Thursday 27 April 2023

Željka Manić, Anđelka Mirkov (eds.) Sociološko nasleđe Vojina Milića – 100 godina od rođenja [The sociological legacy of Vojin Milić - for the 100 anniversary of his birth].

Željka Manić, Anđelka Mirkov (eds.) Sociološko nasleđe Vojina Milića – 100 godina od rođenja [The sociological legacy of Vojin Milić - for the 100 anniversary of his birth]. Beograd 2022. ISBN 978-86-6427-259-9

Open Access: https://isi.f.bg.ac.rs/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/Sociolosko-nasledje-Vojina-Milica-za-NBS.pdf

Zbornik „Sociološko nasleđe Vojina Milića – 100 godina od rođenja” čine prilozi sa istoimenog naučnog skupa nacionalnog značaja. Sadržinski obuhvata sledeće tematske celine: sociološku teoriju, metodologiju socioloških istraživanja, sociologiju saznanja i sociologiju nauke. U pitanju su oblasti u kojima je, pored istorije sociologije, najizraženiji doprinos Vojina Milića u domaćoj sociologiji.

Piotr Abryszeński: Politechnika Gdańska 1968-1980. Portret społeczno-polityczny [Gdańsk Technical High School 1968-1980. A socio-political portrait].

Piotr Abryszeński: Politechnika Gdańska 1968-1980. Portret społeczno-polityczny [Gdańsk Technical High School 1968-1980. A socio-political portrait]. Warszawa: IPN 2022. ISBN:978-83-8229-610-5


OPIS KSIĄŻKI:

Celem książki jest próba stworzenia portretu społeczno-politycznego studentów oraz pracowników naukowych Politechniki Gdańskiej, a także ukazanie ich miejsca w rzeczywistości PRL. Na postawach środowiska akademickiego swe piętno odcisnęły zarówno kryzysy polityczne, jak i przeobrażenia w samorządności studenckiej, a także rosnący wpływ władz na kształtowanie ideologiczne młodzieży.

ToC: https://ksiegarniaipn.pl/pdf/550000/550418_Politechnika_Gdanska_1968-1980_spis.pdf

Tuesday 25 April 2023

Call for Papers: Workshop on Anarchism, Slavic Studies, and Cultural Analysis, 25-26 September 2023

Call for Papers: Workshop on Anarchism, Slavic Studies, and Cultural Analysis, 25-26 September 2023, Université libre de Bruxelles

Organised by Petra James and Dennis Ioffe

Research center MODERNITAS, Maison des Sciences Humaines, ULB

Our workshop dedicated to the legacies of anarchism is framed by the general questions of differentiated experience of time, progress and modernity globally in various geographical spaces (the period that we investigate, starting in late 1860s, is the period of the first phase of globalization) but also by various social, ethnic and gender groups. We are keen to discuss the complex dynamics between modernist aesthetics and politics of that time, between l’art pour l’art and l’art social (see for example Poetry and Radical Politics in fin de siècle France, Patrick McGuinness 2015). The general discussions of the role of the state in society are one of the crucial political questions of the period as is the role of artists and intellectuals in society. All this pressing questions have been addressed by the first anarchist thinkers globally.

We welcome all relevant contributions debating anarchism-related topics vis-à-vis cultural matters of a broader scope, we especially appreciate interdisciplinary approach connecting arts and other fields of knowledge such as politics, sociology, general history and pragmatic philosophy:

· Anarchism and comparative literature

· Anarchism and art history

· Anarchism and Slavic studies

· Anarchism and cinema

· Anarchism and natural sciences

· Anarchism and regional/area studies

· Anarchism and law

· Anarchism and social geography

These are just a few examples of the subject domains we are interested in covering in the framework of our workshop.

Please, send your paper proposals of 300 words to petra.james@ulb.be and dennis.ioffe@ulb.bebefore 31st May 2023. We will notify you by 15th June 2023.

In his recent Anarchism published in the authoritative Oxford University Press collection “A Very Short Introduction”, the influential specialist of Anarchist political thought Alex Prichard affirms that “anarchism was arguably the most widespread revolutionary ideology, globally, up to the end of the Second World War. (…) From the 1850s to 1940s, anarchism was arguably the dominant ideological current on the left worldwide, even as Marxist Leninism would come to dominate in Europe and Maoism in China.” (Prichard 2022: 28; 31).

Indeed, anarchism was one of the major ideo-global phenomena of the first phase of globalization in the 19th century and its repercussions were felt around the world, “anarchist revolutionaries were fighting against global empires founded on chattel slavery, expropriation of land through enclosures, and the development of industrialization outside Europe on the back of colonialism and imperialism. Prichard 2022: 28)”

In our planned workshop we are attentive to the transnational character of anarchism and to the phenomenon of exile as a key means of ideological transmission: “Napoleon III would force socialists into exile in England, and surviving Communards took anarchist ideas west to the Americas and east to Asia. French émigrés like Elisée Reclus would help cross-pollinate anarchist ideas from France to the Americas and back again. Emma Goldman would do the same between Russia and the USA (…)” (Prichard 2022: 31)

Anarchism promotes an active approach against putative authority of the state relying on a respectable philosophical legacy notably this of ancient Greece and India. The direct conceptual and rebellious antecedents of anarchism are to be found in Skepticism. In India this was the Ajñana school of philosophy (Nagarjuna and Shriharsha). Whereas in Greece this line of thought includes such venerable names as Xenophanes, Democritus, most notably, Cratylus but especially Pyrrho of Elis, culminating in the doctrines of Pyrrhonism. Which was further developed by Arcesilaus and Carneades (3rd century BC) whose ideas we largely know from Sextus Empiricus. Aside of Sceptics, a system of thought closely agreeable with Anarchism was represented by the Greek Cynics who famously promoted a natural and unrepressed form of living, emancipated from unnecessary possessions.

The mainstream ‘state-philosophy’ starting from St Augustine, always criticized and attacked the anarchist spirit of nihilist skeptics. Some would also evaluate Martin Luther’s (and possibly Jan Hus’) rebellious religious and ideological skepticism geared against the canon of holy orders as a classic example of both skepticism and a concealed anarchism. Michel de Montaigne and later Pierre Bayle may come to mind as potentially sympathetic of anarchist skepticism, with their powerful and often ironic critique against any form of Authority be it metaphysical or political one. Scottish philosopher David Hume, in his turn, reinforced a case for a skeptical view of political authority.

