Thursday 29 September 2022

Magdalena Zdrodowska: Telefon, kino i cyborgi. Wzajemne relacje niesłyszenia i techniki [Telephone, Cinema and Cyborgs. Relations between deafness and technology].

 Magdalena Zdrodowska: Telefon, kino i cyborgi. Wzajemne relacje niesłyszenia i techniki [Telephone, Cinema and Cyborgs. Relations between deafness and technology]. Kraków: Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Jagiellońskiego 2021. ISBN: 978-83-233-4971-6 / DOI: 10.4467/K7209.10/21.21.15544


Opis książki

Kulturowa historia relacji niesłyszenia i techniki opowiadana jest zazwyczaj wedle utartych i wielokrotnie powtarzanych scenariuszy, w których klarownie rozpisano role wynalazców, producentów i konsumentów. W opowieściach tych osoby niesłyszące ‒ podobnie jak osoby z niepełnosprawnościami w ogóle – nieodmiennie zajmują pozycję konsumentów.


Związki niesłyszenia i techniki są jednak bardziej złożone i niejednoznaczne, a zakwestionowanie patologiczności niesłyszenia i uznanie, że można je traktować jako przejaw ludzkiej różnorodności, pozwala spojrzeć na technikę pod innym kątem. Niesłyszenie staje się wówczas sposobem doświadczania rzeczywistości, który pozwala między innymi w codziennych przedmiotach dostrzegać afordancje odmienne od zwyczajowo uznanych, nierzadko z korzyścią dla słyszących użytkowników.


Książka Telefon, kino i cyborgi. Wzajemne relacje niesłyszenia i techniki oferuje alternatywne ujęcie kulturowej historii techniki oraz spogląda na nią z „głuchych” peryferii. Wskazuje na niesłyszących jako aktywnych i sprawczych aktorów technologicznej zmiany. Przyjęcie takiej optyki pozwala w kinie dostrzec pole bitwy o prawa obywatelskie, w telefonie ujrzeć pierwszy elektryczny aparat słuchowy, a w zaimplantowanych głuchych – cyborgi.


Magdalena Zdrodowska – kulturoznawczyni, pracuje w Instytucie Sztuk Audiowizualnych Uniwersytetu Jagiellońskiego. Prowadzi badania na styku historii techniki, studiów o niepełnosprawności oraz studiów nad głuchotą.

Monday 26 September 2022

"(New) Histories of Science, in and beyond Modern Europe" A special issue of Histories (ISSN 2409-9252).

 "(New) Histories of Science, in and beyond Modern Europe" A special issue of Histories (ISSN 2409-9252).


Histories of Science Communication

by Kristian H. Nielsen

Histories 2022, 2(3), 334-340; https://doi.org/10.3390/histories2030024 - 30 Aug 2022


Towards a Negative History of Science: The Unknown, Errors, Ignorance, and the “Pseudosciences”

by Lukas Rathjen and Jonas Stähelin

Histories 2022, 2(2), 146-156; https://doi.org/10.3390/histories2020011 - 20 May 2022


Digital Perspectives in History

by Anna Siebold and Matteo Valleriani

Histories 2022, 2(2), 170-177; https://doi.org/10.3390/histories2020013 - 04 Jun 2022


History of the Humanities

by Rens Bod

Histories 2022, 2(2), 178-184; https://doi.org/10.3390/histories2020014 - 17 Jun 2022


Histories of Recent Social Science

by Philippe Fontaine

Histories 2022, 2(3), 197-206; https://doi.org/10.3390/histories2030016 - 06 Jul 2022


Domesticities and the Sciences

by Donald L. Opitz

Histories 2022, 2(3), 259-269; https://doi.org/10.3390/histories2030020 - 02 Aug 2022


Research Foci in the History of Science in Past Islamicate Societies

by Sonja Brentjes

by stories 2022, 2(3), 270-287; https://doi.org/10.3390/histories2030021 - 04 Aug 2022


New Objects, Questions, and Methods in the History of Mathematics

by Jenny Boucard and Thomas Morel

Histories 2022, 2(3), 341-351; https://doi.org/10.3390/histories2030025 - 10 Sep 2022 


Imperial Science in Central and Eastern Europe

by Jan Surman

Histories 2022, 2(3), 352-361; https://doi.org/10.3390/histories2030026 - 14 Sep 2022

Drozdová Vrchotická, Hana: Zápisník Tagebuch – Reisen Emila Holuba jako jeho badatelská prvotina [Emil Holub's Tagebuch-Reisen as original of his research]. Praha: Karolinum 2022. ISBN: 978-80-246-4634-3

Drozdová Vrchotická, Hana: Zápisník Tagebuch – Reisen Emila Holuba jako jeho badatelská prvotina [Emil Holub's Tagebuch-Reisen as original of his research]. Praha: Karolinum 2022. ISBN: 978-80-246-4634-3


Kniha přináší kritickou edici deníkových záznamů, které si jako student lékařské fakulty Karlo-Ferdinandovy univerzity (1866–1872) pořizoval cestovatel Emil Holub během svých prázdninových výprav do okolí Pátku nad Ohří. Převážně německy psaný deník obsahuje podrobné informace o místní historii, topografii, fauně a flóře a doprovází ho množství ilustrací. Jeho text je opatřen českým překladem a doplněn rozsáhlou úvodní studií.

Thursday 22 September 2022

RECET Transformative Podcast Episode 23: The Revolutionary University?

RECET TRANSFORMATIVE PODCAST EPISODE 23: THE REVOLUTIONARY UNIVERSITY? URL: HTTPS://WWW.RECET.AT/PODCAST/DETAIL/THE-REVOLUTIONARY-UNIVERSITY .

How did the revolutions around Central and Eastern Europe transform higher education? Less than you might think, suggests Jan Surman (Czech Academy of Sciences). In this episode of the Transformative Podcast, he talks to Rosamund Johnston (RECET) about the disappearance of Marxism-Leninism--if not those who taught it--from universities around the former Eastern Bloc. While often understood as catalysts of revolution, Surman argues that the region’s universities have proved far more resistant to change over the decades that followed than other institutions.

Dr. Jan Surman is a Lumina quaeruntur fellow at the Masaryk Institute and Archives of the Czech Academy of Sciences. He is the author of Universities in Imperial Austria 1848-1918: A Social History of a Multilingual Space (West Lafayette, IN: Purdue University Press, 2018).

