NIOD Rewind Podcast on War & Violence

Follow NIOD Rewind Podcast on War & Violence
Share on
Copy link to clipboard

The NIOD REWIND podcast presents interviews with scholars on the history and study of mass violence, war and genocide.

NIOD Rewind podcast


    • May 26, 2025 LATEST EPISODE
    • monthly NEW EPISODES
    • 29m AVG DURATION
    • 47 EPISODES


    Search for episodes from NIOD Rewind Podcast on War & Violence with a specific topic:

    Latest episodes from NIOD Rewind Podcast on War & Violence

    NIOD Rewind Episode 43 - Hunger as a Weapon of War & Genocide

    Play Episode Listen Later May 26, 2025 46:43


    In this episode, Anne van Mourik (NIOD) sits down with famine scholars Alex de Waal (Tufts University) and Ingrid de Zwarte (Wageningen University & Research) to discuss how hunger can be used as a political-military instrument of power—from the Dutch Hunger Winter of WWII to Sudan, Yemen, Ukraine, and Gaza today. Was starvation in the Netherlands during WWII intentional? What role did food play in Dutch colonial violence in the Indonesian War of Independence? And in the present: What are Israel's objectives in starving Palestinians? Why is the international community failing to act—even when famine unfolds in full view of the world?

    NIOD Rewind Episode 42 - 80 Years of Collecting War

    Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2025 45:08


    Exactly eighty years ago, in the midst of the liberation's chaos, the NIOD (then the RIOD) was founded with a clear mission: to document Dutch experiences of the Second World War. In this special anniversary episode, Anne van Mourik speaks with Jaap Cohen, Eveline Buchheim, Uğur Üngör, and Arvid de Raaij about eighty years of collecting memories, experiences, and stories. They reflect on NIOD's urgent beginnings, its expansion to collect information about conflicts such as Indonesia's War of Independence and the Yugoslav wars, and the ideas and challenges of documenting more recent atrocities, from Syria's civil war to the Yezidi genocide. Why is collecting testimonies of war and genocide so vital? Why does it still matter just as much today? And how to collect digital sources about war and violence, such as the X-posts on the Ajax-Maccabi riots in Amsterdam in 2024? Image: Loe de Jong, 1950 (NIOD archive) 

    NIOD Rewind Flash Episode 41 - History at stake: Trump, Putin and the War in Ukraine

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 24, 2025 10:32


    In the first episode of a special NIOD Rewind series called Flash, Anne van Mourik speaks with historian Dr. Anne-Lise Bobelijk (NIOD) about how president Trump and presidentPutin are exploiting World War II history to support their current political strategies. In this short 10-minute episode, we explore how the past is being reshaped to influence the present, from Trump's comments on US-Soviet cooperation to Putin's manipulation of history to justify his war in Ukraine.Photo: 2nd Lt. William Robertson and Lt. Alexander Sylvashko, Red Army, shown in front of sign [East Meets West] symbolizing the historic meeting of the Soviet and American Armies, near Torgau, Germany on Elbe Day, the day Soviet and American troops met at the Elbe River (April 1945). Wikimedia Commons. 

    NIOD Rewind Episode 40 - Early Postwar Tourism to Former Concentration Camps

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 23, 2024 33:53


    How has American tourism to Nazi concentration camps influenced the ways in which people remember the Holocaust and Nazi atrocities? In this episode, Anne van Mourik (NIOD) sits down with Leonie Werle (Freie Universität Berlin) to explore this question. As early as 1948, American tourists started to visit German concentration camps, with magazines even promoting Germany as the land of ‘Bach and Belsen'. What did this early postwar tourism to the camps look like? Is it a form of dark tourism? Why were the camps often experienced as disappointing by American tourists? And why do people so often compare the Holocaust and concentration camps to present-day events, such as the COVID-19 pandemic or other crises? Credits image in logo: Visitors view a photomural of corpses piled on the ground in the newly liberated Bergen-Belsen concentration camp at the "Lest We Forget" exhibition at the Library of Congress. Photographer: John MuellerDate: 1945 June 30

    NIOD Rewind Episode 39 - The Paradoxes of Fascist Internationalism

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 5, 2024 28:13


    In recent years, several far-right parties espousing nationalist, anti-immigrant, and Eurosceptic ideas have garnered significant support. Despite their nationalist ideologies, these contemporary far-right movements have demonstrated a surprising capacity for international cooperation. Anne van Mourik interviews Martin Hamre, a historian of fascism at the Freie Universität Berlin about this topic. What are some earlier examples of fascist internationalism? How did fascist ideas spread through international conferences and cooperation in the 1930s? What insights does Hamre's research provide for understanding the contemporary European far right?

