Javascript must be enabled to continue!
From the Objects to the Actors of Restitution: Jewish Agency in the Nazi-Era Looted Art and Artefact Restitution Field
View through CrossRef
Scholarship on the restitution of art and artefacts looted during the Nazi era has predominantly focused on objects rather than the actors who have shaped this field. This article adopts an actor-oriented approach to examine the agency of Jewish cultural brokers formative to restitution processes since the 1950s. Drawing on interviews conducted with fifteen Jewish cultural brokers from 2022 to 2025 and archival research at the Leo Baeck Institute Archives in New York, it traces how Jewish actors have pioneered and transformed the restitution field. The research reveals two phases of restitution work. In the first phase (1950s–1990s), Jewish lawyers and organisations established legal frameworks for restitution claims. In the second phase (late twentieth century to the present), second- and third-generation Jewish actors shifted the field from national toward moral and global frameworks to emphasise ‘just and fair solutions’. Contemporary Jewish cultural brokers understand their work as both personal heritage practice and moral obligation. They assert agency, seeking not merely the return of objects but the restoration of marginalised stories to history. This actor-centric approach reveals restitution as a processual, relational, and spatial practice of heritage-making that encompasses voice, recognition, and collective memory. By centring Jewish agency, the study demonstrates how marginalised populations can transform institutional fields, offering new perspectives on cultural heritage as an active, lived process rather than a static product of the past.
Title: From the Objects to the Actors of Restitution: Jewish Agency in the Nazi-Era Looted Art and Artefact Restitution Field
Description:
Scholarship on the restitution of art and artefacts looted during the Nazi era has predominantly focused on objects rather than the actors who have shaped this field.
This article adopts an actor-oriented approach to examine the agency of Jewish cultural brokers formative to restitution processes since the 1950s.
Drawing on interviews conducted with fifteen Jewish cultural brokers from 2022 to 2025 and archival research at the Leo Baeck Institute Archives in New York, it traces how Jewish actors have pioneered and transformed the restitution field.
The research reveals two phases of restitution work.
In the first phase (1950s–1990s), Jewish lawyers and organisations established legal frameworks for restitution claims.
In the second phase (late twentieth century to the present), second- and third-generation Jewish actors shifted the field from national toward moral and global frameworks to emphasise ‘just and fair solutions’.
Contemporary Jewish cultural brokers understand their work as both personal heritage practice and moral obligation.
They assert agency, seeking not merely the return of objects but the restoration of marginalised stories to history.
This actor-centric approach reveals restitution as a processual, relational, and spatial practice of heritage-making that encompasses voice, recognition, and collective memory.
By centring Jewish agency, the study demonstrates how marginalised populations can transform institutional fields, offering new perspectives on cultural heritage as an active, lived process rather than a static product of the past.
Related Results
Jewish Humor
Jewish Humor
Jewish humor is a vast field of Jewish studies that includes many aspects, including different periods, different types, different contents, and a variety of languages in different...
Antisemitism, Christian Ambivalence, and the Holocaust
Antisemitism, Christian Ambivalence, and the Holocaust
The twelve essays comprising this volume originated with a two-week workshop sponsored by the Center for Advanced Historical Studies at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum ...
Jewish Collaborators in the Holocaust
Jewish Collaborators in the Holocaust
There is no issue in the history of the Jews during and after the Holocaust that has provoked stronger emotional reactions than the phenomenon of Jewish collaboration with the Nazi...
Jewish Children During the Holocaust
Jewish Children During the Holocaust
Children deemed as “Aryan” by Nazi ideology epitomized the future of a unified and pure “Aryan” racial community. On the other hand, Nazi ideology and policies targeted “non-Aryan”...
Jewish Diaspora
Jewish Diaspora
The works included in this bibliography describe Jewish diaspora from various analytical and disciplinary perspectives and touch on a wide range of historical contexts. The attempt...
Jewish Art, Modern and Contemporary
Jewish Art, Modern and Contemporary
This article takes a minimalist approach to the designation of “Jewish” in the category of “Jewish art,” focusing primarily on works that directly engage the modern Jewish experien...
October 7, One Year Later: Resilience and Coping Among Jews in Germany Amid Rising Antisemitism and Collective Trauma
October 7, One Year Later: Resilience and Coping Among Jews in Germany Amid Rising Antisemitism and Collective Trauma
The October 7, 2023 Hamas attack on Israel marked a significant turning point for Jewish communities worldwide, including in Germany. This study explored the experiences, perceptio...
“Einstein’s Dentist” (Hans Sachs) and Restitution Claims Concerning a Nazi-Looted Poster Collection
“Einstein’s Dentist” (Hans Sachs) and Restitution Claims Concerning a Nazi-Looted Poster Collection
This article delves into the ongoing issues surrounding the restitution of artwork stolen by the Nazi regime during the Second World War. It highlights the less-explored case of Ge...

