Lunch Lecture: "Before Lebensraum Meant Genocide"

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Location: 1050 Jenkins Nanovic Hall

Mark T. Kettler, a Postdoctoral Research Associate with the Nanovic Institute for European Studies, will offer a public lecture as part of the Nanovic Institute’s Lunch Lecture series. 

What has motivated ethnic cleansing historically? More particularly, what is the relationship between settler colonialism and genocide? These are questions of perennial concern for scholars and policy-makers hoping to understand, predict, and arrest ethnic violence.

This talk will complicate the link between Lebensraum and genocide by closely examining influential proposals for establishing German imperial rule in Eastern Europe during WWI. German intellectuals and policy-makers in WWI were keenly interested in using the conquest of Eastern European territory to sever the German Empire’s dependence on foreign imports and boost national demographic growth. However, few who sought to acquire new German “colonies” or Lebensraum in Eastern Europe endorsed the use of ethnic cleansing in these spaces. Moreover, German imperialists who did condone ethnic cleansing as an instrument of imperial policy typically proposed it for projects or reasons unrelated to the acquisition of Lebensraum. Imperialists’ desire for economic autarky and national demographic growth played a relatively small role in their preference for, or aversion to, the enactment of ethnic cleansing during imperial expansion.

An instructor of European studies, Mark is a historian of Germany and East-Central Europe. He studies imperialism and colonialism to analyze larger questions of national identity and the relationship of ethnic minorities to the modern state. He is currently working on a manuscript, provisionally entitled The Knight, Death, and the Devil. The book examines the German occupation of Russian Poland in WWI, arguing that this occupation fundamentally transformed how German military, political, and intellectual elites understood the relationship between ethnic diversity and imperial stability.

Mark received his Ph.D. in history from the University of California, Berkeley, in 2018. His work has been supported by the German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD). 

Originally published at nanovic.nd.edu.