    NIOD Rewind Episode 38 - Expelled from Care: the Dutch Mental Health System During World War II

    Play Episode Listen Later May 24, 2024 31:43


    Why did a relatively high number of psychiatric patients die in Dutch psychiatric institutions during World War II? Anne van Mourik interviews Eveline Buchheim (NIOD) and Ralf Futselaar (NIOD and Erasmus University Rotterdam) regarding their book, ‘Expelled from Care' (Uit Zorg Verdreven). In Nazi Germany, psychiatric patients were killed as part of the regime's ‘euthanasia program', which aimed to eradicate individuals considered genetically and economically ‘undesirable'. Did this National Socialist ideology also contribute to the excess mortality among the Dutch psychiatric population? What was life like for patients and staff working in psychiatric institutions during the war? Credits image: Collection Museum van de Geest | Dolhuys, Haarlem

    NIOD Rewind Episode 37 - Navigating field research in conflict-effected societies: constraints and opportunities

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 12, 2024 40:00


    How do researchers navigate field research in conflict-affected societies? In this episode of NIOD Rewind on War and Violence, we explore the challenges and opportunities of conducting field research. Host Anne van Mourik engages with researchers Solange Fontana and Lauren Gould, both with extensive experience in conflict-impacted societies. Why are first-hand experiences important when researching war and violence? What does the increasing shift to remote warfare mean for scholars seeking to conduct fieldwork? When doing fieldwork, how do you manage security? And how to deal with the emotional toll the work might take?

    NIOD Rewind Episode 36 - Between lines and lives: using ego-documents to study war and violence

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 30, 2024 44:04


    How to use ego-documents in research on war and violence? In this episode Anne van Mourik speaks with Clara Dijkstra (Cambridge University), and Carlijn Keijzer, Afke Berger and Milan van Lange (NIOD) about this question. The term ego-documents pertains to the realm of the individual, encompassing both the people who create these personal records and the content they document. Besides, as historical sources, ego-documents have a lot to offer beyond the individual's perspective. This episode delves into a topic central to the NIOD: the intricate connection between ego documents and research, discussing some of the (im)possibilities, pitfalls, and opportunities of using such sources in documenting and studying the history of war.

    NIOD Rewind Episode 35 - “Visual Narratives of Catastrophe”: Thinking Photography and the Holocaust

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 8, 2023 26:32


    In this episode Anne van Mourik speaks with visual historian Kylie Thomas (University College Cork and NIOD) about the meaning of the medium of photography for thinking about the Holocaust. How can photographs intersect with how we perceive this history? What happens when images relating to the Holocaust, for example of Anne Frank, become ubiquitous? In this conversation, Kylie and Anne focus on the work of the Austrian-born Jewish photographer Dora Kallmus (1891-1963).  How do her photographs of slaughtered animals function in the aftermath of the Holocaust?    "Visual Narratives of Catastrophe" is a quote from Lisa Silverman, Art of Loss: Madame d'Ora, Photography and the Restitution of Haus Doranna, in: Leo Baeck Institute Year Book, 60, 1 (2015).

    NIOD Rewind Episode 34 - The Last Ghetto: An Everyday History of Theresienstadt

    Play Episode Listen Later May 30, 2023 41:53


    Laurien Vastenhout and Anne van Mourik speak with historian Anna Hájková about her landmark work The Last Ghetto: An Everyday History of Theresienstadt (Oxford University Press). What was life in the Theresienstadt ghetto like, and what does this case study tell us more generally about human behaviour under extreme conditions? How should we (re)define the concept of agency in the context of Holocaust and Genocide Studies (and beyond)? And what is the meaning of kinship and family ties in times of crisis?

    NIOD Rewind Episode 33 - 'Het leven in al zijn facetten': Dagboekfragmenten uit de Tweede Wereldoorlog

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 14, 2023 13:25


    Wat kun je lezen in de dagboekcollectie van het NIOD? Aan de hand van dagboekbeschrijvingen vertelt collectiespecialist Michiel Wilmink over de levens van mensen in de Tweede Wereldoorlog. We horen over de date-ervaringen van dwangarbeider, over een politieman die Jodenarresteert en over hoe het dagelijks leven voor sommigen doorging – terwijl het voor anderen drastisch veranderde. Wil je een dagboek schenken of komen inzien? Neem dan contact op het NIOD. 

    NIOD Rewind Episode 32 - Voices That Matter: Kurdish Women at the Limits of Representation in Contemporary Turkey

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 23, 2023 31:05


    How do Kurdish women struggle to voice themselves in contemporary Turkey? Anne van Mourik speaks with Marlene Schäfers (Utrecht University) about her book ‘Voices that Matter: Kurdish Women at the Limits of Representation in Contemporary Turkey' (University of Chicago Press, 2022). What does it mean to ‘have a voice' in a context of protracted political violence? To what extent do Kurdish women's gaining voices lead to empowerment? And how does Marlene, as a scholar specialized in women's struggle for voice, view the current protests in Iran?   Photo: Braxton Hood. Kurdish singer (dengbêj) Gazîn performing via mobile phone, Wan, Turkey, 2011.