Articles alert: Between Westernization and Traditionalism: Central and Eastern European Academia during the Transformation in the 1990s

 mini-thematic section "Between Westernization and Traditionalism: Central and Eastern European Academia during the Transformation in the 1990s," ed. by Jan Surman & Daria Petushkova, Studia Historiae Scientiarum, 21, 2022. Open access.

Surman, J. ., & Petushkova, D. . (2022). Between Westernization and Traditionalism: Central and Eastern European Academia during the Transformation in the 1990s. Studia Historiae Scientiarum, 21. https://doi.org/10.4467/2543702XSHS.22.014.15980 .

Otrishchenko, N. . (2022). Looking Forward, Looking Back: Re-Connecting of Urban Planning Education in Lviv. Studia Historiae Scientiarum, 21. https://doi.org/10.4467/2543702XSHS.22.015.15981 .

Kastenhofer, K. . (2022). Natural Sciences in Academic Vienna in the 1990s: From “[Peripheral] Outpost Near the Iron Curtain” to “Central Hub”. Studia Historiae Scientiarum, 21. https://doi.org/10.4467/2543702XSHS.22.016.15982 .

[Photo: Unfinished building of Ivan Karpenko-Karyi University of Theatre, Cinema and Television in Kyiv, https://renovationmap.org/building/4GrV6]


CFP: Knowledge Production in Displacement and Forced Migration

 CFP: Knowledge Production in Displacement and Forced Migration

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Workshop at the University of California, Santa Barbara | Conveners: Joshua Donovan (GHI Washington | Pacific Office), Vitalij Fastovskij (GHI Washington | Pacific Office), and Vladimir Hamed-Troyansky (University of California, Santa Barbara), April 17&18, 2023


Knowledge Production in Displacement and Forced Migration

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

German Historical Institute Washington, 93106 Santa Barbara (United States)

17.04.2023 - 18.04.2023

Bewerbungsschluss: 15.11.2022


Due, in part, to humanitarian crises in Latin America, Africa, the Middle East, and Asia, scholarship on refugees has proliferated in recent years. A significant number of studies were devoted to understanding the root causes of political, religious, ethnic, gendered, and/or state violence, which often drives displacement and forced migration. Others have focused on how refugees have navigated humanitarian networks and often racialized immigration systems in order to find safe havens. Still others have considered how intersectional identities shape refugee experiences.

Although scholars, states, and non-state actors alike have compiled and produced a substantial amount of knowledge about refugees and displaced peoples, less work has been done to recover the intellectual and cultural currents these populations carry with them and the knowledge that they produce during the processes of transit and resettlement. Owing to the inherently precarious circumstances faced by people who have experienced forced migration, refugees are often seen as actors who have limited agency – as people who were forced from their homes and left to the mercies of humanitarian organizations and host states. However, displaced people preserve, produce, and transmit knowledge in many forms about the places they were forced to leave behind, about their experiences of relocation, and about how to grapple with the legacies of their displacement. We contend that this knowledge production shapes the places left behind, places in which refugees have settled temporarily or permanently, and the broader international community.


This workshop builds on one of the German Historical Institute’s core research foci, migration and knowledge production, along with its recent efforts to historicize the refugee experience in order to better understand the forms of knowledge transmitted and produced by displaced people both past and present. It is intended to be an interdisciplinary workshop open to faculty, recent PhDs, and advanced graduate students in the humanities and social sciences, including but not limited to the fields of history, ethnic and area studies, gender and sexuality studies, political science, anthropology, sociology, and literature studies. The geographic focus of the workshop is open, but we are particularly interested in studies focused on the first half of the twentieth century.


Possible questions to consider include (but are not limited to):

The Nature of Knowledge Production by Refugees and Displaced Peoples

What does refugee knowledge production look like? What forms can it take?

What role does memory play for communities of displaced people?

How does knowledge production by displaced people shape subject formation or notions of communal identity?

Methodological Questions

How can scholars access knowledge production from displaced people ethically and methodologically?

How do factors like time or geography shape knowledge production by refugees and displaced people?

How does the process of transit create a disjuncture in knowledge production? Are there continuities?

Displaced People and Global Human Rights

How do institutions shape knowledge production by refugee communities?

Have refugees shaped global rights discourses? Conversely, have global rights discourses shaped refugee knowledge production?

How can knowledge production help refugee communities navigate humanitarian and migratory systems? How do refugees preserve and transmit this knowledge to others in similarly precarious positions?

How can a better understanding of knowledge production by displaced people shape scholarship on refugees, migration, and/or human rights?


The organizers plan to publish select papers in an edited volume or special journal issue.


Papers will be pre-circulated to allow maximum time for discussion and workshopping. The workshop language will be English. Please upload a brief CV (2-3 pages max) and a proposal of no more than 600 words to our online portal (https://app.smartsheet.com/b/form/bf39004ea3bc4adb9cbd25cffc4ef3fe) by November 15, 2022. Proposals should indicate the contribution’s argument, methods, and sources, as well as its relevance to the workshop topic.


Accommodations will be arranged and paid for by the conference organizers. Participants will make their own travel arrangements; funding subsidies for travel are available upon request for selected scholars, especially those who might not otherwise be able to attend the workshop, including junior scholars, scholars without university affiliations, and those from universities with limited resources. If necessary, we can make arrangements for virtual or hybrid participation as well.


Please contact Heike Friedman (friedman@ghi-dc.org) if you have problems submitting your information online. All other questions pertaining to the workshop and application process should be directed to Joshua Donovan (j.donovan@columbia.edu) or Vitalij Fastovskij (vitalij.fastovskij@uni-muenster.de).

Monday 19 September 2022

Solidarity, Displacement & the University A Workshop in Two Parts Call for Contributions

 Solidarity, Displacement & the University

A Workshop in Two Parts

Call for Contributions 


Part One: Discussing

October 2022 13-14 - Berlin


Part Two: Building 

April 2023 location TBC


Contact - olive@ceu.edu


Concept

Universities are often thought of as places of learning and places of research, but less often as places of solidarity. We believe that access programmes for displaced learners create spaces of solidarity and community from which to think about opening up the university. 


This two-part workshop explores what solidarity with those who have experienced displacement, including asylum seekers and refugees, might mean for teaching, research and the university generally. It does so from the level of the student, teacher, and institution (as well as the interlinkages between the three). Focusing on solidarity naturally entails thinking beyond the borders of the university, to communities, organisations and grassroots initiatives, and how those, in turn, feed back onto institution, teacher and student experiences.


We ask, in what ways does solidarity flow in and through the classroom? How do teachers understand the intersections of pedagogy and solidarity? What kind of solidarity can we expect universities to offer (especially in hostile contexts)?


