A Mysticism of Open Eyes: Johann Baptist Metz's Case for the Spiritual Work of Remembering Auschwitz

-

Location: 216 DeBartolo Hall

This lecture is presented as part of "Remembrance: the Holocaust in a Global Context," a special series of lectures, films, and gallery talks commemorating the 70th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz.
 
The exhibition, which will be on display from September 28, 2015 through October 9, 2015 in the Great Hall of O'Shaughnessy Hall, investigates how Germany has come to terms with its past, and encourages visitors to ask questions about how we remember the past. What do we remember, how do we remember, and why do we remember? The exhibition focuses on Germany after 1945, but encourages visitors to compare the experiences of that country to the ways in which their own societies are facing up to issues in their pasts - and presents - that may still be unresolved.
 
"Remembrance: The Holocaust in a Global Context" is presented by The Department of German and Russian in cooperation with The Department of Theology, The Nanovic Institute for European Studies, The Center for Civil and Human Rights, The Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies, The Program in Religion and Literature, and The Institute for Scholarship in the Liberal Arts.
 
Additional events in the series:
Opening Reception Address
September 28
4:30 p.m.
Great Hall of O'Shaughnessy Hall
William Collins Donahue, University of Notre Dame
Chair, Dept. of German and Russian Languages and Literatures
 
A Mysticism of Open Eyes: Johann Baptist Metz's Case for the Spiritual Work of Remembering Auschwitz
September 30
5:00pm
216 DeBartolo Hall
J. Matthew Ashley, University of Notre Dame
Dept. of Theology
 
Film: Watchers of the Sky
October 1
7:00pm
Browning Cinema, DeBartolo Performing Arts Center
Reconciliation: A Global Ethic Whose Time Has Come
October 2
4:30pm
115 O'Shaughnessy Hall
Dan Philpott, University of Notre Dame
Dept. of Political Science
 
Gallery Talks led by Exhibit Curator, Stuart Taberner
October 5
12:50pm and 2:00pm
Great Hall of O’Shaughnessy Hall
Stuart Taberner, University of Leeds
Exhibit Curator, School of Languages, Cultures and Societies
 
Film: City of Life and Death
October 6
8:00pm
Browning Cinema, DeBartolo Performing Arts Center
Memory, Understanding, Forgiveness: Primo Levi and His German Readers
October 7
5:00pm
216 DeBartolo Hall
Vittorio Montemaggi, University of Notre Dame
Dept. of Romance Languages and Literatures, Program in Religion and Literature
 
Film: Forbidden Films
October 13
8:00pm
Browning Cinema, DeBartolo Performing Arts Center
German Wartime Suffering and the Holocaust in Postwar Memory
October 14
5:00pm
216 DeBartolo Hall
Jeffrey Luppes, Indiana University South Bend
Dept. of World Language Studies