Sunday, 12 July 2026

*Second International Conference on Early Women Psychoanalysts*

 *Second International Conference on Early Women Psychoanalysts*


The International Association for Spielrein Studies is pleased to announce

the Second

International Conference on Early Women Psychoanalysts, dedicated to women

who engaged with psychoanalysis before the end of World War II. The

conference will be held online on April 10–11, 2027.



Participation is free for students and only $15 for all other attendees.



Selected contributions from the conference will be considered for inclusion

in a second edited volume associated with the Early Women Psychoanalysts

project, edited by Klara Naszkowska. For further details and the Call for

Papers please visit:

https://www.spielreinassociation.org/conference-early-women-psychoanalysts


History of the The Vienna School of Art History

 馃摀 The second part of the proceedings from the conference dedicated to the Vienna School of Art History is out!

The latest volume of The Edgar Wind Journal (Volume 10), edited by Tom谩拧 Mur谩r from the Institute of Art History of the Czech Academy of Sciences together with Fabio Tononi, brings a fresh perspective on the thought of the fundamental Viennese art historian Alois Riegl, to whom last year's Prague conference "The Vienna School of Art History IV: f眉r Riegl / gegen Riegl" was dedicated.

馃敆 The proceedings are available online: https://www.edgarwindjournal.eu/current-issue/

Call for Papers: 14th Biennial European Society for Environmental History (ESEH) Conference

  Call for Papers: 14th Biennial European Society for Environmental History (ESEH) Conference

"Environmental History Beyond Disciplinary Boundaries"

 Salzburg, Austria | 7-10 September 2027

 The deadline for submissions is 15 October 2026, 23:59 CET.

More: https://eseh.org/cfp-14th-biennial-european-society-for-environmental-history-eseh-conference/

Wednesday, 8 July 2026

Nodl, Martin: Prague, Jan Hus and Prague University

Nodl, Martin: Prague, Jan Hus and Prague University. Prague: Karolinum 2026. ISBN: 978-80-246-5636-6


The Bohemian Reformation — the reformation before the Reformation — offered a radical solution to the spiritual and institutional crisis of the late medieval church at the end of the fourteenth century. The beginnings of this reform are distinctly connected with Prague University, which drew many educated people to Prague from across Europe. Through Jan Hus — a former Prague University student who became its rector in 1409/1410 — the Bohemian Reformation gave rise to a new, radical ecclesiology. Not only did Hus challenge the hierarchical system of the church, but under his influence, the Bohemian Reformation acquired a specific national shape, and elements of Czech messianism emerged with the university.

The book Prague, Jan Hus and Prague University analyzes these processes within Prague University, as well as its limits and restrictive consequences for the Bohemian Reformation and Czech medieval society. Emphasis is placed on showing how Prague and the university became a world that successfully struggled for its own existence in late medieval Christian Europe.


Sunday, 5 July 2026

Sylwia Konarska-Zimnicka: „Kiedy krew puszcza膰, kiedy ba艅ki stawia膰…”. Jatromatematyka (medycyna astrologiczna) w wiekach 艣rednich [“When to perform bloodletting, when to apply cupping…” Jatromathematics (astrological medicine) in the Middle Ages].

 Sylwia Konarska-Zimnicka: „Kiedy krew puszcza膰, kiedy ba艅ki stawia膰…”. Jatromatematyka (medycyna astrologiczna) w wiekach 艣rednich [“When to perform bloodletting, when to apply cupping…” Jatromathematics (astrological medicine) in the Middle Ages]. Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Jana Kochanowskiego w Kielcach 2025, ISBN 978-83-8377-057-4, e-ISBN 978-83-8377-058-1

Obserwacja cia艂 niebieskich od zawsze stanowi艂a istotny element ludzkiej egzystencji. Cia艂om niebieskim od zawsze przypisywano moce oddzia艂ywania na wszelkie aspekty ziemskiego 偶ycia, tak偶e na kwestie zdrowia i choroby. Medycyna astrologiczna zwana jatromatematyk膮 by艂a znacz膮c膮 cz臋艣ci膮 astrologii naturalnej, pod pewnymi wzgl臋dami aprobowanej tak偶e przez Ko艣ci贸艂. Osadzona by艂a na dw贸ch fundamentalnych filarach, tj. medycynie humoralnej i tzw. teorii melotezji, kt贸ra bazowa艂a na korelacji pomi臋dzy cia艂ami niebieskimi a poszczeg贸lnymi cz臋艣ciami i narz膮dami cia艂a ludzkiego. Jatromatematyka by艂a nie tylko teoretycznie rozwijana o czym 艣wiadcz膮 liczne zachowane dzie艂a, ale znajdowa艂a tak偶e praktyczne zastosowanie w kalendarzach, prognostykach astrologicznych i horoskopach.