Format

During the first part of the workshop held in October, participants will come together to discuss their experiences, research, and ideas. In the final session of the workshop we will collectively decide on what type of intervention we wish to make using the proceedings of the workshop, and which form we would like to work with (e.g. a series of academic papers, a collectively written book, a podcast series, a multi-modal website, a conference, policy papers, etc).


In the time between the first and second parts of the workshop, participants will work on their and others’ work, meeting online if needed. 


In the second part of the workshop we will meet to finalise and collectively produce the intervention.


Call for Contributions

The workshop is divided into three streams, reflecting the levels through which we would like to think about solidarity at the university.  Below we include short descriptions on each stream and suggested questions. 


The Student Experience and Teacher Experience streams are open to receive suggestions for contributions. The Institutional Experience stream is by invitation.


Please send 500 word descriptions of your suggested contribution indicating which stream you think it applies to by September 18th 2022 to olive@ceu.edu .


Please note limited funding is available to pay for travel and accommodation. Priority will be given to students and scholars of displaced backgrounds and, if possible, precarious scholars. 


Stream One: Student Experience


Solidarity in and from the classroom 

How does student experience affect teaching, and visa-versa? How  do displaced students who’ve become teachers reflect on being on the other side of the classroom? What types of peer learning takes place within the classroom? How do students support one another through their learning? How can we build learning communities based on cooperation not competition? How do friendships form in the classroom and how do these friendships create support systems? What relationships do students in access programmes have with the wider student body, how does this foster solidarity or not?


Solidarity with those in ‘non-standard’ learning contexts

How does the general living conditions of displaced students affect their learning? How does having an interrupted learning trajectory affect learning when enrolled  in full time education? How do external pressures, including troubling situations in students’ home countries, affect displaced students’ ability to flourish when enrolled in education programmes?


Solidarity and the alumni experience 

What are the medium and long term effects of being in education programmes for displaced learners? How have they affected education and career possibilities? What type of other skills or competencies have been derived? What do ‘refugee education programmes’ in Europe miss?  To what extent can the medium and long term effects of education programmes for displaced learners be ‘measured’? Practically speaking, how can alumni be connected through social media, mailing lists, in-person events, etc.?


We welcome experienced-based and research derived presentations.


For more information or questions please contact the stream organisers: 


Obura Ramein - Ramein_Obura@alumni.ceu.edu


Kutaiba Al Hussein - kutaiba-sc@hotmail.com


Mussa Idris Mussa - kilam2006@gmail.com


Júlia Angyalka Füredi - julia.angyalka@gmail.com


Rohit Sarma - Sarma_Rohit@phd.ceu.edu


Ian M. Cook - CookI@ceu.edu


Stream Two: Teacher Experience


Learner-centred approaches have been important in opening academic work to OLIve students. These approaches recognize where students are coming from and seek to grant autonomy in the learning process from the start. They can thus be seen as modes of creating solidarity at a number of levels, as students become active agents of learning responsible for their own work.


While LCA is a general trend in higher education, OLIve offers new opportunities and challenges around the method as it works with displaced students. From this basis, this panel seeks to explore the following questions: To what extent the LCA is different in the OLIve context?


To what extent can the methodological tools can be transmuted into the OLIve context and back out?


One of the aims of the panel is to understand the teaching methods used within the OLIve framework. The question at stake is: to what extent OLIve classes should reinvent the main learner-centred approaches? We are interested in understanding how pedagogues and mentors need to create specific methods that work only within their OLIve classes.


Another aim of the panel is to contextualise the methods. What came be brought from OLIve to the larger teaching public? Would the methods, syllabi, or contents work in different educational contexts?


Since Aristotle and Erasmus, the topics of focus, internal motivation do not have a unique solution. That is why practical issues must also be tackled. What are the different ways to include the personal narratives vs.personal dimensions of learning? How to approach the text materials and create a differentiated level of work?To what extent can students assign the syllabus? Including assignments? How can this be implemented in practical terms?


We welcome papers on this topic and also non-traditional presentations that involve the participants of the conference.


For questions or clarifications please contact the stream organisers:


Jeffrey Champlin - j.champlin@berlin.bard.edu


Adrian-George Matus - Adrian-George.Matus@alumni.eui.eu


Stream Three: Institution Experience 


This panel focuses on two inter-related topics:


External social or political pressures that impact on universities’ capacity to demonstrate solidarity towards people who have been displaced, and

What are the administrative barriers that exist at universities that impede solidarity in providing access to students who have experienced displacement.

External social and political pressures impacting on university solidarity to displaced peoples


The first topic examines the increasing hostility in Europe and elsewhere to displaced people, and also takes note of the differences between this embedded hostility and the readiness in some sectors to include Ukrainian displaced people in recent years.  A number of people working on fostering solidarity with people displaced from Ukraine have argued that this could be a template for extending solidarity with people displaced from other regions.  What can be learned from current practices of opening up the university for people displaced from Ukraine? Can it be a template for the future for all displaced peoples?


Faced with hostile environments often supported by national governments, those fostering solidarity for displaced people in universities have turned to grassroots migrant rights actors.  What can be learnt about solidarity within and outside the educational arena by connecting to migrant rights actors in civil society? How easy or difficult is it to create and maintain these links? How do HE institutions engage with broader issues?


In this part of the panel, we will start with a roundtable discussion followed by a roundtable design session, the latter intended to foster solutions to the problems identified.


University administrative barriers that impede solidarity with displaced people


Despite its best efforts, universities have come to be attached to well-worn processes of assessing previous learning, registering students and supporting their admissions.  There are important blindspots at universities in terms of recognising how social and economic backgrounds impact access to and success in universities.  In other panels in this conference we look at this issue from the perspective of students and teachers and how to make university classrooms more welcoming environments.  Classrooms are embedded in a broader institution, and the institution’s administratie practices can foster and welcome diversity or can impinge on the diversity that students bring.


A related aspect is how programs designed to foster access are conceived or placed within the university.  Access programs are often seen as tangential parts of the university, part of civic engagement, rather than a key academic program that brings diversity to the student body. 


In this part of the panel we will focus on a roundtable discussion consisting of university administrators with responses from individuals who have both experience of working in access programs and in university administration.  This session will be followed up by a closed working session consisting of university administrators and access program staff to address these issues.


