Thursday, 30 May 2024

shortread: Alexej Lochmatow, “Virtues as a Lens: Exploring Science, Scholarship, and Politics under Soviet Domination,”

Alexej Lochmatow, “Virtues as a Lens: Exploring Science, Scholarship, and Politics under Soviet Domination,” History of Knowledge, May 28, 2024, https://historyofknowledge.net/2024/05/28/virtues-as-a-lens/ .

Catherine Baker, Bogdan C. Iacob, Anikó Imre and James Mark (eds.) Off white: Central and Eastern Europe and the global history of race

Catherine Baker, Bogdan C. Iacob, Anikó Imre and James Mark (eds.) Off white: Central and Eastern Europe and the global history of race. Manchester: Manchester University Press 2024. ISBN: 978-1-5261-7220-4

This volume foregrounds racial difference as a key to an alternative history of the Central and Eastern European region, which revolves around the role of whiteness as the unacknowledged foundation of semi-peripheral nation-states and national identities, and of the region's current status as a global stronghold of unapologetic white, Christian nationalisms. Contributions address the pivotal role of whiteness in international diplomacy, geographical exploration, media cultures, music, intellectual discourses, academic theories, everyday language and banal nationalism's many avenues of expressions. The book offers new paradigms for understanding the relationships among racial capitalism, populism, economic peripherality and race.


CONTENTS
Notes on contributors
Acknowledgements
Note on the cover image

Introduction: racial disavowals - historicising whiteness in Central and Eastern Europe - James Mark, Anikó Imre, Bogdan C. Iacob and Catherine Baker
1 Wilson's white world: the foundation of Central-Eastern European nation-states after World War I - James Mark
2 The 'racial contract', 'whiteness contract', and Central Europe - Bolaji Balogun
3 Not quite white: Russians as Turanians in nineteenth-century Polish thought - Maciej Górny
4 Racial thinking among Czech anthropologists: the case of Vojtech Suk - Victoria Shmidt
5 'Hungarian Indians': race and colonialism in Hungarian 'Indian play' - Zoltán Ginelli
6 Peripheral whiteness and racial belonging and non-belonging: accounts from Albania - Chelsi West Ohueri
7 The aesthetics of alternation and the returns of race: Poland and the Jewish Question - Sudeep Dasgupta
8 Retailored for a Soviet spectator: racial difference and whiteness in the films of the 1930s to the early 1950s - Irina Novikova
9 'With the help of the great Russian people': the (invisible) whiteness of Soviet anti-colonialism and gender emancipation from Central Asia to Khartoum - Yulia Gradskova
10 The whiteness of 'Christian Europe': the case of Hungary - Paul Hanebrink
11 Alien at home, white overseas: the Polish interwar Maritime and Colonial League and the 'Jewish Question' - Marta Grzechnik
12 Midsommar and the production of white fantasy - Anikó Imre
13 In pursuit of Western modernity: Russian-speaking migrants claiming whiteness in Helsinki - Daria Krivonos
14 The 'perpetual foreigner' in Serbia: on being marked and unmarked in a 'raceless' state - Sunnie Rucker-Chang
15 Re-routing Eastern European whiteness: relational racialisation and historical proximity - Spela Drnovsek Zorko
16 Through the Balkans to Christchurch: Southeast Europe and global white nationalist historical mythology - Catherine Baker

Call for Proposals: A Postwar Republic of Letters? Gender, Archiving, and Knowledge Production after the Holocaust

Call for Proposals: A Postwar Republic of Letters? Gender, Archiving, and Knowledge Production after the Holocaust

Section II (thematic section) of History of Intellectual Culture (HIC), Volume 4, 2025

Edited by Ewa Koźmińska-Frejlak, Victoria Van Orden Martínez, and Christine Schmidt

We invite proposals for contributions to a thematic section of History of Intellectual Culture (HIC), an international and interdisciplinary open-access yearbook for peer-reviewed papers, published by De Gruyter and edited by Charlotte A. Lerg, Johan Östling, and Jana Weiß. The theme, titled A Postwar Republic of Letters? Gender, Archiving, and Knowledge Production after the Holocaust and co-guest edited by Ewa Koźmińska-Frejlak, Victoria Van Orden Martínez, and Christine Schmidt, focuses on the circulation of knowledge via letters and other forms of written communication within and among survivor historical commissions after the Second World War, emphasizing the interplay of gender and other differences in the history of knowledge and intellectual culture in this context.

The history of documentation efforts and knowledge production after the Nazi period is a burgeoning area of research, particularly concerning Jewish collecting efforts. Still, there is little attention paid thus far to the framing of these activities in terms of gender and exploring how gender intersects with class, nationality, ethnicity, sexuality, and other contexts to shape knowledge production and dissemination. Documentation and archives-building are important facets of knowledge production through establishing the historical record of evidence.

