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Mirna Zaki膰

Mirna Zakic, portrait
Associate Professor
Bentley Annex

Education

  • Ph.D. in History from the University of Maryland

Research

  • Modern Germany
  • Nazism
  • Ethnic Germans

Mirna Zaki膰 is Associate Professor in the History Department. Her research interests include the relationship between ideology, war, and society; issues of occupation and collaboration; Volksdeutsche (ethnic Germans) and other ethnic minorities in the 20th century; and the relationship between the center and the periphery in national expansion and nation building.

Zaki膰 is the author of (Cambridge University Press, 2017; paperback edition 2019 ). The book offers an in-depth study of the ethnic German minority in the Serbian Banat (Southeast Europe) and its experiences under German occupation in World War II. Zaki膰 argues that the Banat Germans exercised great agency within the constraints imposed on them by Nazi ideology, with its expectations that ethnic Germans would collaborate with the invading Nazis. She examines the incentives to collaboration that the Nazis offered as well as social dynamics within the Banat German community鈥攂etween their Nazified leadership and the rank and file鈥攁nd the various and ever-more damning forms collaboration took. The Banat Germans provided administrative and economic aid to the Nazi war effort and took part in Nazi military operations in Yugoslav lands, the Holocaust, and Aryanization. They ruled the Banat on the Nazis' behalf between 1941 and 1944, yet their wartime choices led ultimately to their disenfranchisement and persecution following the Nazis' defeat.

Zaki膰 is also the co-editor, with Christopher A. Molnar, of (University of Pittsburgh Press, 2020; paperback edition 2021), an interdisciplinary volume that tackles the varied transfers, influences, connections, and entanglements between Balkan states and Germany and Austria. Zaki膰's chapter in this volume examines how the historical memory of Eugene of Savoy -- the Habsburg general who spearheaded the settlement of German-speakers in parts of Southeast Europe taken from the Ottoman Empire in the 1700s -- was later manipulated by the descendants of those settlers in the early 1900s to first further their community's Nazification and later exculpate their collaboration with the Third Reich.

Zaki膰 has had research articles published in The Journal of Contemporary History and Holocaust and Genocide Studies. She is the Associate Editor for Book Reviews with the journal Central European History.

Teaching

Mirna Zaki膰 teaches classes on the political, social, and cultural history of modern Germany and Europe, with a focus on the Third Reich, World War II, the Holocaust, and their postwar legacies. Her courses include:

  • HIST 1220: Western Civilization: Modernity from 1500
  • HIST 2220 Europe in the Twentieth Century
  • HIST 3681: Germany in the 20th Century
  • HIST 3682: Nazi Germany
  • HIST 3683: Germany between East and West since 1945
  • HIST 3770: The Holocaust
  • HIST 4770: Perspectives on the Holocaust (Capstone)