Minerva-Wiener Workshop 2025

On November 11–12, 2025, the Wiener Library hosted an international research workshop, held in collaboration with the Minerva Institute for German History, on the topic Antisemitism, Racism, Right-Wing Radicalism: How Current Events Inform Historical Understanding, and Vice Versa.

 

 

Antisemitism, Racism, Right-Wing Radicalism:

 

How Current Events Inform Historical Understanding, and Vice Versa

 

International Workshop


Tel Aviv University, 11–12 November 2025

 

Tuesday, November 11

 

08:30–09:00
Gathering — Coffee

 

Session I: Past and Present

 

09:00–09:45
Welcome Address and Introduction to the Wiener Archive
Amir Teicher
Tel Aviv University

09:45–10:30
Nazi Comparisons as Tourette Syndrome. Some Remarks from Research
Stefanie Schüler-Springorum
Technische Universität Berlin, Center for Research on Antisemitism

Light refreshments

10:45–11:30
The Past is not quite passé: Some Reflections on Israel, Germany and the Missing Third
Gadi Algazi
Tel Aviv University; Minerva Institute for German History

12:00–13:00
Lunch

 

Session II: October 7th

 

13:00–13:30
Antisemitism in Israeli Discourse: Continuity, Change, and the Impact of October 7
Yossi Kugler
Center for the Study of Antisemitism and Law, College of Management Academic Studies

13:30–14:00
Antisemitic Crisis Discourses, October 7th, and ‘Pro-Israel’ Positions. Far Right Stances on (Anti)Zionism, Deflection of Guilt and the Return of Antisemitic Legacy
Nikolai Schreiter
University of Passau

14:00–14:30
The Yom Kippur War or the Kishinev Pogrom? Competing Israeli Narratives of Oct. 7th
Scott Ury
Tel Aviv University

Light refreshments

 

Session III: Jewish Responses

 

15:00–15:30
Franz R. Bienenfeld’s “Religion of the Non-Religious Jews” as Early Response to Antisemitism and Visions of Solidarity
Anne Rethmann
Hebrew University of Jerusalem

15:30–16:00
The Possibility of Hope after Catastrophe: Thinking About Alfred Wiener’s Early Post-War Encounters With Non-Jewish Germans
Josefine Langer Shohat
Technische Universität Berlin, Center for Research on Antisemitism; Tel Aviv University

16:00–16:30
Concluding Discussion

18:00–22:00
Tel Aviv Walk Around / Street Food / Demonstration / Drinks

 

Wednesday, November 12

 

08:30–09:00
Gathering — Coffee

 

Session IV: Gaza

 

09:00–09:30
Never again Gaza: Reflections on the Future of Holocaust Memory
Shmuel Lederman
University of Haifa; The Open University of Israel

09:30–10:00
Gaza and the Erasure of History
Dotan Halevi
Tel Aviv University

Light refreshments

 

Session V: Antisemitism and the Holocaust

 

10:30–11:00
From Center to Margin? Antisemitism in Holocaust and Genocide Studies
Havi Dreifus
Tel Aviv University

11:00–11:30
Conflict in the Jewish World over the Study of Antisemitism after the Holocaust
Tom Eshed
Hebrew University of Jerusalem

11:30–12:00
Perceptions of Israel in the Federal Republic of Germany (1949 to 2005): Changes in Attitudes and Shifts in Patterns of Prejudice
Tim Alexander Brockmann
Heidelberg University

12:00–12:30
Discussion

12:30–13:30
Lunch

 

Session VI: Antisemitism and the Far Right

 

Chair: Neil Bar
University of Haifa; UC Berkeley

13:30–14:00
Ambivalent Projections: The New Right’s Discourse on Israel and Islam in Germany
Matheus Hagedorny
Centre for Antisemitism and Racism Studies (CARS), Catholic University of Applied Sciences, Cologne

14:00–14:30
World Domination and Genocide Conspiracies: Analyzing Alfred Wiener Collection of “Civilians Suggest Propaganda Ideas in 1944–1945” in Contemporary Gaza War Context
Dany Melkonowicki
Hebrew University of Jerusalem

14:30–15:00
“Großer Austausch” and “Volksmord”. Immigration and the Antisemitic Narrative of a “Genocidal War on Germany”
Gideon Botsch
University of Potsdam

15:00–15:30
Why Focus on Gender? On the Multiple Entanglements of Antisemitism and Antifeminism in the Authoritarian and Far Right
Juliane Lang
Justus Liebig University Giessen

Light refreshments

 

Session VII: Thinking Globally

 

16:00–16:30
“Europe” and “Occident/Abendland” as Racialized Codes that Draw on Fascist and Colonial Imaginaries
Marie Müller-Zetzsche
University of Potsdam

16:30–17:00
The Past and Present of Fascist Internationalism
Martin Kristoffer Hamre
Freie Universität Berlin

17:00–17:30
Discussion

17:30–18:00
Concluding Discussion

The Minerva-Wiener Workshop 2025: Schedule

 

 

 

 

Tel Aviv University makes every effort to respect copyright. If you own copyright to the content contained
here and / or the use of such content is in your opinion infringing Contact the referral system >>