Spis tre艣ci

Wst臋p . . . 7

ROZDZIA艁 I

Narodziny jatromatematyki . . . . . 15

Teoria humoralna . . . . . .. . . . 19

Melotezja i wynikaj膮ce z niej implikacje (choroby i dolegliwo艣ci) . . 34

ROZDZIA艁 II

Jatromatematyka w kr臋gu uczonych arabsko-muzu艂ma艅sko-偶ydowskich.. 75

Rozw贸j astrologii . . . . . . .. . . . . 80

Rozw贸j medycyny . . . . . 92

Rozw贸j jatromatematyki . . . . . . 99

Jatromatematyka w dzie艂ach astrologicznych . . . . . 115

Medycyna talizmaniczna . . . . . . . 150

W kierunku 艂aci艅skiego Zachodu… . . . 155

ROZDZIA艁 III

Jatromatematyka w Europie chrze艣cija艅skiej . . . . . . . . . . 159

Jatromatematyka nieakademicka . . . .. . . 159

Uczelnie, uczeni i ich dzie艂a . . .. . . . . . 167

Prognostykarstwo . . . . .. . . . 212

Plagi i zarazy . . . . . 223

Jatromatematyka na dworach . . . . . . 234

ROZDZIA艁 IV

Jatromatematyka w Polsce . . . . . . .. . 255

Medycyna i astrologia na uniwersytecie krakowskim . . . . . 255

Noty i traktaty jatromatematyczne . . . . . . . . .. 273

Introductoria astronomiae vel astrologiae . . . . .. . . 289

Prognostyki i kalendarze astrologiczne . . . . . 296

M贸r . . . . . . .. . . 317

Zielniki . . . . . . 327

Jatromatematyka – mi臋dzy akademick膮 teori膮 a dworsk膮 praktyk膮 . . 333

Zako艅czenie . .. . 343

Bibliografia . . . . . . 357

殴r贸d艂a r臋kopi艣mienne…..357

Inkunabu艂y i stare druki………358

殴r贸d艂a drukowane ….365

Monografie i opracowania….380


Migl臈 Bareikyt臈, Svitlana Matviyenko & Taras Nazaruk (eds.) Histories and legacies of digital infrastructures in Eastern and Central Europe: from Soviet cybernetics to regional Internet histories

 Migl臈 Bareikyt臈, Svitlana Matviyenko & Taras Nazaruk (eds.) Histories and legacies of digital infrastructures in Eastern and Central Europe: from Soviet cybernetics to regional Internet histories (= Internet Histories, Volume 10, Issue 1-2 (2026))



Bareikyt臈, Migl臈, Svitlana Matviyenko, and Taras Nazaruk. 2026. “Introduction: Histories and Legacies of Digital Infrastructures in Eastern and Central Europe: From Soviet Cybernetics to Regional Internet Histories.” Internet Histories 10 (1–2): 1–10. doi:10.1080/24701475.2026.2642542.


Rindzevi膷i奴t臈, Egl臈. 2026. “De-Centring the History of the Internet in the Soviet Union: Computers, Networks and the Infrastructural Politics of Digitality in Lithuania.” Internet Histories 10 (1–2): 11–28. doi:10.1080/24701475.2026.2639224.



Herrmann, Felix. 2026. “No Digital Networks without Computers. The Shortcomings of the Soviet Computer Industry.” Internet Histories 10 (1–2): 29–44. doi:10.1080/24701475.2026.2642544.



Velmet, Aro. 2026. “Database Politics: Informational Infrastructure and Network Utopias in Soviet and Post-Soviet Estonia.” Internet Histories 10 (1–2): 45–64. doi:10.1080/24701475.2026.2639221.



Da Silva, Erik. 2026. “Networked Isolation: Albania’s Computer Network History during the Cold War and the Transition.” Internet Histories 10 (1–2): 65–81. doi:10.1080/24701475.2026.2639223.



Hilstob, Kayla. 2026. “Exporting Obsolescence: Canada’s Nortel Networks in Eastern and Central Europe.” Internet Histories 10 (1–2): 82–97. doi:10.1080/24701475.2026.2639244.



Dauc茅, Fran莽oise. 2026. “The Great Game. How Video Games Servers Map Ukraine in Wartime.” Internet Histories 10 (1–2): 98–116. doi:10.1080/24701475.2026.2662716.



Makhortykh, Mykola. 2026. “Constructing the (in)Security: Sociotechnical Imaginaries of Cybersecurity in Ukraine before and after Russia’s Full-Scale Invasion.” Internet Histories 10 (1–2): 117–34. doi:10.1080/24701475.2026.2639228.



Phan, Vu Thuy Anh. 2026. “Assemblages of Occupation: The Politics of Internet Resource Transfers in Wartime Ukraine.” Internet Histories 10 (1–2): 135–51. doi:10.1080/24701475.2026.2639245.