Bakunin’s ideas created a robust response among intellectuals and artists of Slavic ethnic groups of East-Central Europe. An important issue is therefore “Anarchism and the Slavs” where stands out the central figure of Mikhail Bakunin, who in many ways shaped modern anarchism and its ideology as we know them, emerges. Having lived a considerable part of his life outside Russia, Bakunin particularly appreciated Switzerland. In Switzerland, he was attracted to its practical and successful federalism, to the gradual ‘unbundling’ of bureaucratic and class interests by self-government. For a variety of reasons Bakunin opposed Marx, they argued harshly and in the end the International split because of the contradictions of their supporters. After the fall of the Paris Commune (1871), Marx held a congress that expelled Bakunin, while Bakunin’s supporters in their turn held a congress that expelled Marx. Bakunin was brutally disappointed after these events of failure to raise a meaningful rebellion. Under the influence of Bakunin’s ideas, the first real experiment in bringing anarchist ideas to life was the Jura Federation. It was the Swiss section of the International of Workers (First International), strongly influenced by the anarchist and federalist ideas of Mikhail Bakunin. Among the centers of the Jura Federation was Sonvilier commune in Switzerland, in the canton of Bern. Generally, Jura, is a spacious Swiss mountain area with a town of La Chaux-de-Fonds as its center. Members of this anarchist federation shared anti-state, egalitarian views on work and social emancipation.

Bakunin’s theory was further practically developed by Peter Kropotkin with new ideas, which after a while proved very popular in the anarchist milieu. Peter Kropotkin, as a prominent narodnikwho escaped from imprisonment in Russia, made an important breakthrough in anarchist thought. In Europe he promoted and partially reshaped Bakunin’s ideas.

What is more noteworthy for our discussion in the framework of MODERNITAS is that Kropotkin positioned himself as a natural scientist. He was indeed a major scientist in geology: he was the first to develop the theory of the glacier. Kropotkin tried to steer the anarchist movement in a scientific direction, advocating the need for human solidarity. But in the end, Kropotkin’s ideas of theoretical anarchism polemized with the ideas of both Bakunin and Proudhon.

Kropotkin returned to Russia in 1917 and advocated a federative republic, i.e., a transitional phase to the society promoted by anarchists. The Russian anarchists took an active part in the Russian Revolution and the Civil War up to 1923. The most famous and legendary figure of the entire revolutionary period was certainly Nestor Makhno, who led the most successful rebellious movement in Ukraine under the black flags of anarchism. Symbolizing the continuity of Slavic and European anarchism, ‘Bat’ka Makhno’ died in Paris some six years before the Second World War. Russian anarchism is directly linked to the Slavic diaspora matters - not only through the figures of Bakunin and Kropotkin, but also Peter Arshinov, Vsevolod Volin (Eichenbaum), Alexander Berkman, and Emma Goldman.

As Bakunin and Kropotkin justly remark in the 1860s, 1870s and 1880s in their largely circulated pamphlets and essays, the access to modernity (especially to the benefits of science and technological progress) are almost exclusively experienced by the dominant Western classes (Western women from the upper classes represent an example of this systemic exclusion). The innovative character of the anarchist thinking of the 19th century has been submitted to re-evaluation since the 1980s and have contributed to the renewal of fields such as social geography, which brought important contributions to the question of global inequality (with works of Neil Smith – “uneven development”, Jared Diamond, Guns, Germs and Steel).

“There are two traditions of anarchist thought—libertarian, or extreme individualist, and communitarian—and each appears in three distinctive variations, which may be labeled “philosophical anarchism,” “ideal anarchism,” and “revolutionary anarchism.” Philosophical anarchism is the thesis that there is not, and cannot be, a legitimate state—a state that has the moral right to demand the obedience of its subjects or citizens—because that demand by the state violates the moral autonomy of the individual. Ideal anarchism holds that, besides being illegitimate, the state is suboptimal—it performs less well the tasks of maintaining social order and providing essential services than would an association of free men and women without coercive state power to compel their behavior. Revolutionary anarchism goes a step further and argues that the state is so immediately destructive of human well-being that it must be destroyed by force so that a more humane and constructive social order can take its place. It is revolutionary anarchism that is associated in the popular mind with the term “anarchism.” In the United States, anarchists are popularly imagined speaking with Eastern European accents, to wear beards, and to favor the use of bombs.” (Robert Paul Wolff, Oxford Companion to Comparative Politics, 2012).

Beyond the debate on the topicality of anarchist thinking in today’s society, the workshop will also contribute to the lively and crucial debate among art historians and historians of literature on the method of global modernisms, which need to be understood in this larger context, so that their particular nature and development would be particularly assessed and not understood as a late version of one undivided “Western” modernism.

Monday 24 April 2023

History of Science and Biographical Studies 2023 No.1 is online!

History of Science and Biographical Studies 2023 No.1 is online! Ukrainian with English abstracts, published by the National Scientific Agricultural Library NAAS. Full issue URL: https://inb.dnsgb.com.ua/2023-1/en/

Jerzy J. Wiatr, Paweł Kozłowski, O socjologii w Polsce Ludowej rozmów jedenaście [Eleven discussions about sociology in the Polish People's Republic]

Jerzy J. Wiatr, Paweł Kozłowski, O socjologii w Polsce Ludowej rozmów jedenaście [Eleven discussions about sociology in the Polish People's Republic] (=Fontes rerum ad historiam scientiae spectantium, vol. XXXII, series recentior XIV). Warszawa: Oficyna Wydawnicza ASPRA-JR, Instytut Historii Nauki PAN, Centrum Europejskie UW, Europejska Wyższa Szkoła Prawa i Administracji w Warszawie 2022; ISBN: 978-83-820-9197-7


Publikacja obecna stanowi owoc kilkunastu rozmów prowadzonych w okresie od listopada 2021 roku do lutego 2022 roku. Jest to relacja osobista, co między innymi oznacza – subiektywna, odzwierciedlająca nie tylko moje prace i przeżycia, ale także mój stosunek do spraw, w których brałem bezpośredni udział lub byłem ich naocznym świadkiem. Jest to relacja w dwojakim sensie subiektywna. Mówi o tym, czego byłem świadkiem lub uczestnikiem, a zarazem wyraża mój osobisty stosunek do omawianych w tych rozmowach zjawisk i faktów, rozgrywających się na tle zmieniającej się rzeczywistości historycznej – pełnej sprzeczności i wciąż budzącej silne emocje.

