Series of events 100 years end of the First World War November/December 2018
Event Series: "Destruction – Coping – Overcoming: Commemorating the End of World War I One Hundred Years Ago"
The photo shows rows of stone crosses dedicated to those who fell in World War I.
As part of this event series, the Centrum Frankreich | Frankophonie cordially invited the public to the following lectures and workshops, which took place in cooperation with the Deutsches Hygiene-Museum Dresden and the Institut Français Deutschland, and with the support of the Mission du centenaire de la Première Guerre mondiale:
Poster on the occasion of the guest lecture “Architectural Destruction During World War I: War Crimes?” by Prof. Dr. Joëlle Prungnaud on November 29, 2018, at TU Dresden.
Prof. Dr. Joëlle Prungnaud
Architectural Destruction in 1914–1918: War Crimes?
WHEN? Thursday, November 29, 2018, 11:10 a.m.–12:40 p.m.
WHERE? SLK Faculty, Wiener Str. 48, Room 004
Photo by Stéphane Audoin Rouzeau
Prof. Dr. Stéphane Audoin-Rouzeau
Private Mourning in Europe After World War I
WHEN? Wednesday, December 5, 2018, 7:00 p.m.
WHERE? Deutsches Hygiene-Museum Dresden, Lingnerplatz 1, 01069 Dresden
Poster on the occasion of the Carolus Magnus Circle’s regional seminar, “Let’s Speak Up and Have Fun! Practical Ideas for Communicative French Instruction,” held on December 7–8, 2018, in Dresden, and on January 12–13, 2019, in Berlin.
Journées de l'assistant(e)
Bringing Europe to Life—One Hundred Years After 1918
WHEN? Friday, December 7, and Saturday, December 8, 2018
WHERE? Seminar Building, Zellescher Weg 22, 01217 Dresden
For more information, visit: http://carolus-magnus-kreis.de/seminaire-a-dresde-et-berlin/
From a Franco-German perspective, 100 years after the end of the war, the event aimed to discuss various issues at the intersection of public destruction and private grief, thereby exploring possibilities for shaping life in Europe 100 years after 1918.
In her lecture at the “ ” on November 29, 2018, Prof. Dr. Joëlle Prungnaud focused on the question of how architectural destruction during World War I should be assessed and evaluated as a war crime. In his lecture on December 5, 2018, at the “ ,” Prof. Dr. Stéphane Audoin-Rouzeau outlined a history of private emotions and explored the largely unexplored grief of parents and children, brothers and sisters who had lost one or more of their loved ones at the front. During the Journées de l’assistant(e) on December 7 and 8 , there was a discussion forum titled “ ” on the theme “Faire vivre l’Europe—cent ans après 1918,” where participants could exchange ideas with Francophone foreign language assistants.