Sunday, 31 May 2026

Roman Duda: A History of Polish Mathematics. A Cultural Perspective from Origins to Modernity. Peter Lang 2026.

Roman Duda: A History of Polish Mathematics. A Cultural Perspective from Origins to Modernity. Peter Lang 2026. ISBN (Hardcover): 9783631877647

Summary

The book traces the history of mathematics in the Polish lands from pagan times (the tenth century AD) to the present, with particular attention to the era inaugurated by the reforms of the National Education Commission (1773–1794), through the nineteenth and twentieth centuries until recently. Richly illustrated and thoroughly documented, it recounts the many achievements of Polish mathematicians— including the world-renowned interwar Polish School of Mathematics—alongside the great tragedies, notably the losses caused by the Second World War, as well as the arduous post-war revival. A book for anyone interested in Polish culture and its achievements.

The Ambiguities of Indoctrination in Russian Universities and Schools

 Russian Analytical Digest (RAD), No. 341: The Ambiguities of Indoctrination in Russian Universities and Schools


Author(s): Ivan Fomin, Julia Khairova, Egor Kozhevnikov, Ella Rossman, Nina Zakharkina-Berezner

Editor(s): Fabian Burkhardt, Vassily Klimentov, Robert Orttung, Jeronim Perović, Heiko Pleines, Hans-Henning Schröder

Series: Russian Analytical Digest (RAD)

Issue: 341

Publisher(s): Center for Security Studies (CSS), ETH Zürich; Research Centre for East European Studies (FSO), University of Bremen; Institute for European, Russian and Eurasian Studies (IERES); Center for Eastern European Studies (CEES), University of Zurich

Publication Year: 2026

This issue examines state ideologisation and its implementation in contemporary Russian education and society. First, Ivan Fomin et al. analyse the “Foundations of Russian Statehood” university course, arguing that Putinism relies on a “thin statism” rather than a coherent doctrine. Next, Ella Rossman explores the strategic incoherence of Russia’s “traditional values” ideology, showing how its ambiguous mix of Orthodox neoconservatism and Soviet legacies struggles with direct youth indoctrination. Finally, Nina Zakharkina-Berezner investigates the militarisation of Russian schools, detailing how some teachers employ adaptive strategies to maintain professional autonomy amid ideological pressure.

Download:

https://css.ethz.ch/content/dam/ethz/special-interest/gess/cis/center-for-securities-studies/pdfs/russiananalyticaldigest-341.pdf


History of Science and Biographical Studies 2026 No.1 - Історія науки і біографістика 2026 №1

 History of Science and Biographical Studies 2026 No.1 - Історія науки і біографістика 2026 №1 is online! Ukrainian with English abstracts



Open access: https://inb.dnsgb.com.ua/2026-1/  // https://inb.dnsgb.com.ua/2026-1/en/

Tuesday, 26 May 2026

CFP: Life Reform Movements in the Baltics and East Central Europe: Local and Global Perspectives, c. 1860–1930

Call for Papers

Life Reform Movements in the Baltics and East Central Europe: Local and Global Perspectives, c. 1860–1930


A joint conference organized by the Centre for Baltic and East European Studies (CBEES) at Södertörn University, the Herder Institute for Historical Research on East Central Europe, the Institute for the Culture and History of the Germans in Northeast Europe (IKGN e.V.),

and the Martin Opitz Library

Venue: Södertörn University (Stockholm, Sweden)

Date: February 18–19, 2027


In the last decades of the 19th century, a wave of issue-driven life reform movements emerged across Europe and America, particularly in the areas of nutrition, clothing, consumption, housing, healthcare and moral reform. These movements both accompanied and critiqued processes of industrialization, urbanization, mass communication, and broader societal change. The rapidly evolving modern ways of life, especially in large cities, were often perceived as flawed or problematic. In response, life reform movements promoted alternative ways of living. Campaigns for animal welfare and temperance, as well as tobacco abstention and vegetarianism, combined countercultural agendas with a strong commitment to social reform. Abolitionist movements, meanwhile, criticized bourgeois double standards and condemned trafficking and prostitution as consequences of poverty and wider social inequalities. More broadly, life reform movements responded to the environmental challenges posed by industrialization and urban growth by advocating a return to nature.


This conference approaches these developments as transimperial, translocal, and transnational—if not global—phenomena. While they emerged in multiethnic and multicultural societies of Eastern and Central Europe, they were also shaped by regional and local particularities. We understand life reform movements as responses to political, socioeconomic, and cultural transformations, while at the same time reflecting the specific trajectories of modernity in Eastern Europe. They were closely intertwined with processes of imperial decline and nation-building that accompanied the collapse of the German, Habsburg, and Romanov Empires. As a result, national modes of thinking both influenced these movements and were, in turn, reshaped by them, alongside the impact of Soviet ideology.