    NIOD Rewind Episode 31 - Between Community and Collaboration: 'Jewish Councils' in Western Europe under Nazi Occupation

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 24, 2023 25:44


    Why does the Jewish Council phenomenon remain such a controversial topic? Anne van Mourik speaks with Laurien Vastenhout on her new book ‘Between Community and Collaboration: “Jewish Councils” in Western Europe under Nazi Occupation' (Cambridge University Press). What were differences and similarities between the ‘Jewish Councils' across occupied Western Europe? What room for manoeuvre did the Jewish leaders have, and what impact did local factors have on the form and function of these Councils? We talk about the importance of comparative analyses, socio-historical conditions in Western Europe during the war, and many other themes. Photograph by Johan de Haas, reproduced by kind permission of the De Haas family and the NIOD

    NIOD Rewind Episode 30 - Revolutionary Worlds: Local Perspectives and Dynamics during the Indonesian Independence War, 1945-49

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 7, 2023 33:04


    What was the Indonesian revolution (1945-1949) like as a lived experience? Anne van Mourik speaks with historians Abdul Wahid, Yulianti and Roel Frakking about their new book Revolutionary Worlds: Local Perspectives and Dynamics during the Indonesian Independence War, 1945-49 (Amsterdam University Press). With the book, Indonesian and Dutch researchers bring together two historiographical traditions to shed light on the complexities of the revolutionary war. What did this collaborative project yield? And what does it mean that the book's primary focus lies with the period between 1945 and 1950? What stories emerge when the consequences of the revolution for different communities locally are centered? Image: ‘The guerilla's are defining their tactics' (Gerilya Mengatur Siasat) 1964. Painting by S. Sudjojono, Presidential palace, Bogor.

    NIOD Rewind Episode 29 - History under attack: The Battle for Memory in Today's Russia

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 19, 2023 34:24


    How is memory weaponised in the Russian-Ukrainian war? In this episode, Anne van Mourik and Thijs Bouwknegt talk with historian Nanci Adler. How does she, as a scholar of transitional justice, reflect on this conflict? What is the significance of Vladimir Putin's shut down of the Russian human rights organisation Memorial? And how does this feed in to Russia's repression of its Stalinist history?

    NIOD Rewind Episode 28 - Heritages of Hunger: Memory is the Past made Present

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 24, 2022 26:41


    How does the current Russo-Ukrainian war impact the memory of the Holodomor – the man-made famine in 1932-33? How do the recent Spanish memory laws impact present-day discussions of the Años del Hambre, the years of hunger during the Francoist dictatorship? And how are memories of the Scottish Highland Clearances (1750-1880) evoked in connection to Black Lives Matter demonstrations? In this episode Marta Baziuk (Holodomor Research and Education Consortium), Laurence Gourievidis (Université Clermont Auverne) and Miguel Ángel del Arco Blanco (Universidad de Granada) speak about the functioning of famine pasts in the present. The episode is made by Anne van Mourik (NIOD) and Lindsay Janssen (Radboud University) in the context of the research project Heritages of Hunger. Photo: Replica of the 'Bitter Memories of childhood' sculpture, located in the Holodomor Memorial Parkette (2018), Toronto. This photo was taken on 6 March 2022 – after the Russian invasion of Ukraine (24 February 2022). Someone has placed flowers of Ukraine's national colours (yellow and blue) in the arms of the statue. Photographer: Charley Boerman

    NIOD Rewind Episode 27 - Why Humans Fight: The Social Dynamics of Close-Range Violence

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 4, 2022 25:15


    Why do humans fight? Anne van Mourik speaks with Sinisa Malešević (University College Dublin) on his new book (published by Cambridge University Press). Drawing on interviews with former combatants, Sinisa explores how violence operates in the context of face-to-face actions. What motivates human beings to fight? To what extent do people fight for reasons of self-interest? And in which contexts is fighting more likely to happen?

    NIOD Rewind Episode 26 - Bones of Contention: The Vietnam-American War

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 6, 2022 39:44


    In this episode Anne van Mourik and Dat Nguyen talk with Tam Ngo and Sarah Wagner on the remains of the war dead of the Vietnam-American War (1957-1975). Following the end of the war, the commemoration and identification of the fallen and missing-in-action soldiers from both the Vietnamese (North and South) and American sides remains a contentious issue. With Tam and Dat researching respectively the North- and South Vietnamese perspectives and Sarah the U.S. perspective, this episode approaches the topic from three different angles of the war. What is the contention about? How are the bones used for necro-political and necro-governmental agendas over time?

    NIOD Rewind | Episode 25 - What is 'Violence'? Debates and Directions

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 29, 2022 29:03


    Ever since its founding an important theme within NIOD research has been 'violence': the perpetration of violence, the legacies of violence, and the multilayered experience of violence and its effects on individuals, communities and nations. To renew thinking on the core question of what constitutes violence and how to study it, in June 2022 the NIOD organised, together with the Netherlands Institute of Advanced Studies (NIAS) a workshop on the question ‘What is violence? Debates and Directions'. In this episode, scholars Sinisa Malesevic, Tatjana Tönsmeyer, Avi Sharma and Ton Zwaan discuss how they use the concept of violence in their work. How to address less visible kinds of violence, such as long-term pollution or climate change, which have the potential to kill entire populations and destroy entire regions of the world? How can research on violence draw attention to institutionalised inequalities and exploitation? And who actually decides what counts as violence – in the past but also in the present and future?