Jerzy J. Wiatr


Jerzy Wiatr jest bowiem nie tylko światowej renomy uczonym, o olbrzymiej, interdyscyplinarnej wiedzy z nauk społecznych, ale dodatkowo, co może powodować niekoniecznie pozytywne o tej jego roli opinie, czynnym i znaczącym przez wiele lat, choć już tylko emerytowanym, politykiem. Jest człowiekiem o encyklopedycznej pamięci, bardzo skrupulatnie odnotowującym wszystkie, niekiedy pozornie mało znaczące wydarzenia ze swego ponad dziewięćdziesięcioletniego, niezwykle bogatego i aktywnego życia. W jego intelektualnej „spowiedzi”, w której nie zamierza ani siebie usprawiedliwiać, ani „zapominać” czegokolwiek, oferuje tym, którzy powinni z tego skorzystać, olbrzymią dawkę pedantycznie przedstawionych informacji o nieomal wszystkim, co w polskich naukach społecznych i w polityce naukowej działo się we współczesnych mu epokach: entuzjastycznej odbudowy kraju, we wczesnych latach pięćdziesiątych XX wieku, naznaczonych jednak stalinowskim cieniem, późniejszych latach realnego socjalizmu i socjalizmu „z ludzką twarzą” oraz kończących ten wiek latach przełomu demokratycznego.

prof. dr hab. Krzysztof Pałecki


Na dokumentacyjne walory recenzowanego tekstu korzystnie wpłynęło też bogactwo zawodowych i życiowych doświadczeń prof. J.J. Wiatra, który uczestniczył w przeprowadzaniu wielu przedsięwzięć ważnych dla warszawskiej socjologii, pełniąc w niej różne funkcje organizacyjne. Ponadto w wywiadzie potrafił on zachować obiektywizm w ocenie ludzi i wydarzeń, choć w przyjętej konwencji wywiadu-rzeki miał on – przynajmniej w pewnym stopniu - prawo do subiektywizmu. Pomogły mu w tym także wysokie kompetencje naukowe, które pozwoliły mu ulokować historię polskiej socjologii okresu PRL w szerokim kontekście uwarunkowań politycznych i systemowych.

prof. dr hab. Mirosław Chałubiński

Call for Papers : Marxism and Psychoanalysis in Central and Eastern Europe, 1920–1991

Contradictions/Kontradikce: A Journal for Critical Thought

Call for Papers for volume 8 (2024)

Marxism and Psychoanalysis in Central and Eastern Europe, 1920–1991

The interaction between Marxism and psychoanalysis has a rich history. Extensive research has documented and reflected on the relationship between psychoanalysis and (originally) German Critical Theory, and between (especially Lacanian) psychoanalysis and French Marxism. Much less attention has been paid, however, to the traces left by the dialogue between these two 20th-century intellectual traditions in Central and Eastern Europe. One of the driving forces behind this intellectual meeting was a perceived insufficiency in Marxist thought, which, although capable of theorizing objective social processes, was seen as lacking an adequate concept of subjectivity. With this in mind, a considerable number of Marxists sought the aid of psychoanalysis. Rather than leading to a smooth fusion of one intellectual tradition with the other, this fragile alliance provoked exceptionally fruitful discussions, confrontations, and polemics that found their way into multiple disciplines – above all philosophy, psychology, and aesthetics. A new volume of Contradictions will be devoted to this complex history, and to the traces and resonances that the Central- and Eastern-European interaction of Marxism and psychoanalysis has left in the present.

We especially welcome submissions on the following themes:

The history psychoanalysis’s reception within Marxism, and vice versa, in this period in the region;

psychoanalysis as a materialist theory of subjectivity;

offering psychoanalysis to the masses – class and the accessibility of psychoanalysis;

objective myths as psycho-social factors that influence the human psyche – psychoanalysis as a materialist theory of ideology and propaganda;

psychoanalysis as a materialist theory of art and the imagination;

the psychoanalytic critique of Marxism – the confrontation of Marxist optimism with Freudian pessimism;

the legality/illegality of psychoanalysis in the Eastern Bloc (psychoanalysis as a bourgeois pseudo-science?).

Submissions can take the form of:

Studies and essays: These may be articles of a more or less traditional academic character, but with an emphasis on the social significance of the material presented and on original and provocative argumentation. But we also welcome more essayistic contributions that break with some of the conventions of scholarly form. We are interested in rigorously theoretical essays, works of high scholarly value but which might not find a place in other scholarly journals. Texts for this volume should be no longer than 8,000 words (including notes and bibliography). Include a list of key words and an abstract of approximately 200–300 words. All studies and essays will be subject to independent, double-blind peer review.

Discussion contributions: polemical texts addressing a theme of particular interest to the journal’s readership. Approximately 2500–5000 words.

Translations and materials: Important contributions to Central/Eastern European social thought that can be brought to international attention in English translation; and previously unpublished or long-unavailable “materials,” accompanied by annotation that presents the materials’ significance to contemporary readers. 3000–10,000 words.

Reviews of recent publications. Reviews may be brief (1000–2500 words) or may constitute longer review essays (2500–7500 words). We especially welcome review essays or bibliographical overviews that present and discuss works relevant to freudo-marxist studies in CEE. Otherwise, we welcome any reviews on topics and issues related to the history and contemporary developments of the radical intellectual traditions and movements in the region. Please contact us beforehand if you are interested in writing a review.

We accept submissions written in English, Czech, or Slovak.

The deadline for articles is November 30, 2023. We ask prospective contributors to submit 300-word (max.) abstracts by September 30, 2023.

Send abstracts and articles to kontradikce@flu.cas.cz. Further guidelines for authors are available here (https://kontradikce.flu.cas.cz/en/guidelines-for-authors).

Thursday 20 April 2023

Call for Papers, GCE-HSG Annual Conference 2023 Environment, Energy and Economy in the Black Sea Region Constanţa, Romania, 14-16 September 2023

 Call for Papers

GCE-HSG Annual Conference 2023

Environment, Energy and Economy in the Black Sea Region

Constanţa, Romania, 14-16 September 2023

The Center for Governance and Culture in Europe (GCE-HSG) at the University of St. Gallen in Switzerland invites paper proposals for a conference "Environment, Energy and Economy in the Black Sea Region," to be held in Constanţa, Romania, 14-16 September 2023

The rich and complex history of the Black Sea Region is very much entangled with struggles and conflicts over its resources and with empires and nation-states' efforts to manage them. Even currently, international energy, grain, and transportation crises caused by the Russian war on Ukraine are closely connected to the Black Sea. In addition to the obvious energy and economic instability, the war creates numerous ecological challenges and is extremely harmful to the environment. These events and threats in the region create a growing demand for platforms for multidisciplinary analysis and expertise. By examining the region's past and present through various lenses, including politics, governance, economics, social justice, and technology, the conference will contribute to a more comprehensive and in-depth understanding of the region's development.

Constanţa, the venue of the event, is an outstanding location for a discussion about the environment, energy, and economy in the region. The city, a former capital of the historical border region Dobruja, has one of the biggest ports on the Black Sea and entered the Danube–Black Sea Canal, a large-scale navigable artificial watercourse.