The panel speakers will be selected by invitation. For further information please contact the stream organisers: 


Kerry Bystrom - k.bystrom@berlin.bard.edu


Dumitrita Holdis - holdisd@ceu.edu


Prem Kumar Rajaram - rajaramp@ceu.edu

Vaculínová Marta, Šárovcová Martina, Nachtmannová Alena: Portréty předbělohorských intelektuálů. Portraits of Intellectuals between 1516 and 1620. Praha: Academia 2022. ISBN 978-80-200-3245-4

Vaculínová Marta, Šárovcová Martina, Nachtmannová Alena: Portréty předbělohorských intelektuálů. Portraits of Intellectuals between 1516 and 1620. Praha: Academia 2022. ISBN 978-80-200-3245-4


Monografie přináší mezioborový pohled na portréty učenců, lékařů, kněží, básníků a dalších intelektuálních profesí raného novověku. Dochované podobizny ve starých tiscích a rukopisech byly prozkoumány z pohledu dějin umění a dějin odívání, pozornost je věnována také doprovodným textům. Součástí publikace je rovněž souborný katalog více než stovky portrétů, z nichž mnohé jsou publikovány vůbec poprvé. Autorky si všímají sebeprezentace intelektuálů, ať už se projevuje angažováním kvalitního umělce, v elegantním oblečení, či v pochvalných básních na osobnost nebo dílo zobrazeného.

Thursday 15 September 2022

Call for Papers: “Minority science” in the short 20th century: Imagining science from the margins of academia. March 30-31, Prague.

 When the roars of World War I went silent, the process of redrawing social, cultural, and geographic borders began. Gradually, continental empires seemed a thing of the past, and the idea of the national state seemed to have prevailed – even if overseas empires still remained strong.  Socialism became a legitimate approach in academia, with various versions in different countries. Women were increasingly accepted as academics and researchers, a process proceeding at different speeds across the globe.

The process of redrawing and rethinking  was obviously a slow one, with a wide geographical variety. In Central Europe, states born from empires were multicultural but not automatically open to scholars of other national identifications/loyalties. Czechoslovakia, home to Czech, Slovak, German, Ukrainian, Russian, and Jewish scholars, can be contrasted with Poland, where more Ukrainian scholars taught at clandestine institutions than at official ones. Other countries, like France or Great Britain, retained their colonies and followed policies of imperial othering. Depending on the country and political situation, Socialist scholars could be part of the academia or expelled from it due to their convictions (Horthy-Era Hungary or McCarthy-Era USA). In Socialist countries, on the contrary, liberal but also conservative scholars were excluded or at least othered.

While historians often look at these processes based on the binary exclusion versus inclusion, others have claimed that being an “other” can also be a privilege, allowing a more distant and critical perception of one’s surrounding society. Michel Foucault, Simone Weil, and Jacques Derrida are examples of scholars for whom the outsider position is more a blessing than a curse. A less prominent example is Stefan Baley (Stepan Balej), Polish-Ukrainian psychologist, the author of a number of publications on personality and science. “Minority,” “other,” or “otherness” are of course not innocent concepts, yet they are not set in stone either; they mix legality, ascription, self-perception, numbers, statistics, and individual biographies. Therefore, an integral part of our endeavour is to uncover how (academic) power relations are entangled with those in the society at large.

Our conference wants to look at how cultural outsiders, émigrés, refugees, and members of minorities imagined the sciences and their own position in them. We are interested in contributions discussing scholars who were (and/or regarded themselves as) outsiders/minorities on account of their cultural, gender, political or social identifications. Questions include, but are not limited to:

How did minority scholars see their position within academic scholarship and its institutions? How did they define their minority-ness and otherness (e.g. representatives of “small nations” seeing themselves as a minor part of international science, members of ethnic and/or national minorities within nationalising states, etc.).

What strategies did these scholars pursue to meet their goals (epistemic, political, career-oriented)?

What alternative epistemologies did minority scholars develop or propose? How did they respond to epistemic proposals by mainstream scholars?

How did minority institutions position themselves to the state-dominant institutions?

How did minority and majority scholars differ in their strategies of asserting credibility, building networks, publishing, etc.? For instance, did they demonstratively publish in mainstream media to assert their status within the state, did they search for alternatives, or both?

Can we talk about the specificity of a “minority science,” and how can the mainstream science narrative – our received narrative – be challenged through it?

Please send your abstract of no more than 350 words and a short biographical note by 15 October 2022 to Jan Surman (surman@mua.cas.cz).

The conference is organised by the project “Images of science” in Czechoslovakia 1918-1945-1968, financed by Lumina Quaeruntur fellowship of the Czech Academy of Sciences and hosted by the Masaryk Institute and Archives of the Czech Academy of Sciences.

The conference will take place 30–31 March 2023, in Prague, Czech Republic. Travel costs and accommodations for speakers will be provided. We plan the conference to be in person. Language of the conference is English.


[Image: Professors and students of the Faculty of Law and Social and Economic Sciences of the UVU in Munich. 1948 originally printed in "Golden Jubilee of the Ukrainian Free University" Cleveland-Ohio, 1972. Here from Central State Archives of Foreign Archival Ucrainica (TsDAZU), general fond, inv. No. 911]

ACTA MEDICORUM POLONORUM 12:2022, 1

Open access

URL: http://www.actamedicorum.ump.edu.pl/category.php?level=2&id=31 .

AUC HISTORIA UNIVERSITATIS CAROLINAE PRAGENSIS, Vol 61 No 2 (2021) is online (OPEN ACCESS)

URL: https://karolinum.cz/en/journal/auc-historia-universitatis-carolinae-pragensis/current


Archivní vzdělávání v Československu 1918–1938: sudetoněmecké souvislosti

Tomáš Velička

Výstava soudobé kultury v ČSR a Německá univerzita v Praze

Jana Ratajová

Na dovolenou s čekatelným? Profesoři a další vědecko-pedagogičtí pracovníci Univerzity Karlovy po uzavření českých vysokých škol v listopadu 1939

Antonín Kostlán, Michal V. Šimůnek

Stavba kolejí Větrník-sever a Větrník-jih. Příspěvek k dějinám kolejí a menz Univerzity Karlovy v 60. letech 20. století

Michal Továrek

Kongresy pro dějiny vědy a techniky (1929)1937–2021 a Praha

Milada Sekyrková

František Šmahel – Gabriel Silagi (edd.), Statuta et Acta rectorum Universitatis Carolinae Pragensis (1360–1614)

Blanka Zilynská

Mlada Holá – Martin Holý (Hg.), Das Studentenkolleg der Böhmischen Nation der Prager Universität. Edition der Rechnungen aus den Jahren 1541–1611