We invite proposals for contributions (of up to circa 8,000 words, written in English) that explore how knowledge about these activities was amassed and circulated in national and transnational contexts. We as researchers are particularly interested in forms of ‘unseen labor’ – various forms of work, often ‘administrative’ in nature and therefore primarily conducted by women – that remain underexplored and marginalized in studies of the production, circulation and history of knowledge in this context, as well as of intellectual culture. Therefore, we are particularly interested in case studies of how gender and other differences impacted the circulation of knowledge through written communications about war crimes investigations and postwar trials, the publication and dissemination of scholarly and popular literature, archiving, the collection of oral histories and testimonies, and other outputs.

The proposed contributions can address any aspect of the broad themes outlined above or other, more specific topics that relate to the production and circulation of knowledge, history of knowledge, and intellectual culture. For example, archives and other collections deriving from documentation gathered for postwar justice trials, clinical research on survivors and trauma, and family, private collections, or Jewish communal record keeping. We welcome and encourage collaborative (especially interdisciplinary) articles, comparative studies, etc. We are also very interested in proposals for submissions that focus on North American or transatlantic cases.

Below we have listed several framing references:

Circulation of Knowledge: Explorations in the History of Knowledge. Edited by Johan Östling, Erling Sandmo, David Larsson Heidenblad, Anna Nilsson Hammar & Kari H. Nordberg. Lund: Nordic Academic Press, 2018.

Collect and Record!: Jewish Holocaust Documentation in Early Postwar Europe. Laura Jockusch. New York: Oxford University Press, 2015.

Cultural Translation and Knowledge Transfer on Alternative Routes of Escape from Nazi Terror: Mediations through Migrations. Edited by Susanne Korbel and Philipp Strobl. Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group, 2022.

The Yiddish Historians and the Struggle for a Jewish History of the Holocaust, Mark Lee Smith, Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 2019

“Histories of Migrant Knowledge: Transatlantic and Global Perspectives” Bulletin of the German Historical Institute, Supplement 15 (2020). Edited by Andrea Westermann and Onur Erdur

Proposals (in English) should consist of abstracts between 350 and 500 words (including a proposed title), a short biography of the author or authors (approx. 250 words per author), and 3-5 keywords, and be emailed to cfphicsection@gmail.com no later than June 19, 2024.

The guest editors will review all proposals and communicate their decision via email by July 8, 2024.

The final contributions will be up to circa 8,000 words, written in English, and follow HIC style (this will be provided to selected authors).

A rough timeline follows. Please do not submit a proposal if you know you cannot commit to this timing.

CFP Open    May 24 to June 19, 2024

Proposal deadline    June 19, 2024

Guest editors’ decision    July 8, 2024

Complete manuscripts to guest editors    August 30, 2024

Suggested edits to authors    September 23, 2024

Edited manuscripts to guest editors    October 11, 2024

Editors finalize and submit section to HIC    October 15, 2024

Peer review process    October onwards

Publication date    Circa October 2025

Contact Information

Ewa Koźmińska-Frejlak, Victoria Van Orden Martínez, and Christine Schmidt

cfphicsection@gmail.com

Contact Email

cfphicsection@gmail.com


Wednesday, 29 May 2024

Katharina Kinga Kowalski, Feminismus als Denkstil

 Katharina Kinga Kowalski, Feminismus als Denkstil: Zur Frauen- und Geschlechterforschung im Polen der Transformationszeit. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz 2024. ISBN: 978-3-447-12191-0


OPEN ACCESS: https://www.harrassowitz-verlag.de/pdfjs/web/viewer.html?file=/ddo/artikel/86531/978-3-447-12191-0_Free%20Open%20Access%20Download.pdf#pagemode=thumbs .


(English below. Polski jeszcze nizej) 


Der polnische Feminismus der Transformationszeit blickt auf eine bereits 40-jährige Geschichte zurück und prägt bis heute international relevante soziale, politische und wissenschaftliche Praktiken und Diskurse. Die vorliegende Studie geht den feinen Entwicklungslinien zentraler feministischer Denkstilelemente nach und rekonstruiert Motive und Interventionen des feministischen Denkkollektivs seit den 1980er Jahren bis zum EU-Beitritt Polens. Dabei stützt sie sich auf eine breite Quellengrundlage aus öffentlichen und privaten Archiven sowie auf Interviews mit Schlüsselfiguren des Feminismus und nutzt das theoretische Instrumentarium von Ludwik Fleck. Aufgezeigt werden neue Perspektiven auf das „Machen von Wissenschaft“ auch im transnationalen Kontext sowie feministische (Dis-)Kontinuitäten in der Volksrepublik Polen.