The thematic scope of the conference focuses on, but is not limited to, the following issues:

Environmental Humanities

History of environment, energy and economy in the Black Sea Region

Energy security in the Black Sea region: risks, threats, and responses

Environmental sustainability and responsibility in the energy sector

The economy and resource efficiency

The impact of energy and environmental policies on the economic development of the region

Energy market liberalization and privatization

Climate change in the Black Sea region

The role of international organizations and institutions in promoting sustainable energy and environmental practices

Renewable energy technologies and their potential for the region

Environmental justice and energy poverty in the Black Sea region

Innovation and entrepreneurship in the energy and environment sectors

Cross-border energy and environmental cooperation in the Black Sea region

The interplay between energy, environment, and social inequality in the region

Features of agricultural and industrial development

Natural resource management and crises response

We invite anthropologists, sociologists, historians, ethnographers, economists, geographers, political scientists, and academics from related disciplines to apply for the conference. While the primary focus of the conference is the Black Sea Region, researchers focused on other regions are welcome to apply. The conference committee invites Ph.D. students, early career scholars, as well as advanced researchers.

Please send a brief CV (max. 2 pages) and a paper abstract (max. 300 words) to gce-info@unisg.ch as a single pdf document by May 16, 2023. The working language of the conference is English. Should you fail to receive confirmation of receipt of your application, please contact the organizers.

The conference is planned as an in-person event. However, scholars based in Ukraine who are unable to travel as a result of the Russian invasion will be provided with the opportunity to participate online.

The conference committee covers all travel expenses (max. 300 EUR), accommodation, and meals.

Contact person:

Dr. Oleksii Chebotarov

gce-info@unisg.ch

URL: gce.unisg.ch/en/ueberuns/aktuell/cfp-annual-conference-2023

Call for papers: Roles of the 1968 revolutions in the history of science and mathematics

Call for papers: Roles of the 1968 revolutions in the history of science and mathematics, June 21–23, 2023, the Faculty of Education, Masaryk University in Brno.
 URL: https://math-and-society.webnode.page/
In the post-war history of Czechoslovakia, 1968 is an indisputable milestone. The political history of the year has been described in private memoirs, analysed by historians, and served as inspiration for literary works. Kundera's Unbearable Lightness of Being was published for the first time by 68 Publishers, the publishing house founded by another émigré writer, Josef Škvorecký. 1968 was the year that instilled hopes, but also damped them in August of the same year after the arrival of the Warsaw pact armies. The fates of scientists and scientific institutions reflect and sometimes magnify what happened throughout the country. Although intellectuals never stopped leaving their native country because of their disagreement with the communist regime, the wave of emigration following the August 1968 invasion had a major impact on the community. Those who did not leave the country despite having spoken in favour of the changes instigated by the abolishment of censorship early in 1968 — not only the politicians and the economists, who were behind the proposed societal changed known as "socialism with a human face", but also "ordinary" scientists, leading personalities of university departments — were dismissed from their leading positions, if not from the universities. The developments in Czechoslovakia, however, also affected scientific institutions in the West. After the period of blossoming cooperation during the 1960s, most opportunities faded away. Still many Czechoslovak scientists found a new home in the West, e.g. Bohuslav Diviš, the winner of the first International Mathematical Olympiad in 1959, did not return from his stay in Western Germany and later pursued his career in the US, Vlastimil Dlab decided in the last moment of his return journey from Australia to prefer Carleton in Canada to Charles University in Prague. Petr Vopěnka, on the other hand, described the advantages and disadvantages of work in isolation, pointing out that isolation provided him with a possibility of plunging deeply into research, which resulted in cognition, while he felt dissatisfaction and anxiety in personal life. We invite researchers to submit proposals for papers relevant to the history of science and technology in the 1960s and in the 1970s. While the changes in Czechoslovakia may seem more pronounced, the atmosphere in other countries was influenced by the clear sign that at least in Europe and Northern America, the world remained divided into "the West" and "the Soviet bloc". How did this status quo influence the functioning of international organisations like the UNESCO, the International Union for History and Philosophy of Science, and the International Mathematical Union? We welcome proposals for papers on connecting scientific development and the underlying political issues; modes of co-operation (within international organisations as well as outside of those); styles of scientific exchange between the West and the Soviet bloc; differences and similarities between the two blocs in science and technology; impact of cultural and social development on scientific cultures; other themes relevant to the conference topic. Please, submit your abstracts through EasyChair (https://easychair.org/my/conference?conf=mas23) at your earliest convenience. Authors will be notified within a week from their submission. Final date for a submission is 11 June 2023. Registration open: from 1 May to 15 June 2023. Conference fee: EUR 30 or CZK 600, payable on site or through bank transfer.

CfA: Science and Innovation Diplomacy School on Global Circulation of Research Data, São Paulo, Brazil, 24 July – 4 August 2023

CfA: Science and Innovation Diplomacy School on Global Circulation of Research Data, São Paulo, Brazil, 24 July – 4 August 2023 This year’s São Paulo Innovation and Science Diplomacy School (InnSciDSP) will be focusing on data diplomacy. An innovative initiative of NEWORLD@A consortium-member the University of São Paulo, InnSciDSP is an annual programme that has run since 2019 that provides multidisciplinary training on the intersection of foreign policy and science, technology, and innovation. Early career scholars (Master, PhD, Postdoc levels) are particularly encouraged to apply. Further information is available on the school’s website https://2023.innscidsp.com/ which includes a link to the registration form. The deadline for applications is 28 April 2023. We are pleased to share InnSciDSP’s call for proposals below: The Science and Innovation Diplomacy (InnSciD SP) School on Global Circulation of Research Data, funded by the São Paulo School of Advanced Science Programme of FAPESP (http://espca.fapesp.br), will take place at the University of São Paulo in Brazil from 24 July to 04 August 2023. This call for proposals aims to select up to 80 researchers for The Science and Innovation Diplomacy (InnSciD SP) School on Global Circulation of Research Data. There are up to 40 places available for international participants and 40 places available for participants from Brazil. The main target group for the school is students enrolled in master’s, doctoral or postdoctoral programmes who are interested in the topics covered by the school. If there are several candidates with similar skills, we will aim at diversifying/balancing the selected students by gender and geographical origin. Selection of participants will be made by members of the InnSciD SP Executive Committee based on information submitted online. This Advanced School aims to open a discussion on the circulation of research data and measures of science diplomacy that help shape the current global system of data sharing. It will seek to bring together experts from different parts of the world engaged in pioneering transnational collaborative research projects to reconstruct the process by which important historical transitions have taken place and to engage non-Western narratives in the processes of negotiating research data. The School will fully fund the flights (economy class) and accommodation (standard and shared rooms) for all participants. Students currently receiving a FAPESP scholarship or living in the greater São Paulo area are encouraged to apply but are not eligible for funding. Other costs (visa processing costs, eventual vaccination procedures for travel to Brazil or transportation costs within the city of São Paulo) will not be covered by InnSciD SP. The selection of students will take into account motivations and consistency with the proposed topic, as expressed in the documents attached to the form.

Monday 17 April 2023

Franz Sz. Horváth, Kommunist – Jude – Ungar? Leben und Werk des heimatlosen Philosophen Ernő Gáll.