Ivan Hlaváček

Michael Diefenbacher – Olga Fejtová – Zdzisław Noga (Hgg.), Krakau – Nürnberg – Prag. Stadt und Reformation. Krakau, Nürnberg und Prag (1500–1618) / Kraków – Norymberga – Praga. Miasto i reformacja. Kraków, Norymberga i Praga (1500–1618) / Krakov – Norimberk – Praha. Město a reformace. Krakov, Norimberk a Praha (1500–1618)

Robert T. Tomczak

Petr Hlaváček, Rusové v Praze. Ruští intelektuálové v meziválečném Československu

Michal Továrek

Riikka Palonkorpiová, Věda s lidskou tváří: činnost československých vědců Františka Šorma a Otty Wichterleho během studené války

Michal Továrek

Zdeněk Nebřenský, Marx, Engels, Beatles. Myšlenkový svět polských a československých vysokoškoláků, 1956–1968

Michal Továrek

Naděžda Morávková, Václav Čepelák a katedra historie plzeňské Pedagogické fakulty

Michal Továrek

Marie Jílková (ed.), Nejisté dny sametové revoluce: stávkové deníky pardubických vysokoškoláků 17. 11. 1989–5. 1. 1990

Michal Továrek

Petr Fiala, (M)univerzita. Poslání, výzvy a proměny ve 21. století

Michal Továrek

Monday 12 September 2022

Laura Almagor, Haakon Ikonomou and Gunvor Simonsen (eds.): Global biographies. Lived history as method. Manchester: Manchester University Press 2022. ISBN: 978-1-5261-6116-1

 

Global biographies provides an advanced and comprehensive analytical framework for historians to use biography as a method to write global history. Moving beyond the state-of-the-art, the volume defines and operationalises three uniquely tailored approaches to global biographies: 'time and periodisation', 'exceptional normal' and 'space and scales'. From Icelandic communists and Jewish medical students, via Zambian Third Worldism and Albanian nationalism, to the Black/White Atlantic and Australian internationalists, the volume tests the prospects and pitfalls of the approaches it launches.


CONTENTS

Introduction - Laura Almagor, Haakon A. Ikonomou and Gunvor Simonsen

PART I: Time and periodisation

1 Wilsonian moments: Thanassis Aghnides between empire and nation state - Haakon A. Ikonomou

2 Making sense of 1956: experiencing and negotiating the socialist project in Iceland - Rósa Magnúsdóttir

3 Colonial masculinity: monarchy, military, colonialism, fascism and decolonisation - Diana M. Natermann

4 Jewish medical students in Vienna between two world wars - Natalia Aleksiun

PART II: Exceptional normal

5 'Just an African radical'? A Zambian at the edge of the third world - Ismay Milford

6 Exceptionally normal (post)Ottomans: how failure shaped the futures of Balkan heroes - Isa Blumi

7 The exceptional normal: Hugh Lenox Scott (1853-1934) and the United States' imperial expansion - Stefan Eklöf Amirell

8 A fateful beginning: Mehmed Cavid Bey, politics and finance in the global Middle East, 1908-14 - Ozan Ozavci

PART III: Space and scales

9 Scholar, refugee worker, Jew: Koppel S. Pinson (1904-61) - Laura Almagor

10 Transnational agitator and union activist: James W. Ford and the communist push into the Black Atlantic - Holger Weiss

11 A woman with a typewriter: the international career of Dorothea Weger - Benjamin Auberer

12 A white Atlantic life: the money, books and family of Adrian Bentzon - Gunvor Simonsen

Index

East European Intellectual History—”East” meets “West”: Virtual Issue 2.1

URL: https://jhiblog.org/2022/09/07/east-european-intellectual-history-east-meets-west-virtual-issue-2-1/

Over its more than 80 years in print, the Journal of the History of Ideas has accumulated a pretty large archive. Oftentimes, that archive is representative of the history of intellectual history—its trends, priorities, methods. Sometimes, it involves scholarship that, by virtue of appearing once-in-a-while, cannot quite get either the visibility or the relevant context in which to be seen.

With the Virtual Issues initiative on the JHIBlog, we propose to recall earlier articles from the JHI that fit with a particular subject or theme, and to place them in a new and current context. We do not pretend that the JHI could ever be comprehensive on these themes, and we are well aware of the limits of the journal’s success in addressing particular subjects. But as with every archive, all sorts of surprises await. With Virtual Issues, we bring out work that has some connection to current concerns, and to recall ways in which authors engaged a particular theme, including ways that may now be out of fashion but that are suggestive of past trends. Each Virtual Issue—the second being East European Intellectual History, to appear in several installments—features an introduction that resituates these articles. Anyone interested in curating such an issue together with us should contact the lead JHIBlog editors with a proposal and a list of relevant articles.

— Stefanos Geroulanos, on behalf of the Executive Editors

Sunday 11 September 2022

Quarterly Journal of the History of Science and Technology (Kwartalnik Historii Nauki i Techniki), 2022, issue 2 is online. Polish with English abstracts

 

URL: https://www.ejournals.eu/KHNT/2022/2-2022/


ARTYKUŁY 

Cezary W. Domański, Historia osobliwej pamiątki. Mit i prawda o „Pomniku szarańczy” w Zwierzyńcu na Roztoczu. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 

Marcin Krasnodębski, Krótka historia kodyfi kacji na rzecz chemii przyjaznej środowisku naturalnemu. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33 

Michał Piekarski, Z badań nad repertuarem operowym Teatru Narodowego w drugiej połowie XVIII w. Nieznana praca magisterska obroniona na Uniwersytecie Warszawskim w 1938 r.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65 

Barbara Wasiewicz, Prace Romana Nitscha z zakresu wścieklizny na tle rozwoju mikrobiologii jako dyscypliny medycznej na przełomie XIX i XX w. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 85 

Miron Wolny, Equitum peditumque idem longe primus erat – uwagi o sprzęcie bojowym Hannibala . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 99 

ARTYKUŁY RECENZYJNE 

Lucyna Szaniawska, Niespójność komentarzy z realiami XVI–XVIII-wiecznej kartografi i w polskim wydaniu książki Kevina J. Browna Dawne mapy. Podróż w przeszłość . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 115 

RECENZJE 

Roman Murawski, Danuta Ciesielska, Lech Maligranda, Joanna Zwierzyńska, W świątyni nauki, mekce matematyków. Studia i badania naukowe polskich matematyków, fizyków i astronomów na Uniwersytecie w Getyndze 1884–1933, Wydawnictwo Naukowe PWN, Warszawa 2021, ss. 404. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 135 

