
Great Lakes History Conference to focus on Holocaust and global genocide

The Holocaust and genocide from a global perspective will be
addressed in more than 20 presentations at the 40th annual Great Lakes
History Conference at Grand Valley State University.
The 2014 conference will take place Friday, October 10 and
Saturday, October 11 on the Pew Grand Rapids Campus.
“Considering that this year is the 100th anniversary of World
War I, this topic is especially timely,” said Gordon Andrews,
assistant professor of history at Grand Valley and executive director
for the Michigan Council of History Education. “The ‘Great War’ led to
the Holocaust and so much of the violence of the twentieth century.”
Stephen Feinberg, former special assistant for education
programs at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial, will be the keynote speaker
on Friday, October 10 at 7:30 p.m. in the Loosemore Auditorium in the
Richard M. DeVos Center. His address, “Pedagogical Issues and Concerns
When Teaching About the Holocaust,” is free and open to the public.
Jan Gross, professor of European history at Princeton
University, will give a keynote address, “On the Periphery of the
Holocaust: Pillage and Killings of Jews by their Neighbors,” on
Saturday, October 11, at noon on the second floor of the L.V. Eberhard
Center.
The conference will also include roundtable discussions;
scholarly panels with educators, librarians, archivists and public
historians; and presentations of research given by both graduate and
undergraduate students.
Registration is required for the event and can be completed
through the beginning of the conference on October 10. Conference fees
are $40 for out-of-state attendees and $20 for West Michigan attendees.
The Michigan Council of History Education, Grand Valley’s
College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and History Department sponsor
the conference.
The Great Lakes History Conference was established in 1975 as a
means to allow faculty from educational institutions in the Midwest to
present their research to colleagues and to cultivate
interdisciplinary work. The conference has since evolved and now
bridges the divide between university’s and the general public by
attracting educators, graduate students, public historians and
independent scholars from across the world.
For more details and online registration, visit www.gvsu.edu/history and click
on the link to the Great Lakes History Conference.
For more details on Holocaust education at Grand Valley, visit www.gvsu.edu/holocausteducation.
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