------EN

Looking back at developments in feminism over more than four decades, we see that the Polish feminism of the transformation period continues to exert an influence on internationally relevant practices and discourses in the social, political, and academic fields. This study traces the fine lines of development of the central elements of the feminist thought style, and reconstructs the motives and interventions of the feminist thought collective from the 1980s until Poland’s entry into the European Union. The work is based on a broad range of sources from public and private archives, as well as interviews with key figures in feminism. It additionally makes use of the theoretical tools developed by Ludwik Fleck. Light is shed on new perspectives on “doing scholarship”, including in the transnational context, as well as feminist (dis)continuities in the People’s Republic of Poland.

------PL

Spoglądając z perspektywy ponad 40 lat na polski feminizm okresu transformacji, zauważamy, że do dziś wywiera on silny wpływ na istotne w skali międzynarodowej praktyki i dyskursy społeczne, polityczne i naukowe. Niniejsza analiza subtelnie przygląda się drogom rozwoju głównych elementów feministycznego stylu myślowego, rekonstruując motywy i interwencje feministycznego kolektywu myślowego od lat osiemdziesiątych XX wieku do przystąpienia Polski do Unii Europejskiej. Praca opiera się na szerokiej bazie źródeł z archiwów publicznych i prywatnych oraz na wywiadach z czołowymi postaciami feminizmu, a w wymiarze teoretycznym wykorzystuje instrumentarium Ludwika Flecka. Autorka ukazuje nowe perspektywy „robienia nauki” także w kontekście transnarodowym oraz (nie)ciągłość myśli feministycznej w PRL.


Thursday, 23 May 2024

Hybrid conference: Потенційна класика: Potential classics: the displaced, forgotten, and found in the history of Ukrainian sociology, Wednesday, June 5-6, starting at 10:00 EEST

 Hybrid conference: Потенційна класика: витіснене, забуте та віднайдене в історії української соціології // Potential classics: the displaced, forgotten, and found in the history of Ukrainian sociology, Wednesday, June 5-6, starting at 10:00 EEST (registration until June 1, 15:00 EEST)

(Ukrainian below)

How has sociology and related social sciences developed in Ukraine? Is this knowledge purely imported, or does it have internal foundations in Ukrainian intellectual traditions? What are these traditions? Can they serve as a source of conceptual inspiration for contemporary researchers? These and other related questions will be discussed within the framework of the conference "Potential classics: superseded, forgotten, and uncovered in the history of Ukrainian sociology" on June 5, 2024, at the Faculty of Sociology at Kyiv University. The event includes a section of presentations based on original research, gathering experts from Ukraine, France, Spain (Catalonia), Canada, and a round table. The event will take place in a hybrid format. Registration is mandatory for interested participants, both for remote and in-person attendance.

Working languages: Ukrainian, English.

The event will be held on the occasion of the 190th anniversary of Kyiv University (1834) and the centenary of the Ukrainian Sociological Institute/Institute for Community Studies in Prague (1924). Additional information about the speakers and their reports as well as schedule will be published here in due course. Registration form: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSe7mJ1XcuOtsaQQzDSnfN1oI5DBfBeWLZzkj_3DOhcKPx6-ZA/viewform


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Як розвивалася соціологія та суміжні соціальні науки в Україні? Чи є це винятково імпортоване знання чи воно має внутрішні підстави в українських інтелектуальних традиціях? Які ці традиції? Чи можуть вони слугувати джерелом концептуального натхнення для сучасних дослідників? Ці та низка інших питань будуть обговорені в межах конференції "Потенційна класика: витіснене, забуте та віднайдене в історії української соціології" 5 червня 2024 року на факультеті соціології Київського університету. Захід передбачає секцію доповідей на основі авторських досліджень, яка збирає фахівців з України, Франції, Іспанії (Каталонії), Канади та круглий стіл. Захід відбуватиметься у змішаному форматі. Для зацікавлених слухачів обов'язковою є реєстрація, як для дистанційної, так і для особистої присутності. Робочі мови: українська, англійська. Додаткові відомості про доповідачів, теми та організацію з'являтимуться тут поступово.

Захід відбудеться з нагоди 190-річчя Київського університету (1834) та століття Українського соціологічного інституту/ Інституту громадознавства у Празі (1924).

Реєстрація: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSe7mJ1XcuOtsaQQzDSnfN1oI5DBfBeWLZzkj_3DOhcKPx6-ZA/viewform

8th DHST Dissertation prize

 The Division of History of Science and Technology of the International Union of the History and Philosophy of Science and Technology (DHST/IUHPST) is happy to invite submissions to the 8th DHST Dissertation prize, awarding promising young scholars in the broad field of the history of science and technology

Starting at the 22nd International Congress of History of Science in 2005 held in Beijing, DHST now awards the prize every two years. Up to three awards for recent PhD historians of science and technology will recognize outstanding doctoral dissertations completed and filed between 2 September 2022 and 15 April 2024.