    NIOD Rewind Episode 24 - ‘Alles wat onze kleinkinderen zullen leren': In de archieven van het NIOD

    Play Episode Listen Later May 30, 2022 23:21


    Het NIOD beheert meer dan 2500 meter archiefmateriaal: van een op sigarettenvloei geschreven dagboek uit een Japans interneringskamp in de Tweede Wereldoorlog tot aan archiefmateriaal verzameld en opgemaakt gedurende het Srebrenica onderzoek in 1996-2002. Hoe wordt deze bulk aan data opgeslagen en doorzoekbaar gemaakt? Anne van Mourik spreekt met Carlijn Keijzer, NIOD beleidsadviseur Collecties en Diensten. De totstandkoming van archieven is mensenwerk waarbij keuzes worden gemaakt over het bewaren en structureren van het materiaal. Wat betekent deze selectie en waardering voor welke geschiedenissen wel en niet uitgelicht worden? Hoe reflecteren bestaande machtsstructuren op welke verhalen in de archieven worden verteld en welke worden vergeten? *** In de aflevering wordt verwezen naar: Ismee Tames, 'Digitale ontsluiting van het Centraal Archief Bijzondere Rechtspleging: Mogelijkheden en onmogelijkheden', Tijdschrift voor Geschiedenis 133 no. 2 (2020): 303 - 324.

    NIOD Rewind Episode 23 - At Home in Our Sounds: Music, Race and Cultural Politics in Interwar Paris

    Play Episode Listen Later May 11, 2022 31:18


    Why was music key to anticolonial and antiracist cultural politics in interwar Paris? Anne van Mourik interviews Rachel Gillet on her new book At Home in Our Sounds: Music, Race, and Cultural Politics in Interwar Paris. In the aftermath of World War I, Black men and women participated in the Parisian cultural and political life via music. How could music function to build community and assert belonging? And how was it deployed to combat fascism and racism in the early 1930s?

    NIOD Rewind Episode 22 - Born under a bad sign

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2022 31:53


    In this episode of NIOD Rewind Anne van Mourik speaks with Ralf Futselaar about his inaugural lecture Born under a bad sign. The indelible Marks of Total War on Twentieth Century Lives (November 2021). Ralf warns against focusing too much on individual lives in historical narratives that suppose to ‘give history a face'. Instead, he advocates to investigate warfare and its long-term consequences on large, specific groups of people. What are the drawbacks of making history relatable by telling individual life stories to represent violent episodes? How can computational analysis of large data sets help us understand group effects of violent episodes of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries? Can such analyses further our understandings of the Dutch Hunger Winter, for example? Photo: Collectie Fries Verzetsmuseum, Leeuwarden

    NIOD Rewind Episode 21 - Dynamics Of Violence In West Germany And The Netherlands

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 23, 2022 27:18


    How did Germany and the Netherlands deal with violent political groups of the 60s and 70s? How can we compare this with Dutch reactions to violent political groups? And how to understand current far right Alternative für Deutschland (AfD) politics? Anne van Mourik speaks with professor Jacco Pekelder about the dynamics of violence in Germany and the Netherlands in the long twentieth century. In 2021 Jacco got assigned as head of the Centre of Netherlands-Studies and in his work deals with the relationship between Germany and the Netherlands. What are his plans for future research?​ In the interview, Jacco spoke about the film 'Buongiorno notte' (2003) directed by Marco Bellochio. Picture: Rob Bogaerts/ Dutch National Archives/ Anefo

    NIOD Rewind Episode 20 - Preparing for War: The Making of the Geneva Conventions

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2022 34:26


    How and why did the rules of war come about? To what extent and how can the 1949 Geneva Conventions be operationalised in both past and contemporary war? In this episode Anne van Mourik and Thijs Bouwknegt talk with historian Boyd van Dijk about his brand-new book Preparing for War: The Making of the Geneva Conventions (Oxford University Press, 2022). Van Dijk takes us through rationales for the Conventions, by placing them in world historical context and highlighting the role played by some remarkable people. Also, he discusses how the Geneva Conventions could provide a prism through which to perceive the Dutch colonial war in Indonesia between 1945 and 1949, and today's Russia-Ukraine conflict. Image: ICRC Audiovisual Archives, V-P-HIST-03538-05.

    NIOD Rewind Episode 19 - Political Apologies across Cultures

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2022 37:12


    What is the value and meaning of political apologies across cultures? In this episode Anne van Mourik speaks with historian Marieke Zoodsma, who researches how apologies are expressed and received across the world. How do political authorities across the world address or redress past wrongdoings in these accounts? How can we understand the large number of political apologies in the recent past? And can political excuses effectively help processing suffering or lead to reconciliation? https://www.politicalapologies.com/ Photo: visitors paying their respects at the 2019 commemoration of the Jeju 4.3 Uprising, Jeju, Republic of Korea. By Marieke Zoodsma. Audio fragment: NOS Koningspaar in Indonesië (2020)

    NIOD Rewind | Episode 18 - Global War, Global Catastrophe

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 19, 2021 25:08


    How did the First World War transform the lives of ordinary people all over the world? In the latest episode of NIOD Rewind, Anne van Mourik interviews Maartje Abbenhuis and Ismee Tames about their new book Global War, Global Catastrophe: Neutrals, Belligerents and the Transformations of the First World War. Conventionally, the history of The First World War is predominantly one of Western belligerents and battlefields. Maartje and Ismee, however, turn this traditional history inside out and focus on the histories of those who are often marginalised in the narratives on the war. What did the war mean for people and societies in colonies and neutral states? How did this innovative idea for the book came about? And what is it that we can learn from the book for our present-day society?

