The Sussex Weidenfeld Institute of Jewish Studies, University of Sussex
Contact details
Sussex HouseFalmer
Brighton
BN1 9RH
United Kingdom
Tel: +44 (0)1273 606755
Email: G.Reuveni@sussex.ac.uk
https://http://www.sussex.ac.uk/cgjs/
Head of Department/Director
Prof. Gideon Reuveni
Email: G.Reuveni@sussex.ac.uk
Main research activities
Aimed as an agent of change, the Sussex Weidenfeld Institute of Jewish Studies seeks to make the historical Jewish experience relevant to some of the major issues of our day, such as the growing rise of religious intolerance, racism and nationalism.
For over two decades, the Centre for German-Jewish Studies has been at the forefront of academic enquiry into the history, culture and thought of Jewish refugees from German-speaking lands. The University of Sussex began to build upon this expertise in 2013 with the establishment of the Yossi Harel Chair in Modern Israel Studies. Seeking to develop this further, the Sussex Weidenfeld Institute of Jewish Studies was launched in 2019.
A critical mass of expertise across a number of disciplines is being brought together to attempt to bring about positive societal change. Since the summer of 2020, the Institute hosts a DAAD Chair in Eastern-European Jewish Studies, to complement existing expertise in German-Jewish and Israel studies, along with funded PhD scholarships and a growing Visiting Fellowship programme for academic leaders to work with the team for a period of up to three months.
With a strong commitment to the three pillars that underpin its work and activities: research, education and outreach – at the heart of the Institute’s mission is delivering research with impact, working with internal and external partners to engage in the translation and dissemination of its research outputs to the wider public. Current research themes include Holocaust and genocide; the history of Jewish refugees; anti-Semitism. The Centre's archival collection, located in the University of Sussex Library, is being developed in accordance with these main themes. There is a particular interest in materials documenting the histories of German-Jewish families since the Enlightenment, including diaries, letters, oral testimony, survival narratives and other biographical sources recording the history of refugees.
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