Bareikyt臈, Migl臈, and Johanna Hiebl. 2026. “Hybrid Frontiers: Resilient Investigative Data and Media Practices and Tactical Avoidance in the Baltics.” Internet Histories 10 (1–2): 152–69. doi:10.1080/24701475.2026.2639222.


Shumylovych, Bohdan, Taras Nazaruk, Oleksa Baliura, and Maryna Malchenyuk. 2026. “UaNetHistory Project: Documenting the First Decades of Ukraine’s Internet. An Interview with Olexa Baliura and Maryna Malchenyuk.” Internet Histories 10 (1–2): 170–81. doi:10.1080/24701475.2026.2663687.

Saturday, 4 July 2026

Call for papers: Cartographies of Crises

Call for papers: Cartographies of Crises: Mapping Conflict, Disaster, and Uncertainty (19th–21st Centuries)


The international workshop Cartographies of Crises: Mapping Conflict, Disaster, and Uncertainty (19th–21st Centuries) organised by the Institute of History of the Czech Academy of Sciences (Prague, Czechia) and the University of Erfurt, Centre for Transcultural Studies / Perthes Collection (Gotha, Germany) will take place on 26th–27th November 2026 at the Centre for Transcultural Studies / Perthes Collection (CG2 - Pagenhaus, Schlossplatz 1, Gotha).

Call for Papers (https://www.hiu.cas.cz/user_uploads/badatelum_i_verejnosti/udalosti/2026_11_26_27_workshop_cartographies_of_crises/cfp_cartographies_of_crises_workshop_2026.pdf)


Thematic mapping has played a crucial role in visualising, interpreting, and communicating physical and socio-economic phenomena. This has been particularly true in times of crises, when maps have been used to represent wars, forced migrations, epidemics, environmental disasters, social upheavals, political conflicts, and anticipatedthreat scenarios. In such contexts, maps have served not only as instruments of documentation but also as analytical tools, persuasive arguments, and means of intervention.

This workshop focuses on the cartographies of crises from the 19th to the 21st century and seeks to advance research on the thematic mapping of crises. Contributions are invited that engage with a broad range of cartographic practices, from individual and hand-drawn maps to official state mapping, thematic atlases, recent digital mapping projects, and approaches associated with Historical GIS and Digital Humanities.

Particular attention will be paid to the ways in which maps represent experiences of uncertainty, disruption, displacement, and shifting identities, as well as to the role of cartography in shaping public perceptions of crises and historical memory. Proposals are welcome that explore how actors across the political and social spectrum have used cartography in response to different forms of crisis – from state and institutional mapping efforts to grassroots and counter-mapping practices – and how these maps both reflected

and shaped individual and collective understandings of phenomena such as war, displacement, epidemics, and environmental disasters.

The workshop seeks to foster interdisciplinary dialogue on this specific category of cartographic sources and to encourage comparative perspectives across different historical periods and world regions. Contributions focusing on non-Western actors and cartographic traditions are particularly welcome. The study of how crises have been mapped and visualised offers new insights into both individual and collective responses to situations of threat and uncertainty, as well as into the role of maps in shaping processes of governance, intervention, and social transformation. The topic is particularly relevant today, as the study of historical crisis mapping deepens our understanding of the visual languages through which contemporary crises are represented, interpreted, and governed.

Contributions addressing, but not limited to, the following themes are invited:

Maps as analytical tools and instruments of power and governance: crisis management, political argumentation, propaganda, real-time mapping during ongoing crises and disasters, and the role of state and institutional actors;

Visual languages and cartographic conventions: standardisation, symbols, techniques of representation;

Counter-mapping and grassroots practices: non-institutional actors, communities, and individuals as producers of crisis cartographies; maps as tools of resistance, negotiation, and contestation;

Methodological and comparative perspectives: Historical GIS, Digital Humanities, digital mapping projects, transnational approaches, and studies of non-Western cartographic traditions.

The deadline for submitting abstracts (300 words) and a short CV is 10 September 2026. Authors will be notified of the acceptance or rejection of their proposals by 20 September 2026. Each participant will have 20 minutes for their presentation, followed by discussion.

Please submit your proposal using the online form available at: https://forms.gle/Sg1kyeNoSyH5Rukv7

There is no registration fee. To facilitate international participation, the organisers will cover accommodation costs for all accepted speakers. Travel expenses will be covered either partially or in full, depending on available funding.

Organisers:

Jitka Mo膷i膷kov谩 (Institute of History of the Czech Academy of Sciences): mocickova@hiu.cas.cz

Dominic Keyssner (University of Erfurt): dominic.keyssner@uni-erfurt.de

The workshop is organised with the support of the Strategy AV21 research programme Identities in the World of Wars and Crises (Czech Academy of Sciences, 2026) and the University of Erfurt.


*Second International Conference on Early Women Psychoanalysts*

 *Second International Conference on Early Women Psychoanalysts* The International Association for Spielrein Studies is pleased to announce ...