    NIOD Rewind | Episode 17 - Fighting Hunger, Dealing with Shortage in WWII

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 19, 2021 31:38


    What did it mean to live in Europe under German occupation? In this episode Anne van Mourik and Thijs Bouwknegt talk with professor Tatjana Tönsmeyer on the new Source Edition Fighting Hunger, Dealing with Shortage. Everyday Life under Occupation in World War II Europe. How did these two volumes come about, and what sources does it cover? And in what way did food shortages affect the lives of ordinary people as well as specific groups such as Jews, Sinti and Roma, and women — and how did they cope with it? (Image: Herder Institute for Historical Research on East Central Europe Marburg, Image Archive)

    NIOD Rewind Episode 16 - Aan Tafel met Frank van Vree en Martijn Eickhoff

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 20, 2021 30:53


    In deze speciale editie van Niod Rewind zitten Anne van Mourik en Thijs Bouwknegt aan de directeurstafel van het Niod. Ze spreken met Martijn Eickhoff en Frank van Vree. Martijn volgde op 1 september 2021 Frank op als directeur. Wat dreef hen om de Tweede Wereldoorlog, de Holocaust en wereldwijd massaal geweld te gaan onderzoeken? Hoe reflecteert Frank op zijn voorbije directeurschap? En hoe ziet Martijn de toekomst van het instituut voor zich? Muziek intro: Roy van Rosendaal Muziek: Rosemary and Garlic

    NIOD REWIND Episode 15 - Forced Disappearances Under Apartheid

    Play Episode Listen Later May 10, 2021 37:22


    Anne van Mourik and Thijs Bouwknegt interview historian Kylie Thomas and journalist Michael Schmidt, discussing forced disappearances under Apartheid South Africa. Michael is the author of Death Flight: Apartheid's secret doctrine of disappearance, which investigates and tells the history of Apartheid’s chilling tactic of throwing people, dead or alive, from airplanes so that their remains cannot be found. A Truth and Reconciliation Commission on human rights violations during the Apartheid years was established in 1995. Kylie Thomas researches and writes about the 2017 reopening of the Apartheid cases. Who exactly were the people who were targeted for ‘disappearance’? And how come cases of activists who were imprisoned, tortured and murdered, are only now being reinvestigated and reopened? Websites mentioned in the episode: Foundation for Human Rights Unfinished Business of the South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission: https://unfinishedtrc.co.za Images courtesy of the Ahmed Timol Family Trust: https://www.ahmedtimol.co.za/ ​ Music: Alastair Douglas

    NIOD REWIND Episode 14 - The Problems of Genocide

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2021 34:42


    What are the problems of genocide and how to rethink mass death? In this episode Anne van Mourik and Thijs Bouwknegt interview historian Dirk Moses, whose book The Problems of Genocide: Permanent Security and the Language of Transgression just came out. How does the legal concept of genocide distort our thinking about civilian destruction? What does genocide, as the ‘crime of crimes’ still mean for other types of humanly caused civilian death, like bombing cities and drone strikes? Cover book by Murad Subay: https://muradsubay.com/ Music: Rosemary and Garlic

    NIOD REWIND Episode 13 What are the next Big Topics in War and Genocide Research?

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2021 20:40


    War, mass violence and its consequences are not a thing of the past. They are very much present in the world of today and tomorrow. In collaboration with the NIAS, researchers of the NIOD Institute are teaming up with a group of international scholars, in order to develop an innovative and multidisciplinary research agenda in the field of the multiple connections between the topic of ‘war and society’ in the recent past - and in the world of today. In this episode of the podcast Niod Rewind, Anne van Mourik speaks with several of these researchers about this new fellowship program. Why is it so important to investigate the past in light of the present? And how can we connect histories of mass violence with present-day societies? ​ *** The people in this episode: Ismee Tames Sophie de Schaepdrijver Siniša Malešević Avi Sharma Ville Kivimäki ​ This podcast was made with the help of: Bethany Warner and Alex Strete

    war male nias niod mourik genocide research
    NIOD REWIND Episode 12 WWII through Digital Gaming

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 15, 2021 23:23


    What kind of knowledge can we gain from WWII games? In episode 12 of Niod Rewind, Anne van Mourik interviews Pieter van den Heede about his dissertation 'Engaging with the Second World War through Digital Gaming', which he defended last February (2021). Pieter studied how digital entertainment games such as Call of Duty represent the war and the Holocaust in particular, and how players reflect on playing these games. To what extent do studios make WWII games according to the last historical insights about how people actually dealt with this mass violence? How is it that some games become political and thereby seem to align with right-wing ideologies?

