Programme

Complicities in the Second World War:

Literature of Occupation, Collaboration, and Impure Resistance

(3-5 October, Ghent, Belgium)

 

 

Pre-conference Event

(3 October 2024)

De Boekentoren – Rozier 9, 9000 Gent

18:00-19:30: History and Memory of World War II Occupation in Belgium: A Round Table Discussion 

Bruno de Wever (Ghent University)

Chantal Kesteloot (CegeSoma/Archives de l’Etat)

Kevin Absillis (University of Antwerp)

Chair: Koen Aerts (Ghent University)

19:30 – 20:30:  Reception

 

Day 1 

(4 October)

Monasterium Poortackere

(Oude Houtlei 56, 9000 Gent)

 

8:30 – 9:00 Registration and Welcoming

 

9:00 – 10:45 Parallel sessions

Panel 1 – Holocaust literature beyond the concentrationary universe 

Chair: Juliane Prade-Weiss (LMU Munich)

Simone Ghelli (Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa): The «Latent Infection» of Fascism: Primo Levi’s Antifascist Education Between Oppression and Resistance

Jenny Watson (University of Edinburgh, UK): Other Germans, Other Complicities: Black Sea Germans and the ‘Holocaust by bullets’ in Markus Berges’s Die Köchin von Bob Dylan (2019)

Irina Rebrova (TU Berlin): The German Monsters have Escaped, but the Entire Hitler System is in the Dock:” Literary Responses of the Soviet Open Trials in Post-war Society (the North Caucasus Case)

Panel 2 – World War II and the colonial world

Chair: Maaheen Ahmed (Ghent University)

Wambua Muindi (University of Nairobi): This war sounds like the beginning of something very stupid”: Re-imagining WW2 in the Horn of Africa

Arlenea Herdimansyah (Independent): Indonesian folklore and the heinous history of occupation in Eka Kurniawan’s epic novel Beauty is a Wound

Désirée Schyns (Ghent University): The Sétif-massacre of 8 May 1945 in Le cadavre encerclé (1954/1955) by the Francophone Algerian writer Kateb Yacine (1929-1989)

 

10:45 – 11:15 Coffee Break

 

11:15 – 13:00: Panel 3 The complexity of history and the power of literature

Chair: Guido Bartolini (Ghent University)

Adrian Armstrong (Queen Mary University of London): The Ghost Townscape: Catachresis and Not Really Knowing in Hugo Claus’s Wonder

Juliane Prade-Weiss (LMU Munich): Striving for Commemorative Purity: Justice, Fact, and Fiction in Kinstler’s Come to this Court and Cry

Tijana Matović (University of Kragujevac): Reconfigurations of narrative identities in Kazuo Ishiguro’s memoryscapes

 

13.00 – 15:00 Lunch

 

15:00 – 16:40 Parallel sessions

Panel 4 –  Italian Fascism and Complicity: After-life and Alternative History

Chair: Stefano Serafini  (University of Padua)

Charles Burdett (School of Advanced Study, University of London): Ciro Poggiali’s Diario AOI 1936–1937 and The Representation of The Italian Colonial World on the Eve of the Second World War

Patricia Chiantera-Stutte (University of Bari): The missed revolution debate between fascists and liberals

Andrea Meyer Ludowisy (Senate House Library, University of London): “Selves on the shelves”: archives, libraries and museum collections as powerful vehicles for nationalism and cultural order

Panel 5 – Resistance in European literature 

Chair: Rebecca Glasberg (Stanford University)

Martina Biavati (University of Reading and Cardiff University): “La mamma Agnese viene con noi”: representations of female agency of the Italian Communist Resistance between official commemorations and autobiographical accounts

Domantė Vaišvylaitė and Gabija Bankauskaitė (Vilnius University): The Archetype of the Hero’s Journey as a Metamorphosis of War Consciousness in Algirdas Landsbergis’ “Five Pillars in the Market Square”

Sophia McDaniel (Columbia University, Paris): Simone Veil’s Biography in Bande Dessinée: An Illustrated Legacy of Occupied France and Perpetual Resistance

 

16:40 – 17:00 Coffee Break

 

17:00 – 18:30 Keynote Lecture 

Ivan Stacy (Beijing Normal University): Long Occupations and Fallen Cities: Fictions of World War Two in Asia

Chair: Arvi Sepp (VUB)

 

18:30 – 19:00: Collective Discussion:  The cultural memory of World War II in the twenty-first century 

Chair: Guido Bartolini (Ghent University)

 

19:30 – 22:00: Conference Dinner

 

Day 2

(5 October)

Monasterium Poortackere

(Oude Houtlei 56, 9000 Gent)

 

9:00 – 10:30 Keynote Lecture 

Mihaela Mihai (The University of Edinburgh): Structural Violence and the Limits of Polyphonic Memory

Chair: Stef Craps (Ghent University)

 

10:30 – 11:00: Coffee Break

 

11:00 – 12:45:  Parallel sessions

Panel 6 – Multidirectional transformations of WWII memories

Chair: Arnoud Arps (University of Amsterdam):

Marie Jadot (University of Liège): Music to Remember the Long Second World War in Dutch Literature of Victimhood and Perpetration

Will Norman (University of Kent): Bad Faith and Organized Guilt: The American Afterlives of World War Two Complicity

Jan Miklas-Frankowski (University of Gdańsk): Recomposing national myths: Grzebałkowska’s literary reportage ‘Poland 1945’ and the diversification of WWII narratives

Panel 7 – Perpetrators and collaborators in literary depiction

Chair: Guido Bartolini (Ghent University)

Giuseppe Marrone (Università di Roma La Sapienza, Italy): «I balilla andarono a Salò». The characterisation of the fascist in the Salò narrative

Bérengère Darlison (Sorbonne University): In the Intimacy of the Perpetrator: Empathy, Repulsion, Manipulation in La Mort est mon métier (Death is My Trade) and Les Bienveillantes (The Kindly Ones)

Ruth Peeters (KU Leuven): Who is to blame? The problem of sympathy in two short stories by Clara Malraux

 

12:45 – 14:15 Lunch

 

14:15 – 16:15 Panel 8 – Justifications and Identity renegotiation in postwar literature

Chair: Stefano Serafini  (University of Padua)

Marius Hentea (University of Gothenburg): Francis Stuart, or the Story of the Irish Artist

Jayne Persian (University of Southern Queensland, Australia): Revisiting Helen Demidenko’s The Hand that Signed the Paper: A War Crimes Investigation

Rizwan Akhtar (University of the Punjab, Lahore): The Ambivalent Territory of Resistance and Complicity in Michael Ondaatje’s The English Patient

Anna Taglietti (University of Padua): Prigionia: c’ero anch’io” Italian Literature on Second World War Military Imprisonment Between Forgetting and the Construction of Memory

 

Coffee Break: 16:15 – 16:45

 

16:45 – 18:30 Panel 9 – The Ethical Labyrinth of War Collaboration  

Chair: Guido Bartolini (Ghent University)

Arnoud Arps (University of Amsterdam): “Man lives for victory and then defeat or the other way around”:Multiple positionalities and complex implication in Pramoedya Ananta Toer’s Perburuan (1950)

Stefano Romagnoli (Sapienza University of Rome): Ambiguous Alliances: Asymmetrical Friendships, Mimicry, and Exploitation in Japanese-Occupied Territories

Rebecca Glasberg (Stanford University): From perpetrator to victim, or vice versa? Genocide and colonial occupation in Anouar Benmalek’s Fils du Shéol (2015)

 

18:30 Closing remarks