Piotr Rataj, Jan Szajner, Marcin Rechłowicz, Tramwaje lwowskie 1880–1944, Księży Młyn Dom Wydawniczy, Łódź 2020, ss. 509 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 139 

Anna Trojanowska, Stefan Zamecki, „Kwartalnik Historii Nauki i Techniki” – ludzie i problemy. Lata 1956–1993, Instytut Historii Nauki im. L. i A. Birkenmajerów PAN, Warszawa 2020, ss. 438 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 143 

Leszek Zasztowt, Bronisław Piłsudski, Dziennik 1883–1885, oprac. Jolanta Żyndul, Narodowy Instytut Polskiego Dziedzictwa Kulturowego za Granicą POLONIKA, Warszawa 2021, ss. 591 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 148 

KRONIKA 

Anna Trojanowska, XVI Przegląd Prac Magisterskich z Zakresu Historii Farmacji . . . . 155

Thursday 8 September 2022

Donata Romizi, Monika Wulz, Elisabeth Nemeth (eds.) Edgar Zilsel: Philosopher, Historian, Sociologist. Cham: Springer 2022. ISBN: 978-3-030-93687-7


ABOUT THIS BOOK

This book provides a new all-round perspective on the life and work of Edgar Zilsel (1891-1944) as a philosopher, historian, and sociologist. He was close to the Vienna Circle and has been hitherto almost exclusively referred to in terms of the so-called “Zilsel thesis” on the origins of modern science. Much beyond this “thesis”, Zilsel’s brilliant work provides original insights on a broad number of topics, ranging from the philosophy of probability and statistics to the concept of “genius”, from the issues of scientific laws and theories to the sociological background of science and philosophy, and to the political analysis of the problems of his time. Praised by Herbert Feigl as an “outstanding brilliant mind”, Zilsel, being as a Social-Democrat of Jewish origins, mostly led a life of hardship marked by emigration and coming to a sudden and tragic end by suicide in 1944. The impossibility of an academic career has hindered the reception of Zilsel’s scientific work for a long time. This volume is a contribution to its late reception, providing new insights especially into his work during his years in Vienna; moreover, it shows the heuristic value of Zilsel’s ideas for future Scholar research – in philosophy, history, and sociology.


ABOUT THE EDITORS

Donata Romizi has studied Philosophy at the University of Bologna (where she also attended the interdisciplinary “Collegio Superiore”) and at the University of Vienna (PhD, 2013). She now works at the University of Vienna: she is Tenure-Track Assistant Professor at the Department of Philosophy and Vice-Director of the postgraduate program “Philosophical Practice” (which she initiated in 2013) at the Postgraduate Center. Her main publications so far have been in the field of (History of) Philosophy of Science: she has published on the philosophy of probability and statistics, on the Vienna Circle and on the issue of scientific determinism. Her book Dem wissenschaftlichen Determinismus auf der Spur (Karl Alber, 2019) was awarded the Karl Alber Prize 2019. Further main publications: Fare i conti con il caso. La probabilità e l’emergere dell’indeterminismo nella fisica moderna (Bologna: Gedit, 2009). “The Vienna Circle’s ‘Scientific World Conception’: Philosophy of Science in the Political Arena”, in: HOPOS. The Journal of the International Society for the History of Philosophy of Science, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, Vol. 2, No. 2; Fall 2012.

Monika Wulz is a philosopher and historian of science. After finishing her PhD at the University of Vienna, she was a postdoc researcher at the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science, at the Technical University of Braunschweig, at the University of Konstanz, and at ETH Zurich. Currently, she is a postdoc researcher and lecturer at the Chair of Science Studies at the University of Lucerne. Her research is situated at the intersection of Philosophy of Science, History of Science, and the history of social and economic thought. Her publications focus on the epistemological traditions in French philosophy, including her book Erkenntnisagenten: Gaston Bachelard und die Reorganisation des Wissens (Kadmos, 2010), on the philosophy of Ernst Mach and the Vienna Circle as well as on social and economic aspects of epistemology. Currently, she is working on a book project on the economic foundations of intellectual work in the decades around 1900.

Elisabeth Nemeth has been Professor of Philosophy at the University of Vienna (retired in 2016). Her fields of research are Philosophy and History of Science, Logical Empiricism, Philosophy of the Social Sciences. She was visiting professor at the Université Paris 1 – Sorbonne and the University of Tunis. She served as a board member in various international philosophical societies (Institute Vienna Circle, HOPOS, Austrian Philosophical Society). 2019-2021 she was president of the Austrian Ludwig Wittgenstein Society. Publications include “Ernst Mach and Logical Empiricism”. In: The Routledge Companion to Logical Empiricism. Ed. by T. E. Uebel and C. Limbeck-Lilienau, Routledge, forthcoming. „Visualizing Relations in Society and Economics: Otto Neurath’s Isotype-Method Against the Background of his Economic Thought“. In: Neurath Reconsidered. New Sources and perspectives. Ed. by J. Cat, A. T. Tuboly. Springer Nature Switzerland 2019, 177-140. “Edgar Zilsel on Historical Laws”, in: History of Explanation, Prediction and Confirmation. Proceedings of the ESF project Philosophy of Science in a European Perspective. Ed. by D. Dieks, W.J. Gonzalez, S. Hartmann, T. Uebel, M. Weber, Springer, 521-532.


 

Call for Papers: Women Scientists, Development and Environmental Citizenship: Scientific Transnational Organizations and Public Activism, University of Trieste - Department of Humanities, April 20-21, 2023

 Call for Papers: Women Scientists, Development and Environmental Citizenship: Scientific Transnational Organizations and Public Activism, University of Trieste - Department of Humanities, April 20-21, 2023


The  Department of Humanistic Studies at the University of Trieste is  organizing a conference on April 20-21, 2023 in Trieste, dedicated to  women's activism in science, development and environmental justice in  the context of transnational organizations during the Cold War.

In  the second half of the twentieth century, beginning with the so-called  "Atomic Age," a realization gradually took hold among scientists of the  two opposing blocs that dialogue for the peaceful use of nuclear energy  would help save the world from atomic cataclysm. At the same time, the  activism of some/all scientists manifested a strong critique of the  development model that had characterized the postwar years. FAO's World  Food Program in 1961 and Rachel Carson's famous Silent Spring  study-denunciation in 1962 paved the way for understanding the links  between environmentalism, economic and social development, and the role  of science. There then gradually emerged the need to analyze, and stop,  the environmental and human consequences that unsustainable development  was bringing to the planet and the poorest people.