    NIOD REWIND Episode 11 Fighters Across Frontiers

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 9, 2020 13:18


    In this episode of NIOD Rewind, Anne van Mourik speaks with Ismee Tames and Robert Gildea about their new book Fighters across Frontiers. Transnational resistance in Europe, 1936-1948. The book is the product of years of research by a team of two dozen historians, and it reveals that resistance against Fascism was not narrowly delineated by country but startlingly transnational. What did Ismee and Robert learn from this collaborative scholarship? How did the book come about? Where do the experiences of the transnational fighters take us? And what does it tell us?

    NIOD REWIND Episode 10 Roel Frakking

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 31, 2020 19:25


    Anne van Mourik talks with Roel Frakking on the term 'extreme violence' and the importance of local dynamics in researching decolonisation conflict. Roel is a postdoc researcher at the Royal Netherlands Institute of Southeast Asian Studies (KITLV, Leiden) where he is researching the regional dynamics of the Indonesian war against Dutch recolonisation (1945-1950). His latest publication, co-authored with Professor Martin Thomas (Exeter), deals with the micro-dynamics of violence during decolonization conflicts in Southeast Asia and Africa after 1945 in the Low Countries Historical Review 135, 2 (2020).

    NIOD REWIND Episode 9 Kerstin von Lingen

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 30, 2020 30:09


    In episode 9 of NIOD REWIND, Anne van Mourik and Thijs Bouwknegt interview historian Kerstin von Lingen. Prof. Dr. Kerstin von Lingen is a historian and researcher, Professor at the Institute for Contemporary History at the University of Vienna. From 2013-2017, she led an independent research group at Heidelberg University in the Cluster of Excellence “Asia and Europe in a Global Context” entitled “Transcultural Justice: Legal Flows and the Emergence of International Justice within the East Asian War Crimes Trials, 1946-1954,” supervising four doctoral dissertations on the Soviet, Chinese, Dutch, and French war crimes trial policies in Asia, respectively. Her publications include two monographs in English, Kesselring’s Last Battle: War Crimes Trials and Cold War Politics, 1945-1960 (Lawrence: University of Kansas Press, 2009) and Allen Dulles, the OSS and Nazi War Criminals: The Dynamics of Selective Prosecution (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2013). Her edited volumes include: Transcultural Justice at the Tokyo Tribunal: The Allied Struggle for Justice, 1946-48 (Brill 2018); Justice in times of turmoil: War Crimes trials in the Wake of Decolonization and Cold War in Asia(Palgrave 2016); Debating Collaboration and Complicity in War Crimes Trials in Asia (Palgrave 2017). In German, she published the multi-authored volumes Kriegserfahrung und nationale Identität in Europa [War experience and national identity in Europe after 1945], Paderborn: Schoeningh, 2009, and co-edited with Klaus Gestwa, Zwangsarbeit als Kriegsressource in Europa und Asien [Forced labor as a resource of War: European and Asian perspectives), Schoening 2014. CREDITS Music, intro/ outro: Roy van Rosendaal Logo: Jesper Buursink Advice: Ismee Tames Montage/Editing: Anne van Mourik

    NIOD Rewind Episode 8 Iva Vukušić

    Play Episode Listen Later May 18, 2020 21:08


    In episode 8 of NIOD REWIND, Anne van Mourik and Thijs Bouwknegt interview historian Iva Vukušić. Iva is a lecturer at Utrecht University and a Visiting Research Fellow at King’s College London. She recently defended her PhD — online (!) — which focuses on Serbian paramilitaries and irregular armed forces during the breakup of Yugoslavia in the 1990s. Iva worked for the Sense News Agency in The Hague, analyzing evidence from trials at the United Nations’ International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) and before that, she was an analyst and researcher at the Special War Crimes Department of the State Prosecutor’s office in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Follow her on Twitter: @VukusicIva CREDITS Music, intro/ outro: Roy van Rosendaal Logo: Jesper Buursink Advice: Ismee Tames Montage/Editing: Anne van Mourik

    NIOD Onzekere Tijden - Afl. 4 Frank van Vree

    Play Episode Listen Later May 8, 2020 20:28


    In deze speciale reeks van de NIOD Rewind podcast gaan onderzoekers van het NIOD in op de coronacrisis en de onzekere tijden die dit met zich mee brengt. Hoe ervaren zij de crisis zelf? En hoe analyseren zij, vanuit het perspectief van hun onderzoek, de gebeurtenissen in de samenleving? Anne van Mourik spreekt met NIOD-directeur Frank van Vree. Hoe analyseert hij de coronacrisis? Welke historische analogieën ziet hij? En het NIOD staat deze week stil bij het 75-jarig bestaan, hoe ziet Frank de toekomst van het instituut? Een podcast door: Anne van Mourik, Thijs Bouwknegt en Anne-Lise Bobeldijk. Credits: Montage: Anne van Mourik Foto logo: Joris van den Tol Muziek intro/ outro: Roy van Rosendaal Advies: Ismee Tames

