Viola Alianov- Rautenberg – Research Fellow
Dr. Viola Alianov-Rautenberg is a Minerva Postdoctoral Fellow. She is a historian of German-Jewish and Israeli history of the 19th and 20th century. Her research is driven by a keen interest in questions of gender, home, and migration as well as social and cultural history. She received her Ph.D. in 2018 by the Berlin Institute of Technology. Her research has been supported, among others, by the Leo Baeck Fellowship Program, the Studienstiftung des deutschen Volkes, and the Leo Baeck Institute New York. Her Ph.D. dissertation, which explores the gender history of Jewish emigration from Nazi Germany in the 1930s, has been awarded the Joseph Carlebach Award by the University of Hamburg. Her first book, No Longer Ladies and Gentlemen: Gender and the German-Jewish Migration to Mandate Palestine, is forthcoming with Stanford University press in October 2023. Before joining the Bucerius Center, Viola has been the Ruth Melzer Fellow at the Herbert D. Katz Center for Advanced Judaic Studies at the University of Pennsylvania (2019-2020) as well as a research fellow at the Institute for the History of the German Jews in Hamburg (2018-2019).
2011-2018 Technical University of Berlin , PhD, (History)
2003-2009 University of Hamburg, MA, (History and German Philology)
- Migration und Marginalität. Geschlecht als strukturelle Kategorie in der deutsch-jüdischen Einwanderung nach Palästina/Eretz Israel in den 1930er Jahren, in: Internationales Jahrbuch Exilforschung 36 (2018), pp. 105-117.
- Alte und neue Rollen. Jeckische Hausfrauen zwischen Bürgerlichkeit, Zionismus und Existenzkampf, in: Anja Siegemund (Ed), Deutsche und zentraleuropäische Juden in Palästina und Israel, Berlin 2016, pp. 202-212.
- Schlagsahne oder Shemen-Öl? Deutsch-jüdische Hausfrauen und ihre Küche in Palästina 1936-1940, in: Tel Aviver Jahrbuch für deutsche Geschichte 41 (2013), pp. 82-96.
- Zwischen Ideologie und Überleben. Offene Fragen zum “Chug Chaluzi” im Berliner Untergrund 1943-1945, in: transversal. Zeitschrift für jüdische Studien 2 (2010), pp. 51-71.