Dr. Omer Bartov
Professor
Brown University
Omer Bartov is
the John P. Birkelund Distinguished Professor of European History at Brown
University. His early research concerned the Nazi indoctrination of the
Wehrmacht and the crimes it committed in World War II, analyzed in his books, The
Eastern Front, 1941-1945 (1985) and Hitler’s Army (1991). He then
turned to the links between total war and genocide, discussed in his books Murder
in Our Midst (1996), Mirrors of Destruction (2000), and Germany’s
War and the Holocaust (2003), as well as to the role of stereotypes in
representations of violence, leading to his study, The “Jew” in Cinema
(2005). Bartov’s growing interest in Eastern Europe is reflected in his study Erased:
Vanishing Traces of Jewish Galicia in Present-Day Ukraine (2007), which
investigates the politics of memory in the borderlands of Eastern Europe. His
most recent book is Anatomy of a Genocide: The Life and Death of a Town
Called Buczacz (2018), where he reconstructs the transition of an
interethnic community from long-term coexistence to genocidal violence. The
book won the National Jewish Book Prize in Holocaust and the Zócalo Book Prize.
Bartov directed the project “Israel-Palestine: Lands and Peoples” at the Watson
Institute for International and Public Affairs at Brown University in
2015-2018, and has begun researching a new book tentatively titled Israel,
Palestine: A Personal Political History.