Topography of Violence: Antisemitic violence in Germany 1930–1938 by Fabian Ehmel with UCLAB / FH Potsdam
How can acts of violence be visualized in an appropriate manner? Jews, Jewish institutions, and Jewish-owned firms and stores in the German Reich were subjected to increasing violence long before the November pogroms on 9 November 1938. In cooperation with the Jewish Museum in Berlin, the project developed visualizations that present information about the dates and locations of over 4,600 different acts of violence that took place between 1930 and 1938.
The project forms part of ongoing historical research that examines allegedly spontaneous manifestations of growing antisemitism before the Holocaust. From 1930 onward, and especially in the period from 1933 to 1938, the Nazis used racist slurs, antisemitic legislation, and violent assaults to threaten Jews on a local level and to exclude them from social, economic, and cultural life. As a result of this violence, which occurred in several waves, many of Germany’s two thousand Jewish communities ceased to exist by 1938.
The data set used for the project draws from contemporary sources and extensive local, regional, and national studies carried out over the past seventy years. The research project subsequently focused on the question of how insightful, deliberate and ethical visualization forms can be found along interactive modes, enabling an animated overview and interactive exploration as well as the participatory enrichment of the data set. The results are a large-scale animated wall map and an explorative media station. Both are integrated into the new permanent exhibition of the Jewish Museum Berlin. The explorative visualization has additionally been published online.
The visualization gives an overview of the acts of violence with their dates, locations, and perpetrators. The targets of violence are divided into three categories: individuals, Jewish institutions (synagogues, cemeteries, community institutions, private associations), and businesses (firms and stores). While the visualization does not provide a finalized or exhaustive survey of cases, visitors can search for particular places, years, or perpetrator groups. They are also invited to expand and enrich the data set by contributing their knowledge of local incidents of violence.
Topography of Violence was a research collaboration between the Jewish Museum Berlin Foundation and the UCLAB of the University of Applied Sciences Potsdam, with the assistance of the House of the Wannsee Conference memorial and educational site. The data presented in the visualization are based on research by the Jewish Museum Berlin (JMB) and by Marc Grellert of the Digital Design Unit, Technical University of Darmstadt.
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CreditsDesign & Development - Fabian Ehmel Project team UCLAB - Fabian Ehmel - Viktoria Brüggemann - Prof. Dr. Marian Dörk Historical Research - Christoph Kreutzmüller - Jana Fritsche - Marc Grellert Project team JMB - Sabrina Akermann - Sarah Binz - Michael Dorrmann - Dagmar Ganßloser - Mischa Geiger - Etta Grotrian - Aubrey Pomerance - Franziska Schurr Translation - Adam Blauhut - Allison Brown - Kate Sturge English editing - Richard Toovey
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