentrum
Dr. Agnieszka Mrozik, PAN
Prof. Joanna Nalewajko-Kulikov, PAN
Prof. Antony Polonsky, POLIN Museum
Prof. David Rechter, Oxford University
Dr. Stephan Stach, POLIN Museum (conference convener)
Dr. Michał Trębacz, POLIN Museum