During  the 1960s and 1970s, the process of decolonization also led to a more  pronounced prominence of the new countries that emerged from the  dissolution of European colonial empires. This also redefined the  concept of development, in connection with the debate on human rights  and environmental sustainability, which began to gain progressive  prominence in national politics, international relations and the agenda  of International Organizations.

Along  with purely economic issues, women's rights issues also emerged,  intersecting with the debates of the feminist movements of the 1970s and  1980s. In fact, as Regina Laub and Yianna Lambrou have pointed out, it  was female scientists such as Helen Caldicott, Rosalie Bertell, Dorothy  Hodgkin, and Emma Reh who denounced the nefarious effects of the arms  race (particularly atomic) and emphasized the importance of enacting  effective development policies for the world's most backward areas, and  using different criteria to analyze global problems.

These  elaborations also found space at the international level if one  considers the importance of documents such as the Declaration on the  Elimination of Discrimination Against Women (DEDAW, 1967) later to  become the Convention (CEDAW) in 1979. To this must be added the  important presence of women scientists at the UN conferences in Mexico  City (1975), Copenhagen (1980), Nairobi (1985) and Beijing (1985), where  the links between women's rights, environmental justice and sustainable  development emerged ever stronger. Beginning in the late 1960s, as  Devaki Jain analyzed in 2005, a series of studies and campaigns were  launched within the so-called Onusian system (which includes all related  agencies, such as WHO, UNDP, UNESCO, FAO and ILO) that influenced and  were influenced in turn by the presence of women scientists who through  channels that were not always official and structured – networks and  associations such as Pugwash, Femmes d'Europe, Women in Science and  numerous NGOs – attempted to influence global choices and perspectives.  At the same time, beginning in the late 1970s, grassroots movements  sprang up in different parts of the world that combined claims about  respect for the environment with demands for greater social and racial  equity. Within these, women's activism played a key role in creating a  transnational network and codifying the concept of environmental justice  on a global level.

The  conference is part of the PRIN-2017 research project "Inventing the  Global Environment: Science, Politics, Advocacy and the  Environment-Development Nexus in the Cold War and Beyond."

The discussion topics and perspectives to be addressed by the papers are as follows:

-  How has women's activism through associations, transnational networks,  or international agencies (such as UNIFEM, TWOWS, INSTRAW) influenced  the orientations and studies of major international organizations,  particularly the UN and related agencies.

-  How has the activism of women scientists and scholars in general  changed, particularly in so-called developing and Third World countries  but not only there, the relationship between development, environmental  justice, and human rights? What have been the connections between  Non-Governmental Organizations, activism of women scientists such as  Rachel Carson (for the Western world) or Wangari Maathai (for Third  World countries) and the creation of women leaders within environmental  and environmental justice movements.

- How can the categories of gender, race, and class explain North-South relations with respect to environmental issues?

-  How have local and global dimensions helped guide the environmental  debate and what has been the contribution of women to this discussion?

-  How has women's activism been incorporated into policymaking on  environmental protection, environmental justice, and development by  states of the two opposing blocs?

-  The impact of women's activism in the development and evolution of  concepts and practices related to environmental justice and development.

-  How have agricultural and food policies of National Governments or  International Organizations changed the status of women? Both from  cultural, labor and political perspectives.

Please send abstract of 500 words maximum, with one-page CV of the author, to

Elisabetta Vezzosi (vezzosi@units.it) and Federico Chiaricati (FEDERICO.CHIARICATI@units.it) by October 15.

With an abstract of 500 words maximum, accompanied by a one-page CV of the author.

Selection will be announced by November 10.

Monday 5 September 2022

HIRA&hps.cesee Book Launch: J. Surman et. al (eds.) Science Interconnected: German-Polish Scientific Entanglements in Modern History (Marburg 2022). With Zaur Gasimov (Bonn), Jan Surman (Prague) and Justyna Turkowska (Edinburgh).

HIRA&hps.cesee Book Launch: J. Surman et. al (eds.) Science Interconnected: German-Polish Scientific Entanglements in Modern History (Marburg 2022). With Zaur Gasimov (Bonn), Jan Surman (Prague) and Justyna Turkowska (Edinburgh). Thursday, September 15, 18:00-19:00 Vienna / 19:00-20:00 Kyiv / 12:00-13:00 New York, online


The virtual platform HPS.CESEE and Herder Institute Research Academy (HIRA) are proud to present the global book talk  "Ukrainian Science Between Two Empires". Justyna Turkowska (Edinburgh) and Zaur Gasimov (Bonn) will join with the editor of "Science Interconnected: German-Polish Scientific Entanglements in Modern History" (Marburg 2022), Jan Surman (Prague) in a discussion moderated by Tatsiana Astrouskaya (Marburg). It is part of a series of open zoom events aiming to foster the discussion of new books and approaches within the history of science and scholarship (broadly understood) in Central, Eastern and Southeastern Europe.

Thursday, September 15, 18:00-19:00 Vienna / 19:00-20:00 Kyiv / 12:00-13:00 New York

The meeting is free and open to the public. To receive the link, please register here:  https://www.eventbrite.com/e/hirahpscesee-book-launch-j-surman-ed-science-interconnected-tickets-410753624147 or write to hps.cesee@gmail.com.

Justyna Turkowska is a DAAD Lecturer at the University of Edinburgh. She completed her PhD on the transnational aspects of the history of medicine in the Eastern borderlands of the German Empire at the University of Giessen (Germany) in 2016 . Her award-winning dissertationIt was published as Der kranke Rand des Reiches. Sozialhygiene und nationale Räume in der Provinz Posen um 1900  (Marburg 2020).

Zaur Gasimov is the DFG Principal Investigator at the Russian Studies Department of the University of Bonn. In 2009, he graduated from the University Eichstätt-Ingolstadt and joined the Leibniz Institute of European History in Mainz, Germany. From 2013 to 2019, he was a Senior Research Fellow at the Orient-Institut in Istanbul, Turkey. He has extensively published on Russian-Turkish relations and the entangled history of Eastern Europe and the Middle East.

Jan Surman is a historian of science and scholarship at the Masaryk Institute and Archives of the Czech Academy of Sciences. Surman holds a PhD in history from the University of Vienna and has been working at the Herder Insitute, Marburg; IFK, Vienna; and the National Research University Higher School of Economics, Moscow. His research focuses on scientific transfer, academic mobility, and scientific internationalism, and he is currently preparing a book on the history of Ukrainian science in the interwar period.