Franz Sz. Horváth, Kommunist – Jude – Ungar? Leben und Werk des heimatlosen Philosophen Ernő Gáll. Wien: Harrasowitz 2023. ISBN: 978-3-447-12019-7 

Das Leben des ungarisch-jüdischen Philosophen Ernő Gáll (1917–2000) steht für das (jüdische) Leid, die politischen Hoffnungen und Enttäuschungen einer ganzen ostmitteleuropäischen Generation. Franz Sz. Horváth stellt Gáll als Jungkommunisten in Rumänien, als verfolgten Juden in Ungarn (1940–1945) und im KZ Buchenwald vor. Er schildert Gáll als stalinistischen Dogmatiker in Rumänien (1945–1956), als Reformmarxisten und Minderheitenintellektuellen (nach 1968). Gálls hybride (jüdisch-kommunistisch-ungarische) Identitäten, seine kommunitaristische Ethik der Würde und Verantwortung werden analysiert. Doch arbeitet der Verfasser auch Gálls Bemühungen, den Holocaust philosophisch zu deuten (Ettersberger Grübeleien), und seine vorsichtige Wiederannäherung an das Judentum im Alter heraus. Hierzu wertete er u.a. Gálls umfangreichen Briefwechsel, seine Tagebücher, Publikationen und Securitate-Akten aus. So gelingt es Horváth, die widersprüchliche Wahrnehmung Gálls als ungarischer Nationalist (durch die Securitate), als Jude im Dienst der rumänischen Partei (so die Ungarn) und als „dem Judentum entfremdeter Jude“ (so seine jüdischen Freunde) aufzuzeigen. Diese erste Biographie des heimatlosen Philosophen Ernő Gáll weist zuletzt nach, dass man mit Gálls Begriffsschöpfung der „Würde der Eigenart“ an heutige Identitätsdiskurse anknüpfen kann. Schließlich gewährt die Einbettung des Gállschen Lebenswegs in die Erfahrungswelt seiner Generation auch einen Einblick in die rumänienungarische Minderheitengeschichte im 20. Jahrhundert.

Lubow Żwanko, Dmytro Kibkało: Per aspera ad astra. Listy Leona Cienkowskiego (1822–1887) [Per aspera ad astra. Letters of Leon Cienkowski (1822-1887)].

Lubow Żwanko, Dmytro Kibkało: Per aspera ad astra. Listy Leona Cienkowskiego (1822–1887) [Per aspera ad astra. Letters of Leon Cienkowski (1822-1887)]. Torun: Wydawnictwo Naukowe Uniwersytetu Mikołaja Kopernika 2022. ISBN: 978-83-231-4950-7 Książka autorstwa naukowców z Charkowa jest pierwszym w Polsce całościowym opracowaniem poświęconym życiu i działalności naukowej Leona Cienkowskiego (1822–1887), jednego z najwybitniejszych biologów XIX wieku. Leon Cienkowski – mikrobiolog, botanik, podróżnik, „ojciec polskiej biologii”, „ukraiński Pasteur”, odkrywca szczepionki przeciw wąglikowi w Europie Wschodniej i utalentowany dydaktyk – zajmuje zaszczytne miejsce w gronie polskich naukowców, którzy działali w okresie zaborów, przynosząc sławę swej nieistniejącej ojczyźnie. Jego życie to droga per aspera ad astra – droga przez trudy i cierpienia do uznania, które zyskał m.in. dzięki genialnemu odkryciu w Charkowskim Instytucie Weterynaryjnym. Stworzenie wielowątkowej biografii Leona Cienkowskiego umożliwiła autorom analiza listów, które uczony pisał do swojego warszawskiego przyjaciela Jerzego Aleksandrowicza. Publikacja zawiera opracowanie wszystkich 50 listów – jest więc pierwszą próbą ich pełnego udostępnienia dla świata nauki, co stanowi o jej wyjątkowości. Na podstawie tej korespondencji autorzy stworzyli portret Leona Cienkowskiego w oderwaniu od jego badań, pokazali „człowieczeństwo naukowca”, opisali geniusza i wyobrazili sobie „światy”, które uczony tworzył wokół siebie. Ukazali go jako ojca i męża, przyjaciela, człowieka kochającego życie mimo wielu przeciwności losu. Wywiady z prof. Lubow Żwanko: https://repozytorium.umk.pl/bitstream/handle/item/6772/Lepiej%20poznac%20sasiadow.pdf?sequence=1 https://www.polskieradio.pl/399/7979/Artykul/3089621,per-aspera-ad-astra-wydano-ksiazke-o-leonie-cienkowskim-zapomnianym-geniuszu-nauki?fbclid=IwAR3NwyBonv_UwDQSTwkCaxEmazjU4uKsD5faTvyCu4J3qulsCHpqMAJ8P5Q https://tvtorun.pl/30501/per-aspera-ad-astra

Thursday 13 April 2023

Transnational_History_Lab: Writing the History of Science and Technology Anew International Winter School, February 5–10, 2024

Transnational_History_Lab: Writing the History of Science and Technology Anew International Winter School, February 5–10, 2024 Humanity lives in a transnational world. Recent global events such as the Covid-19 pandemic, major supply chain disruptions and the war in Ukraine have reinforced this claim and exposed the challenges of that transnational world. Resources, products, businesses, organizations, activists, and other actors, as well as technologies, ideas, and scientific findings constantly cross borders and exert a decisive influence on both national and global affairs. How can we write transnational history in a world in which science and technology become increasingly relevant? For our “Transnational History Lab” we welcome and encourage proposals that cover a wide range of topics, timelines, and different methodical approaches and academic disciplines to further develop the research field of transnational history. The winter school will take place over 6 days, allowing researchers to fully retreat “into the laboratory” to develop and experiment with ideas in a setting that not only allows for but actively encourages trial and error. It will be an intensive but rewarding experience for scholars to reflect on the ways they conduct research and develop and share new approaches to transnational history in collaboration with renowned senior researchers. The focus is on four main thematic areas that will form the basis for the discussions and presentations: International Organizations Global Histories of Anti-Nuclear Activism Internationalism and Academic Refugees Scientific and Technological Standards and Standard Setting We encourage all interested parties to apply and to join us in experimenting with new approaches, perspectives, and research avenues through an open and productive learning environment. We will invite up to 20 junior scholars (MAs, PhDs, Postdocs), 5 for each of the main thematic areas. The deadline for the submission of a cover letter (max 1 page), a CV with selected publications (max 2 pages), and an abstract of your paper (1.500 to 2,000 words) is Monday, May 15, 2023. In your cover letter you must indicate which of the four thematic areas mentioned above you wish to participate in, if not we cannot accept your application. Please include your name and contact information in all submitted documents. Applicants will be informed of the result of the review process by Monday, June 26, 2023. The invited junior scholars will be asked to submit a more developed research paper (no more than 8,000 words) by Monday, October 2, 2023. This will form the basis of their presentations during the winter school and can take the form of a chapter, an article, or a paper. These texts will be circulated among all the participants of the winter school. Following the completion of the winter school, the students will be issued a certificate of participation. When? Monday, February 5 to Saturday, February 10, 2024 Where? Josephs, Augustinerstraße 19, 90403 Nuremberg, Germany Who? Up to 20 early-career scholars (Masters, PhDs, Postdocs) in research fields dealing with transnational history such as History of Science and Technology, Science and Technology Studies, International Relations, Diplomatic History, Sociology and/or Philosophy of Science, or any related fields What is covered? Hotel accommodation including breakfast as well as lunch and coffee/tea are covered for all days. Additionally, the organizers can partially cover travel expenses depending on where the students are traveling from. Three dinners will be offered over the winter school Who is organizing it? Prof. Dr. Maria Rentetzi and Dr. Aske Hennelund Nielsen, Chair of Science, Technology and Gender Studies, Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg (FAU) Who is funding it? The winter school is entirely funded by the VolkswagenStiftung Important dates? Deadline for submission of cover Letter, CV and abstract: Monday, May 15, 2023 Notification of the result of the review process: Monday, June 26, 2023 Deadline for submission of final paper: Monday, October 2, 2023

