History Department

Devin Pendas

associate professor & director of graduate studies

pendas devin

Telephone: (617) 552-6881

Office Location: 21 Campanella Way, 442

Email: devin.pendas.1@bc.edu

Curriculum Vitae: please click here

Education

Ph.D., University of Chicago, 2000

Fields of Interest

German History; Modern Europe; Legal History; history of mass violence and war

Academic Profile

Professor Pendas's teaching interests include courses on German history, European legal history, the history of war and genocide, the history of war crimes trials, and the history of human rights. His research focuses on war crimes trials after World War II, particularly on West German Holocaust trials. He is currently working on a history of Nazi trials in German courts in all occupation zones from 1945 to 1950, to be published by Cambridge University Press.

Professor Pendas has also received research fellowships from the German Academic Exchange Service, the MacArthur Foundation, the Center for Contemporary Historical Research in Potsdam, Germany and the U.S. Holocaust Museum.

Representative Publications

  • "'The Magical Scent of the Savage': Colonial Violence, the Crisis of Civilization, and the Origins of the Legalist Paradigm of War," Boston College International and Comparative Law Review (2007)
  • "Eichmann in Jerusalem, Arendt in Frankfurt: The Eichmann Trial, the Auschwitz Trial, and the Banality of Justice," New German Critique (2007)
  • The Historiography of Horror: The Auschwitz Trial and the German Historical Imagination," Lessons and Legacies VI: New Currents in Holocaust Research (2004)
  • "Truth and its Consequences: Reflections on Political, Historical and Legal Truth in West German Holocaust Trials," Traverse: Zeitschrift für Geschichte/Revue d'Histoire (2004)
  • "'Law, not Vengeance': Human Rights, the Rule of Law and the Claims of Memory in German Holocaust Trials," in Truth Claims: Representation and Human Rights (2002)
  • "I didn't know what Auschwitz was: The Frankfurt Auschwitz Trial and the German Press," Yale Journal of Law and the Humanities, June 2000.