CfP: East Central Europe at the Crossroads: Jewish Transnational Networks and Identities (Polin)


This conference brings together the latest scholarship on the broad themes of transnationalism, intersectionality and cross-border exchanges in Jewish history from the early modern period to the present.  The conference will be conducted entirely in English.

Conference date: 18-21 June, 2023

Venue: POLIN Museum, Warsaw, Poland

Applications in English until November 7, 2022

We invite scholars working on transnational Jewish subjects broadly conceived, including Ph.D. candidates, to apply with a paper proposal (in English only). Applications with a paper proposal (abstract of no more than 500 words) and a short biographical note, should be sent via online application by November 7.


The organizers will reimburse invited speakers’ travel costs to and from the conference (economy class tickets) and will provide lodgings during the event.

» READ MORE: https://polin.pl/en/news/2022/08/24/call-papers-international-conference-east-central-europe-crossroads

» APPLY: https://polin.pl/en/form/conference-east-central-europe

Clare Griffin, Mixing Medicines The Global Drug Trade and Early Modern Russia. Montreal: McGill–Queen's University Press 2022. ISBN: 9780228011941


What the medicines of early modern Russia can tell us about scientific knowledge, global trade networks, and the long reach of colonialism.

Early modern Russians preferred one method of treating the sick above all others: prescribing drugs. The Moscow court sourced pharmaceuticals from Asia, Africa, Western Europe, and the Americas, in addition to its own sprawling empire, to heal its ailing tsars.


Mixing Medicines explores the dynamic and complex world of early modern Russian medical drugs, from its enthusiasm for newly imported American botanicals to its disgust at Western European medicines made from human corpses. Clare Griffin draws from detailed apothecary records to shed light on the early modern Russian Empire’s role in the global trade in medical drugs. Chapters follow the trade and use of medical ingredients through networks that linked Moscow to Western Europe, Asia, and the Americas; the transformation of natural objects, such as botanicals and chemicals, into medicines; the documentation and translation of medical knowledge; and Western European influence on Russian medical practices. Looking beyond practitioners, texts, and ideas to consider how materials of medicine were used by one of the early modern world’s major empires provides a novel account of the global history of early modern medicine.


Mixing Medicines offers unique insight into how the dramatic reshaping of global trade touched the day-to-day lives of the people living in early modern Russia.

Thursday 1 September 2022

CFP: Mountains and Plains: Past, present and future environmental and climatic entanglements, 12th Biennial European Society for Environmental History (ESEH) Conference

 CFP: Mountains and Plains: Past, present and future environmental and climatic entanglements

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12th Biennial European Society for Environmental History (ESEH) Conference


Call for Papers: Mountains and Plains: Past, present and future environmental and climatic entanglements


Bern, Switzerland, 22–26 August 2023


Mountains and Plains: Past, present and future environmental and climatic entanglements

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Universität Bern, Historisches Institut und Oeschger Centre for Climate Change Research, 3012 Bern (Switzerland)

22.08.2022

Deadline: 31.10.2022


The University of Bern has a long tradition in environmental and climate studies. The Institute of History and the Oeschger Centre for Climate Change Research are therefore proud to host to the 12th Conference of the ESEH.


Bern will be the first conference site since the establishment of the biennial ESEH conferences that is close to the Alps or to mountainous regions in general. Drawing from its closeness to mountainous regions Bern invites for a conference on “Mountains and Plains”, a topic enabling approaches from various disciplines possible.


Possible topics to be discussed as part of the conference’s thematic focus on “Mountains and Plains”, include, but are not limited to the following:


- Transit across mountainous areas and their socio-economic impact (including culture and knowledge transfer)

- History of environmental knowledge related to mountains and plains

- Environmental histories of tourism in the Alps and other alpine areas as well as traffic connected with these activities

- Mountains/plains interactions, e.g. water metabolisms

- Resource use and management, biodiversity, and the commons in mountain environments and their associated plains

- The place of underwater and island mountains in oceanic environments and climates

- Influence of weather and climate on mountain and plain regions in the past, present, and future

- Mountains and plains as battlefields, migratory routes and barriers of war – the environmental impact of war


In addition, we warmly welcome papers/provocations/presentations on environmental history also outside the conference theme. We also invite contributions on teaching and communicating environmental history to a wider public (e.g. schools, university pedagogics, public outreach, citizen science). Furthermore, we encourage submissions from related academic disciplines and interdisciplinary fields, such as archaeology, anthropology, digital humanities, infrastructure studies and geography.


The Call for Papers (https://www.eseh2023.unibe.ch/conference/call_for_papers) is now open until 31 October 2022.


Online Submissions (https://www.conftool.com/eseh2023/).

Šárka Velhartická: Bedřich Hrozný: Texty a přednášky [Text and Lectures by Bedřich Hrozný]. Praha: Academia 2022. ISBN 978-80-200-3161-7

Šárka Velhartická: Bedřich Hrozný: Texty a přednášky [Text and Lectures by Bedřich Hrozný]. Praha: Academia 2022. ISBN 978-80-200-3161-7


Kniha představuje souborné vydání doložených textů a přednášek Bedřicha Hrozného v českém jazyce, které byly nashromážděny nejen z mnoha dobových periodik 1. poloviny 20. století, ale zejména náročným bádáním v archivních materiálech. Některé texty – především Hrozného popisy cest a archeologických expedic na Přední východ –, které byly zcela zapomenuty a jsou čtenářům představeny opět po téměř sto letech, vrhají na osudy tohoto badatele zcela nové světlo. Jeho líčení putování Palestinou i Tureckem na koni, texty o cestách syrskou a mezopotamskou pouští za objevením starověkých lokalit, vykreslení podmínek během archeologických výkopů v Sýrii i Anatolii, vysvětlení postupu při luštění chetitského jazyka i převratný nález klínopisných tabulek na Kültepe a mnoho dalších úvah na téma sumerského, babylonského a egyptského náboženství a kultury, orientálních dějin i srovnávací jazykovědy zavedou čtenáře na starověký Přední východ a současně seznámí s neobyčejnými životními osudy našeho předního orientalisty.

Tomasz Pudłocki: Szekspir i Polska. Życie Władysława Tarnawskiego (1885 - 1951) [Shakespeare and Poland. Life of Władysława Tarnawskiego (1885-1951)

Tomasz Pudłocki: Szekspir i Polska. Życie Władysława Tarnawskiego (1885 - 1951) [Shakespeare and Poland. Life of Władysława Tarnawskiego (18...