hybrid conference: Stefan Zamecki (1936-2022) – in memoriam (Polish), 17.04.2023

hybrid conference: Stefan Zamecki (1936-2022) – in memoriam (Polish), 17.04.2023 Pracownia Naukoznawstwa IHN PAN oraz Komisja Historii Nauki PAU zapraszają do wzięcia udziału w konferencji Stefan Zamecki (1936–2022) – in memoriam. Obrady są poświęcone śp. prof. Stefanowi Zameckiemu, który od 1975 r. prowadził w Zakładzie Historii Nauki, Oświaty i Techniki PAN (od 1994 Instytut Historii Nauki PAN) badania z zakresu naukoznawstwa, historii i filozofii nauki oraz historii chemii, a w latach 1999-2018 pełnił funkcję redaktora naczelnego „Kwartalnika Historii Nauki i Techniki”. Obrady rozpoczną się w poniedziałek, 17 kwietnia 2023 r. o godzinie 14:45 za pośrednictwem platformy ZOOM. Osoby zainteresowane uczestnictwem w konferencji proszone są o kontakt mailowy z dr. Mateuszem Hübnerem (mhubner@ihnpan.pl lub mateuszhubner@wp.pl). Poster: https://www.ihnpan.pl/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/Konferencja-Stefan-Zamecki.pdf

Call for Papers: Making Knowledge on Ukraine in the Interwar Period

Call for Papers: Making Knowledge on Ukraine in the Interwar Period, Workshop, 25–26 September 2023, IOS Regensburg, Germany. Deadline 10.05.2023 The Russian war against Ukraine resulted in a massive displacement of Ukrainian scholars and increasing attempts to make knowledge on Ukraine. At the same time a discussion emerged about the persons who could legitimately claim expertise about the country. The figure of the expert has oscillated between the “native informants,” whose legitimacy came from their local knowledge, and “Westsplainers,” whose local expertise was questionable. Acknowledging that the question of legitimacy is also a question about the situatedness of knowledge, we propose to investigate practices of knowledge making on the Ukrainian lands, its inhabitants and its recent history, with a focus on the interwar period. World War I put Ukraine on the mental maps of Europe, both as an imagined construct and as a body of separate political entities. Ukraine appeared on maps and in international debates, and Ukrainian intellectuals were visible like never before due to the global interest in the region and their political impetus to legitimize their own knowledge on Ukraine. After the Great War, the displacement of scholars and politicians increased their entanglements with non-Ukrainian institutions and scholars all over Europe. At the end of WWI, the imagined Ukrainian lands were integrated as new regions into various states. In the interwar decades they remained a subject of intensified interest in Czechoslovakia, Poland, Romania, and the Soviet Union. Inquiries involved a range of actors apart from professional academics, such as officials, citizen scientists, entrepreneurs, teachers, travel authors, translators, memoirists, and photographers. Whether minorities or émigrés, Ukrainian intellectuals were subjected to power relations and often violence, which also limited their possibilities to become part of official discourses about the regions of their origins. The attitude towards them ranged from active cooperation to complete ignorance, often in reciprocity with ideologies and loyalties to state-building, nation-building or geopolitical projects. We invite you to discuss, among others, the following questions with us: How was Ukraine made (in)visible in different political settings during the interwar period? How could Ukrainians influence or establish legitimate knowledge on Ukraine and Ukrainians outside of national circles? Which transnational and transregional networks provided Ukrainians with new possibilities and opportunities? Who were other actors producing or contesting this knowledge? Which conflict lines arose here, especially beyond the political ones?How did epistemologies of Ukrainian Studies (Ukrainoznavstvo) change since the outbreak of World War I, and how did they influence processes of knowledge-making? How did Ukrainians produce and institutionalize knowledge on the most recent history, particularly on the period of 1914-1923? How did hierarchies in different state/local/regional settings influence the circumstances of knowledge production on Ukraine? How was knowledge on Ukraine obliterated or unmade? Which counter-narratives to Ukrainian approaches were established, and how were they institutionalized? How was ignorance towards Ukraine produced? What forms of violence were instrumentalized to suppress the perspectives of a “national minority”? We are particularly interested in transnational entanglements of the highlighted issues and also invite contributions, which don’t directly involve Ukrainian actors, but interact with knowledge on Ukraine. We welcome submissions from diverse fields of inquiry and do not attempt to limit us to specific disciplines. Interdisciplinary contributions are highly encouraged. Please, submit a max. 300 words abstract and short biographical note to Martin Rohde (rohde@ios-regensburg.de) until May 10. We will notify you about the acceptance of your papers until mid May. Participants will be provided with accommodation in Regensburg. We can cover the travel costs for a limited number of researchers; if you would like to be considered for financial support, please indicate this in your application. Organizers: Galina Babak, Guido Hausmann, Martin Rohde, Jan Surman The workshop is jointly organized and supported by IOS Regensburg, the University of Regensburg, the Institute of History (Czech Academy of Sciences), and the Lumina quaeruntur project “Images of science” in Czechoslovakia 1918-1945-1968 (Masaryk Institute and Archives, Czech Academy of Sciences). Photo: Convention of Slavic geographers and ethnographers in Warsaw 1927, Narodowe Archiwum Cyfrowe, 3/1/0/5/520

Thursday 6 April 2023

hybrid event: Sławomir Łotysz: More than just Mykoin: The Czech origins of East European penicillin,

hybrid event: Sławomir Łotysz: More than just Mykoin: The Czech origins of East European penicillin, 19.04.2023 13:00 CET, Prague and zoom

On 19.04.2023, at 13:00 (hybrid) Lumina Quaeruntur project ““Images of science” in Czechoslovakia 1918-1945-1968” at Masarykův ústav a Archiv AV ČR, together with the Institute for History of Medicine and Foreign Languages, First Faculty of Medicine, Charles University and the Society for History of Medicine and Technology will host a talk by prof. Sławomir Łotysz  (Institute for the History of Science Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw, Poland) entitled More than just Mykoin: The Czech origins of East European penicillin.