The conference examines these movements in their horizontal entanglements and their transnational and transimperial dimensions, viewing them as social and cultural phenomena shaped by the specific contexts of different societies and communities. Through the lens of life reform movements, it also focuses on people, non-human actors, ideas, practices, infrastructures and materialities, including art, literature and media. We aim to explore the circulation, transfer, and fusion of life reform ideas and practices across boundaries—whether national, cultural, imperial, ideological, social, physical, or environmental.


We also want to highlight interactions and (dis)connections, as well as tensions and conflicts, between different life reform movements, paying particular attention to their broader societal effects and to the ways in which they were shaped by specific spatial and contextual settings.

Moreover, the conference aims to advance the discussion on the epistemological dimensions of knowledge production about life reform movements by reflecting on conflicting interpretations of sources, silences in the archives, and the challenges posed by overlooked or marginalized historical sources and phenomena.


We warmly welcome proposals on these and other topics closely related to the conference’s themes, and invite contributions drawing on a wide range of disciplines, theories, methodologies, and primary sources.

Topics and fields

- gender / sexual / moral reform

- social conditions and hygiene

- youth / education

- environment (housing, interiors, including living conditions)

- animal welfare, anti-vivisection

- consumption: temperance, dietary reform, vegetarianism

- garden cities and their aesthetics

- life reform and science, religion, vernacular knowledge, beliefs.


Please send your abstract of max. 500 words and a brief CV of 300 words until July 30, 2026 to: forum@herder-institut.de

We will inform the selected participants until September 1, 2026.

To facilitate discussion, we kindly ask participants to submit an extended abstract (5–10 pages) outlining their main arguments until February 1, 2027.

Participants are invited to submit a chapter up to 9000 words including references and annotations following the conference until July 30, 2027.

Deadlines:

- Abstract of max. 500 words: July 30, 2026

- Extended abstract: February 1, 2027

- Book chapter: July 30, 2027


CFP: Parallel Memories: People, Place and Environments in the Baltic States

 Call for Papers

Fourth Annual BASEES Baltic Study Group Workshop

Parallel Memories: People, Place and Environments in the Baltic States

Online, 30-31 October 2026


More: https://creeca.wisc.edu/academic-opportunity-fourth-annual-basees-baltic-study-group-workshop/

Sunday, 24 May 2026

CFP: Into the larger world: global ventures of the Eastern Bloc automotive industry in late socialism & early post-socialism

 Call for Papers:

Into the larger world: global ventures of the Eastern Bloc automotive industry in late socialism & early post-socialism

DL: 30.06.2026// Conference date: 5-6.10.2026

Venue: Villa Noel-CEREFREA, Bucharest

https://sites.google.com/view/globv/cfp?authuser=0

Fourth Baltic Conference on the Environmental Humanities and Social Sciences, BALTEHUMS IV: Worlds in Relation

 We are pleased to announce that the Fourth Baltic Conference on the Environmental Humanities and Social Sciences, BALTEHUMS IV: Worlds in Relation, will take place in Riga, Latvia, on 1-3 December 2026, hosted by the University of Latvia and the Baltic Studies Centre. The call for contributions is now open!


This year’s theme, Worlds in Relation, invites us to think with the Baltic Sea region as a landscape of transitions and intertwined histories and to explore how changing relations between humans, nonhumans, and environments are narrated, negotiated and tended across time. We welcome contributions from environmental humanities, social sciences, and related fields, including work on environmental histories and memories; seasonal rhythms and winter histories; water cultures and hydrosocial perspectives; climate change and biodiversity loss; human-animal relations and multispecies commons; everyday environmental practices and ecological knowledges; infrastructures and interventions in land and water; environmental philosophy and ethics of care; and artistic, literary, and sensory engagements with more‑than‑human worlds.

Abstracts of up to 300 words should be submitted via the online platform by 15 June 2026. The conference will be held on‑site in Riga, at the House of Science of the University of Latvia, and in keeping with BALTEHUMS tradition, there is no conference fee.  Further details, including submission links, can be found on the conference website: https://eztf.lu.lv/baltehums-iv/ 

We are currently finalising the keynote programme and other event details, including opportunities for more informal exchanges during the conference days and will share updates with you over the coming months. 

We would be very grateful if you could circulate this call through your networks and encourage colleagues, students and collaborators who work on the Baltic region (broadly understood) to submit proposals.

With warm greetings,

Anita Zariņa

Kati Lindström

on behalf of the BALTEHUMS IV organising committees

Roman Duda: A History of Polish Mathematics. A Cultural Perspective from Origins to Modernity. Peter Lang 2026.

Roman Duda: A History of Polish Mathematics. A Cultural Perspective from Origins to Modernity. Peter Lang 2026. ISBN (Hardcover): 9783631877...