    NIOD Onzekere Tijden - Afl. 3 Ralf Futselaar

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2020 12:38


    In deze speciale reeks van de NIOD Rewind podcast gaan onderzoekers van het NIOD in op de coronacrisis en de onzekere tijden die dit met zich mee brengt. Hoe ervaren zij de crisis zelf? En hoe analyseren zij, vanuit het perspectief van hun onderzoek, de gebeurtenissen in de samenleving? In de derde aflevering spreekt Anne-Lise Bobeldijk met Ralf Futselaar over medische geschiedenis, hamsteren en zijn werk aan de Erasmus Universiteit Rotterdam. Een podcast door: Anne van Mourik, Thijs Bouwknegt en Anne-Lise Bobeldijk. Credits: Montage: Anne van Mourik Foto logo: Joris van den Tol Muziek intro/ outro: Roy van Rosendaal Advies: Ismee Tames

    NIOD REWIND Episode 7 Peter Romijn

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 14, 2020 37:30


    In this seventh episode of NIOD REWIND Anne van Mourik and Thijs Bouwknegt interview Prof. dr. Peter Romijn. Peter is head of the Research Department of the NIOD and Professor of Twentieth-Century History at the University of Amsterdam. Recently he published a new book about The Netherlands at war in Europe and Asia, 1940-1950. During the Second World War both the Netherlands and the Dutch East Indies (today's Indonesia) were under German and Japanese occupation (1940-1945). After being liberated, the Netherlands engaged in a violent decolonisation war in Indonesia (1945-1950). In his book, Peter, refuses to see the latter war only as an aftermath of the former one; it focuses on the many continuities of a society continuously mobilised for internal conflict and external warfare, trying to come to terms with the profound changes in international relations. More information on his book can be found here (in Dutch): https://www.niod.nl/nl/de-lange-tweede-wereldoorlog-nederland-1940-1949 Muziek intro/ outro: Roy van Rosendaal Logo: Jesper Buursink Advies: Ismee Tames Montage: Anne van Mourik

    NIOD Onzekere Tijden - Afl. 2 Uğur Üngör

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 7, 2020 9:42


    In deze speciale reeks van de NIOD Rewind podcast gaan onderzoekers van het NIOD in op de coronacrisis en de onzekere tijden die dit met zich mee brengt. Hoe ervaren zij de crisis zelf? En hoe analyseren zij, vanuit het perspectief van hun onderzoek, de gebeurtenissen in de samenleving? In de tweede aflevering spreekt Thijs Bouwknegt de kersverse hoogleraar Holocaust en Genocide Studies, Uğur Ümit Üngör. Een podcast door: Anne van Mourik, Thijs Bouwknegt en Anne-Lise Bobeldijk. Credits: Foto logo: Joris van den Tol Muziek intro/outro: Roy van Rosendaal Advies: Ismee Tames.

    NIOD REWIND Episode 6 Ingrid De Zwarte

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 31, 2020 32:50


    In episode 6 of NIOD REWIND Anne van Mourik and Thijs Bouwknegt interview historian Ingrid de Zwarte (Wageningen University). De Zwarte's research explores the role of food and famine in modern conflict in the broadest sense: from hunger as a political and military tool in warfare to social self-organisation in times of hunger, and from the demographic impact of famine to the effects of hunger on migration and state formation. Her book “The Hunger Winter. Fighting Famine in the Occupied Netherlands, 1944-1945” (Cambridge University Press) is available from August 2020. [hyperlink: www.cambridge.org/nl/academic/subj…441945?format=HB] Together with M. Corporaal (PI) and L. Jensen, De Zwarte has been awarded a NWO NWA-ORC Grant for the project Heritages of Hunger: Societal Reflections on Past European Famines in Education, Commemoration and Musealisation. Working with famine experts from sixteen countries, it investigates the past and present significance of European famines in educational institutions and the heritage sector. (for more information: www.ru.nl/heritagesofhunger/) Music: Kumasi Groove by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) Source: http://incompetech.com/music/royalty-free/index.html?isrc=USUAN1100183 Accralate - The Dark Contenent by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) Source: http://incompetech.com/music/royalty-free/index.html?isrc=USUAN1100341 Artist: http://incompetech.com/

    NIOD Onzekere Tijden - Afl. 1 Ismee Tames

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 26, 2020 11:50


    In deze speciale reeks van de NIOD Rewind podcast gaan onderzoekers van het NIOD in op de coronacrisis en de onzekere tijden die dit met zich mee brengt. Hoe ervaren zij de crisis zelf? En hoe analyseren zij, vanuit het perspectief van hun onderzoek, de gebeurtenissen in de samenleving? In de eerste aflevering spreekt Anne van Mourik met Ismee Tames. Een podcast door: Anne van Mourik, Thijs Bouwknegt en Anne-Lise Bobeldijk. Foto logo: Joris van den Tol Muziek intro/ outro: Roy van Rosendaal Advies: Ismee Tames

    NIOD REWIND Episode 5: Farabi Fakih

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 26, 2020 28:42


    Anne talks with Farabi Fakih about the Indonesian national identity during the revolutionary period in Indonesia (1946-1948). Farabi is a lecturer at the History Department, Universitas Gadjah Mada. His main research interests are on urban history, the history of the Indonesian state and the intellectual history of Indonesia. In the background you hear the noise of life at UGM, where the interview was taken. Further reading: K’tut Tantri, Revolt in Paradise (1989). Music: - Indonesia Raya - NonaRia performed at Jakarta International Java Jazz Festival (JJF) at JI Expo, Kemayoran, Central Jakarta, Indonesia on March 2nd, 2018 (by Senang0906) - Amiina - Rosemary and Garlic​

