Citizenship, Return, and Repatriation: Balkan Muslims and the Dilemmas of a New International Order after World War I (11/19/24)
Join us for a lecture by Emily Greble, Nelson O. Tyrone, Jr. Chair in History; Professor and Chair, Department of History; and Professor of German, Russian and East European Studies at Vanderbilt University. Moderated by Aimee Genell, Assistant Professor of International History, Pardee School of Global Studies.
Tuesday, November 19 • 4:30 to 6 PM
Pardee School of Global Studies, 121 Bay State Road
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Emily Greble’s research interests include law and society, Islam in Europe, civil conflict, and local responses to socialism. Greble’s first book, Sarajevo, 1941-1945: Muslims, Christians, and Jews in Hitler’s Europe (Cornell, 2011) examines the persistence of institutions and networks in the city of Sarajevo under Nazi occupation during the Second World War. It has been translated into Italian, Turkish, and Bosnian. Her second book, Muslims and the Making of Modern Europe (Oxford, 2021), traces the stories of several generations of local Muslim men, women, and children living in southeastern Europe from the 1880s to the 1940s, illuminating how Muslim histories are European histories and how Muslims helped shape modern states and societies, laws, and the European project.