This hybrid lecture will take place on Wednesday 19th of April 2023 from 1 p.m. CET (12 a.m. GMT) at the Institute for History of Medicine and Foreign Languages, U Nemocnice 4, Praha 2, room 1.20, and online in Zoom (register on eventbrite here (https://www.eventbrite.de/e/sawomir-otysz-more-than-just-mykoin-tickets-593407707427)

Abstract: 
In the summer of 1944, a research ůgroup at the B. Fragner pharmaceutical company’s laboratory in Dolní Měcholupy, near Prague, manufactured small quantities of penicillin. Working in secret from the Nazi German occupants, they were able to replicate entirely on their own the process of biosynthesis, which was previously known only to a few American and British corporations. The Mykoin BF 510, as it was designated, was used to treat Czech patriots and Soviet soldiers injured in the Prague uprising (Pražské povstání) the following May. Making Mykoin was a remarkable accomplishment for Czech scientists, but the first full-scale Czechoslovak penicillin factory, which opened in Roztoky in the fall of 1949, was supplied by UNRRA and used technology developed during the war in the West. In this talk, after briefly explaining how Mykoin was developed, I will detail the origins of the Penicillin Plant Programme, under which UNRRA provided five penicillin factories to Czechoslovakia, Poland, Yugoslavia, Belarus, and Ukraine. I will argue that Czech antibiotic expertise accumulated while working on Mykoin was essential in initiating the Penicillin Plant Programme and formulating its assumptions and aims. Furthermore, the practical expertise of Czech specialists was critical in keeping the entire program from failing. They not only identified flaws in the original factory design, but also supported other countries in starting production through scientific and technical assistance. This paper assesses the non-obvious flows of expertise during a period when political upheaval prevents or considerably impedes the regular movement of knowledge. Breaking established links between institutions and people can be particularly damaging in domains where tacit knowledge is critical, such as penicillin research and manufacture. This analysis challenges the usual notion of centre-periphery dynamics by introducing new actors to the epistemology of early biomedicine.
The paper is based on author’s book Welfare Factory. Penicillin behind the Iron Curtain, 1945-1954 (in Polish: Fabryka z darów. Penicylina za żelazną kurtyną 1945-1954. Warsaw: Aspra JR, 2020). The book’s Table of Contents can be found here http://lotysz.webd.pl/welfare-factory/ and a review published in Open Access in HoST – Journal of History of Science and Technology is available here https://doi.org/10.2478/host-2022-0009
The research was funded by the National Science Centre, Poland, under grant number 2014/13/B/HS3/04951.

Krzysztof Mikulski: Nicolaus Copernicus. Social milieu, background, and youth.

Krzysztof Mikulski: Nicolaus Copernicus. Social milieu, background, and youth. Torun: Wydawnictwo Naukowe Uniwersytetu Mikołaja Kopernika 2023. ISBN: 978-83-231-4987-3 

A prominent French historian, Fernand Braudel, in his works concerning the Mediterranean Sea stated that what is necessary to understand actions of even a single human being is a broad context created by the space and social environment in which the protagonist lives. For Braudel, the character of Philip II, King of Spain, served only as a pretext to analyse the entire civilisation of the Mediterranean of his times. In the present book, the author uses Braudel’s method in reference to Nicolaus Copernicus – the scholar. His biography remains a background to these considerations – the more interesting for the author, however, is the spatial and social context which to a certain extent had to shape Nicolaus’s personality and his intellectual horizons. This context is created by the biographical entries of Toruń’s families related and linked to the astronomer and a genealogy of Copernicus family, totally different from the ones that have been presented to date. The author also reveals some new findings concerning the initial period of Nicolaus Copernicus’s life in Toruń. 

 Wybitny historyk francuski Fernand Braudel w swoich pracach o Morzu Śródziemnym stwierdził, że dla zrozumienia działań nawet pojedynczego człowieka konieczny jest szeroki kontekst, jaki tworzą przestrzeń i środowisko społeczne, w którym toczy swoje życie główny bohater. Dla Braudela Filip II, król Hiszpanii, stał się więc tylko pretekstem do analizy całej cywilizacji Morza Śródziemnego w jego czasach. W prezentowanej książce autor posługuje się metodą Braudela, ale odnosi ją do Mikołaja Kopernika – uczonego. Jego biografia pozostaje na marginesie tych rozważań – zdecydowanie ciekawszy dla autora jest bowiem ów kontekst przestrzenny i społeczny, który musiał w jakiejś mierze kształtować osobowość Mikołaja i jego horyzonty intelektualne. Kontekst ten tworzą biogramy toruńskich rodzin spokrewnionych i spowinowaconych z astronomem oraz zupełnie odmienna od dotychczas prezentowanych genealogia rodziny Koperników. Autor przedstawia też nowe ustalenia dotyczące pierwszego, toruńskiego okresu życia Mikołaja Kopernika.

Summer School "Collaboration and Interdisciplinarity in Science and Technology "