    NIOD REWIND Episode 4 'Negotiating Displacement'

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 13, 2020 33:42


    In this special edition of NIOD REWIND, Anne van Mourik and Thijs Bouwknegt interview scholars from various backgrounds and disciplines on the topic of Displacement. In December 2019, the NIOD Institute for War, Holocaust, and Genocide Studies organised a conference in collaboration with IMIS University of Osnabrück: ‘Negotiating Displacement: New Perspectives and Connections in War, Migration and Refugee Studies’. The conference aimed at connecting research on war, mass violence and genocide with migration studies in order to deepen the dialogue between two disciplines that often look at similar phenomena but from different viewpoints. The conference’s guiding question was how displacement has been negotiated with regard to trajectories and status by individuals and groups from the First World War to the present in a global perspective. Scholars, journalists and migrants discussed displaced person’s agency, room for maneuver and possibilities for creating their own social and cultural spaces within the limited and often harsh social, economic and political parameters. How can we understand the dynamics surrounding these processes? In this podcast: Anne Irfan Avi Sharma Christoph Rass Eugene Michail Ismee Tames

    NIOD REWIND episode 3: Natalya Vince

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 22, 2020 36:01


    Anne van Mourik spoke with historian Natalya Vince of the University of Portsmouth. Natalya has carried out extensive field research in both Algeria and France since 2005 including interviewing Algerian women who participated in the War of Independence (1954-1962) about their experiences in post-colonial Algeria and their memories of the conflict. Her monograph Our fighting sisters: nation, memory and gender in Algeria, 1954-2012 was published by Manchester University Press in May 2015 and was winner of the Women's History Network Annual Book Prize in 2016. Here are some links for further reading: The classic and path breaking account of women in the Algerian War - Djamila Amrane - Les femmes algeriennes dans la guerre (1991): https://www.amazon.fr/femmes-alg%C3%A9riennes-dans-guerre/dp/2259022952/ref=sr_1_2?__mk_fr_FR=%C3%85M%C3%85%C5%BD%C3%95%C3%91&keywords=djamila+amrane&qid=1561641569&s=books&sr=1-2 Stef Scagliola, Liefde in tijden van oorlog: onze jongens en hun verzwegen kinderen in de Oost (Amsterdam 2013) Frances Gouda and Julia Clancy Smith's Domesticating the Empire: Race, Gender, and Family Life in French and Dutch Colonialism Ann Laura Stoler Carnal Knowledge and Imperial power: Race and the Intimate in Colonial Rule Frantz Fanon Algeria unveiled - free here: http://abahlali.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/04/Frantz-Fanon-A-Dying-Colonialism.pdf or On rape and sexual violence: Raphaelle Branche: https://www.cairn.info/revue-vingtieme-siecle-revue-d-histoire-2002-3-page-123.htm (in French) In English, readers could check out her chapter 'Sexual Violence in the Algerian War'(pp. 247-260) in Dagmar Herzog (ed) Brutality and Desire: War and Sexuality in Europe's Twentieth Century (Palgrave, 2009; second ed 2011) On the Djamila Boupacha case: https://www.jstor.org/stable/42843654?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents (not open access) This is a great recent article (in French - keep googling it for the online version): Khedidja Adel, La prison des femmes de Tifelfel. Enfermement et corps en souffrances.Année du Maghreb, dossier de recherche 20/2019-I: Prisons en guerre, guerres en prison au Maghreb. Co-edited by Marc André and Susan Slyomovics Shepard's The invention of decolonisation really highlights the ways in which the war was gendered and sexualised, http://www.cornellpress.cornell.edu/book/?GCOI=80140100361490, he does this even more in his edited collection with Catherine Brun, http://www.thalim.cnrs.fr/publications/article/guerre-d-algerie-le-sexe-outrage?lang=fr Indonesia, Jonathan Verwey's text.‘Hoeveel wreekt de bruidegom de bruid’ Seksueel geweld en de Nederlandse krijgsmacht in Indonesië, 1945-1950 Jonathan Verwey TVGESCH 129 (4): 569–592 DOI: 10.5117/TVGESCH2016.4.VERW

    NIOD REWIND Episode 2 Wim Manuhutu

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 17, 2019 32:13


    The NIOD REWIND Podcast presents interviews with scholars on the history and study of mass violence, war and genocide. In the second episode Anne van Mourik and Thijs Bouwknegt speak with Wim Manuhutu.

    NIOD Rewind Episode I Kees Ribbens

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 13, 2019 44:32


    The NIOD REWIND podcast presents interviews with scholars on the history and study of mass violence, war and genocide. In the first episode Anne van Mourik and Thijs Bouwknegt talk to Professor Kees Ribbens about his research on World War Two and the representation of the Holocaust in comic books and popular culture.

    Claim NIOD Rewind Podcast on War & Violence

    In order to claim this podcast we'll send an email to with a verification link. Simply click the link and you will be able to edit tags, request a refresh, and other features to take control of your podcast page!

    Claim Cancel