Holocaust, postwar Germany, trials of Nazi perpetrators and terrorists, and German legal history
Notable work
Beyond Justice: The Auschwitz Trial
Notable awards
Fraenkel Prize in Contemporary European History (2005);
Rebecca Elizabeth Wittmann is a Canadian historian, writer, and professor. Her research interests focus primarily on the Holocaust, post war Germany, the trials of Nazi perpetrators, and German legal history. Beyond Justice: The Auschwitz Trial, her debut book, was awarded the Fraenkel Prize in Contemporary History from the Wiener Library in 2005. Currently, Wittmann is an associate professor of history in undergraduate and graduate studies at the University of Toronto Mississauga.[1][2]
In 1992, she graduated from the University of Toronto with her Bachelor of Arts degree. Two years later, Wittmann earned her Master's degree from the University of Southern California, San Diego. In 2001, she graduated with her Ph.D. from the University of Toronto.[4][5]
Career
Wittmann is an associate professor of history at the University of Toronto Mississauga. She mainly teaches classes in Modern and Contemporary Europe, the Holocaust, and remembering atrocities. In her classes, Wittmann encourages her students to "deconstruct their notion of evil."[2]
In 2005, Wittmann's first book, Beyond Justice: The Auschwitz Trial won the Fraenkel Prize in Contemporary European History for Best Book Manuscript from the Wiener Library.[5] At the time she was doing research for the book, the trial had not yet been transcribed. Wittmann had to listen to the tapes of the trials, which helped bring, "to life the atmosphere of the trial in a way that the written word can't do."[2]
Currently, she is working on her second book titled, Nazism and Terrorism: The Madjanek and Stammheim Trials in 1975 West Germany. So far, she has spent a year researching in Germany.[1]
"Legitimating the Criminal State: Former Nazi Judges on the Stand at the Frankfurt Auschwitz Trial," Lessons and Legacies VI: New Currents in Holocaust Research, 2004