Fellows


Paul Weindling
Stadt Wien ifk_Fellow


Duration of fellowship
01. March 2018 bis 30. June 2018

Neurology in Austria 1918–1960: Tensions, Transformations, Translations and Traumas



PROJECT DESCRIPTION

Austrian neurology was scientifically a highly innovative field in the clinic, laboratory as well as conceptually drawing on philosophy, psychoanalysis and wider cultural movements. A key question is how Austrian neurology was impacted by National Socialism. Whereas German medical organizations and specialisms have reviewed their past conduct under National Socialism, this has happened only to a very limited extent in Austria. Medical specialisms rapidly imposed Gleichschaltung after the Anschluss, excluding their Jewish and politically undesirable members, and supporting the imposition of Nazi racial and health policies. How the situation was in neurology remains largely uninvestigated.



CV

Paul Weindling is Research Professor in History of Medicine at Oxford Brookes University. He has been on advisory commissions concerning National Socialism for the Max-Planck-Gesellschaft and the precursor Kaiser-Wilhelm-Gesellschaft, 1999–2004; on the Robert Koch Institute, 2005–2009; on the German Association of Psychiatry, Psychotherapy, and Neurology (DGPPN), 2010–2012. He is co-president of the commission of the University of Strasbourg to research the medical faculty of the Reich University Straßburg between 1941 and 1944. He recently began a major collaborative project to research the life histories of patients killed for research by Institutes of the Kaiser Wilhelm Society. He holds the Anneliese Maier Prize of the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation, and is member of the Leopoldina, the German National Academy of Sciences and Honorary member of the DGPPN. He is a trustee of CARA, the Council for At-risk Academics.



Publications

Selected publications: with Herwig Czech (eds.), Österreichische Ärzte und Ärztinnen im Nationalsozialismus, DOEW Jahrbuch, Vienna 2017; Victims and Survivors of Nazi Human Experiments: Science and Suffering in the Holocaust, London 2014; John W. Thompson, Psychiatrist in the Shadow of the Holocaust, Rochester 2010.

Jüdische Ärztinnen und Ärzte in Wien 1938 und ihr Beitrag zum Gesundheitswesen: Vortrag von City of Vienna/IFK_Fellow Paul Weindling

Im Rahmen der Tagung "Anschluss" im März 1938: Nachwirkungen auf Medizin und Gesellschaft, einer Initiative des Alumni Clubs der MedUni Wien, wird City of Vienna/IFK_Fellow Paul Weindling den Vortrag Jüdische Ärztinnen und Ärzte in Wien 1938 und ihr Beitrag zum Gesundheitswesen halten.

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Medizinische Forschung und NS-Verfolgung: Aktuelle Projekte und Debatten

Paul Weindling (Halle/IFK Wien)  Brain tissues generated by Nazi psychiatrists at Kaiser Wilhelm Institutes, and their post-war use, 1940–2017  ><  Vortrag in englischer Sprache

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„Medical Ethics in the 70 Years after the Nuremberg Code, 1947 to the Present“

 

Einladung zur Präsentation des Tagungsbandes

„Medical Ethics in the 70 Years after the Nuremberg Code, 1947 to the Present“

Vorgestellt von Christiane DRUML, Herwig CZECH, Paul WEINDLING

Moderation:

Marlene NOWOTNY, ORF

Wann: 20. Juni 2018, um 17.00 Uhr

Wo: Josephinum Währinger Straße 25, 1090Wien

Anmeldung unter: josephinum@meduniwien.ac.at

 

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Buchpräsentation: STRUKTUREN UND NETZWERKE MEDIZIN UND WISSENSCHAFT N WIEN 1848–1955

  1. Dezember 2018, 18:00 Uhr

Aula am Campus, 1090 Wien, Spitalgasse 2-4, Hof 1

STRUKTUREN UND NETZWERKE
MEDIZIN UND WISSENSCHAFT N WIEN 1848–1955
hgg. von Daniela Angetter, Birgit Nemec, Herbert Posch,
Christiane Druml und Paul Weindling

  

(=650 Jahre Universität Wien – Aufbruch ins neue Jahrhundert Bd. 5, hgg. von
Friedrich Stadler und dem Forum Zeitgeschichte der Universität Wien (Katharina Kniefacz u. Herbert Posch)

Vienna University Press | V & R unipress (Göttingen)

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19 March 2018
18:15
  • Lecture
IFK
Paul Weindling

PROVENANCE AND PERSONAL IDENTITY: PROBLEMS OF BRAIN TISSUES FROM THE ERA OF NATIONAL SOCIALISM

The issue of the provenance of medical specimens deriving from victims of Nazi atrocities has been addressed in various ways since the late 1980s. Academic institutions have systematically denied and lied, collectively buried without identifying the victims, or secretly disposed of victim body parts. By way of contrast, the named burials and commemoration of the Spiegelgrund victims have established a model of best practice.

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