Summer School "Collaboration and Interdisciplinarity in Science and Technology ", 24-29 Sept. 2023 in Wuppertal (Germany) at the Flemings Express Hotel. The Research Training Group GRK 2696 “Transformations of science and technology since 1800: topics, processes, institutions”, in cooperation with the Interdisciplinary Summer School Series in Higher Education Research and Science Studies (https://www.herss-summer.eu) invites applications for the Summer School "Collaboration and Interdisciplinarity in Science and Technology ", taking place 24-29 Sept. 2023 in Wuppertal (Germany) at the Flemings Express Hotel. COLLABORATION AND INTERDISCIPLINARITY IN SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY Science as a social system has grown rapidly during the 20th and the early 21st centuries. This growth involved processes of cognitive and social differentiation, resulting in an increasing variety of scientific disciplines and research fields. Thomas Kuhn argued that similar to the speciation of new biological organisms, new disciplines emerge when scientists increasingly rely on a new lexicon that excludes non-specialists from scientific communication. In his view, such “lexical diversity” permits the sciences to solve more complex scientific puzzles than a lexically homogeneous science. In contrast, Peter Galison argued that “trading zones” between fields can bridge gaps in communication through interdisciplinary collaboration. The summer school will examine both collaboration and interdisciplinarity from the perspectives of history, philosophy and sociology of science and technology. We will discuss state-of-the-art theories, methods and research designs that aim at better understanding the complex web of scientific collaboration, the costs and benefits of interdisciplinary research, the competition between research fields, institutional conditions for successful collaboration, and their impact on scientific careers. The summer school will give early career researchers the opportunity to discuss these issues with leading scholars and probe new ideas for their own projects. Confirmed Lecturers and Working Group titles: Daniel Acuña, University of Colorado Boulder (Computer Science, Science of Science): tba Hanne Andersen, University of Copenhagen (Philosophy of Science): Title: Studies of interdisciplinarity: Questioning the legends Hunter Heyck, University of Oklahoma (History of Science and Technology): tba Erin Leahy, University of Arizona, Tucson (Sociology of Science): Title: Collaboration is hard. Interdisciplinary research is hard. What does it get us? Cyrus Mody, University of Maastricht (History and Sociology of Science): Title: Scientific “Bubbles” in Nanotechnology and Beyond Hannah Rubin, University of Missouri (Philosophy of Science): Title: Modeling scientists’ social interactions and their consequences We invite contributions from advanced graduate students and postdoctoral fellows from history, philosophy and sociology of science and technology as well as the fields of science of science and science & innovation studies. We are interested in both theoretical as well as the empirical contributions addressing various aspects of collaboration and interdisciplinarity in science and technology. To apply, please send the following material in a single pdf file by May 31st 2023 to grk2696-summerschool@uni-wuppertal.de: - Letter of motivation - Short CV The application process will be competitive and participants will be selected according to qualification and research interests. The cost of participation will be € 250 and includes full board and lodging. A selection of participants will be given the opportunity to give short presentations of their own work as part of the school. The presentations will be followed by a commentary from a faculty member of the graduate school or one of the invited speakers. In case you intend to give a presentation, please include in your application: - Title of your talk - Long abstract (approx. 1000 words) focusing on work in progress from ongoing research projects addressing the above issues. We offer a small number of stipends to participants with limited funding opportunities. To apply for a stipend, please also prepare and submit a letter, no longer than one page, explaining your financial situation. The research training group is strongly committed to creating equal opportunities. In case of equal qualification, preference will be given to underrepresented groups. We are organizing on-site child care. Please indicate in your application if you intend to bring your child or children. You can contact the organizers of the summer school using the email address grk2696-summerschool@uni-wuppertal.de.

Monday 3 April 2023

Marek Hałub (ed.) Śląska Republika Uczonych / Schlesische Gelehrtenrepublik / Slezská vědecká obec, X.

Marek Hałub (ed.) Śląska Republika Uczonych / Schlesische Gelehrtenrepublik / Slezská vědecká obec, X. Wroclaw: Atut/ Dresden: Neisse Verlag 2022, ISBN: 978-83-7977-634-4 Toc: https://www.atutoficyna.pl/uploads/att/85/5/3285/Slaska_Republika_Uczonych_vol-10_2022__spis_tr.pdf .

Станіслав Росовецький: Володимир Перетц. Біографія інтелектуала [Volodymyr Perets: Biography of an Intellectual].

Станіслав Росовецький: Володимир Перетц. Біографія інтелектуала [Volodymyr Perets: Biography of an Intellectual]. Київ: Дух і Літера 2023. ISBN 978-966-378-967-5 Книжку присвячено академіку ВУАН та АН СРСР, доктору слов’янської філології, професору Володимиру Миколайовичу Перетцу (1870–1935) – філологу-давнику, історику літератури, авторові праць з джерелознавства, текстології, палеографії, фольклористики й історії театру. Академік Перетц був і лишається зіркою нашого літературознавства, світилом європейського рівня, співмірним за яскравістю з Іваном Франком. Автор ставить і намагається розв’язати питання про те, чому цей петербуржець присвятив життя українській давній літературі та фольклору, чому саме в Києві вийшов на світовий рівень філологічної науки, що зробив для України і що Україна не зробила для нього. Пропонуються відповіді на загадки причин арешту академіка двох академій і невиконання ним обіцянки написати історію української літератури. Для викладачів, учителів, студентів. Для читачів, які не бояться замислитися над книгою.

CFP -- How to take patients’ histories: Doing medical history from below in practice

CFP -- How to take patients’ histories: Doing medical history from below in practice, International Workshop organized by Hieke Huistra (Utrecht University), Noortje Jacobs (Erasmus MC, Rotterdam) and Martijn van der Meer (Erasmus MC, Rotterdam) Keynote speakers: Susan Lederer (University of Wisconsin-Madison) & Cassia Roth (University of Georgia) Almost forty years ago, Roy Porter published his seminal article ‘The Patient’s View: Doing Medical History from Below’. Historians routinely ignored the roles, perspectives, and experiences of sufferers, Porter argued, even though sufferers were the source and origin of any history of healing, and shaped medical encounters and health experiences just as much as healers did. Hence, Porter formulated his ambitious research agenda to shift focus to “the history of the sick,” which he considered central to all medical history and the backbone of social history as well. In the past decades, historians have taken up the gauntlet. However, as scholars working on patients’ histories will know, doing “medical history from below” can be challenging. First of all, Porter’s research agenda consists of systematic steps that are so all-encompassing—from collecting “the terra firma of the material conditions of communities in times past” to the “basic mappings of experience, belief systems, images and symbols [of classes and communities]”—that executing his vision seems insurmountable, certainly in an age of academia in which research is project-based and limited in resources. Secondly and more practically, the sources left to trace sufferers’ roles, experiences, and perspectives are often scant, difficult to interpret, and fraud with challenges in terms of how representative they are for more general conclusions about sufferers in history. In this workshop, we want to explore these two challenges with scholars working on patients’ histories. We want to discuss what these historians do in practice: which sources might yield new and important insights, which methodologies help to retrieve and interpret them, what sort of meaningful historical perspectives these sources and methods can—and can’t!—bring, and how we may generalize individual patients’ experiences into broader historical patterns. We want to think practically and hands-on: we invite scholars working on such histories to share their experiences, struggles, and tips and we will read and think along with each other’s work-in-progress. We particularly welcome papers that explore specific sources that help with doing (medical) history from below, such as, but not limited to, ego documents, court proceedings, patient files, health manuals, advertisements, newspapers, and popular magazines, but also medical journals and other professional publications that offer their own—indirect—insights into patients’ histories. Practical Information The workshop will take place on 28 and 29 September in Utrecht. We plan to organize an informal opening dinner on Wednesday evening 27 September; the sessions will be scheduled on Thursday 28 and Friday 29. We welcome scholars from all career stages. If you are interested in participating, please send an abstract (300-500 words) and a short bio (2-5 lines) to Hieke Huistra (h.m.huistra@uu.nl) before or on April 14th, 2023. We aim to get back to you with a decision at the end of April. We have some funding available to support travel costs. If the travel costs form a barrier for you to participate in the workshop, please contact us to discuss the options.

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...