The Prize does not specify distinct categories, but submissions must be on the history of science, technology, or medicine. The Award Committee endeavors to maintain the broadest coverage of subjects, geographical areas, time periods, methodologies and so on.

Prizes consist of a certificate, waiver of registration fees, and assistance with accommodation expenditures to the 27th DHST Congress at the University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand, in 2025. The winner of a prize whose dissertation engages substantially with Islamic science and culture (either on the 7th (2020-2022) or 8th (2022-2024) editions of this competition) is also awarded the İhsanoğlu Prize funded by the Turkish Society of History of Science.

A list of previous winners and their projects may be found on the DHST web page under “Awards.”

AWARD COMMITTEE: The Award Committee includes DHST Council members and distinguished subject specialists.

COMPETITION CALENDAR: Applications open 1 May 2024 and close 1 August 2024 (10 p.m UTC). Announcement of prize winners for the 8th competition will be made in late 2024. An award ceremony for winners of the 7th and 8th DHST Prize is planned at the 27th International Congress of History of Science and Technology to take place in Dunedin, New Zealand in 2025.

For the APPLICATION PROCEDURE see https://dhstweb.org/2025-dissertation-prize-call

Monday, 20 May 2024

Martin Nodl, Piotr Węcowski, and Dušan Zupka (eds.) Marxism and Medieval Studies: Marxist Historiography in East Central Europe

Martin Nodl, Piotr Węcowski, and Dušan Zupka (eds.) Marxism and Medieval Studies: Marxist Historiography in East Central Europe. Amsterdam: Brill 2024. ISBN: 978-90-04-68918-3

URL: https://brill.com/display/title/69546 .

This volume is a unique publication as it examines the Marxist attitudes in East Central European historiography and archaeology for the first time, with an emphasis on the co-existence of Marxist and other methodologies between the 1950s and 1970s in the local historiographies in question. Its approach is to distinguish between pseudo-Marxism as an ideological tool on the one hand, and Marxism in the form of historical materialism as a way to interpret the medieval world on the other.


Contributors are: Florin Curta, Piotr Guzowski, Adam Hudek, Tereza Johanidesová, Jitka Komendová, Jiří Macháček, Andrzej Marzec, Martin Nodl, Attila Pók, David Radek, Tadeusz Paweł Rutkowski, Iurie Stamati, Rafał Stobiecki, Gábor Thoroczkay, Przemysław Wiszewski, Piotr Węcowski, Martin Wihoda, and Dušan Zupka.

Włodzimierz Wincławski: Siedem obrazków z lat minionych [Seven impressions from previous years].

Włodzimierz Wincławski: Siedem obrazków z lat minionych [Seven impressions from previous years]. Torun: Wydawnictwo Naukowe UMK 2024. ISBN: 978-83-231-5349-8


WŁODZIMIERZ WINCŁAWSKI (rocznik 1942) jest emerytowanym profesorem socjologii UMK. Doktorat i habilitację otrzymał w warszawskim Instytucie Filozofii i Socjologii PAN. Podjął pracę w PAN-owskim Instytucie Rozwoju Wsi i Rolnic- twa, gdzie powierzono mu badania socjologicznych zagadnień wsi i wychowania. Po zamieszkaniu w Toruniu i podjęciu pracy na UMK, skierował się ku badaniu dziejów socjologii. Jest autorem artykułów i książek na te tematy.


Myśl napisania autobiografii narodziła się we mnie w późnym wieku emerytalnym, podczas pracy nad kolejnym tekstem naukowym, kiedy to dostrzegłem, że nie wnoszę nic nowego do socjologii. Odłożyłem pióro z postanowieniem zarzucenia pracy naukowej. Wiązało się to także z koniecznością porzucenia mojego stylu życia, miałem przestać pisać. Nie mogłem tego zaakceptować. Sięgnąłem ponownie po pióro i zagłębiłem się w opisie własnej przeszłości. Temperament socjologa nakazywał mi rozpatrywać ją w ścisłym powiązaniu z najbliższym otoczeniem społeczno-kulturowym.


SPIS TREŚCI

Obrazek 1


Dzieciństwo: Lubraniec w latach 1942–1956 / 7


Małe miasteczko rolnicze w dziejach – Mój Lubraniec w latach 1942–1956 – Społeczność – Progi rodzinne – Rodzice – Wychowanie w rodzinie – U pani Kołtuńskiej – Kościół – Grupy rówieśnicze – Dzieci „zza bramy” podwórka – Nowi koledzy: „nasza piątka” – Na stadionie lekkoatletycznym – Szkoła podstawowa – Czytelnictwo – Podzwonne dla Lubrańca


Obrazek 2


Dojrzewanie: okres licealny w Izbicy Kujawskiej (1956–1960) / 83


Wyprawa do Izbicy – Internat – Liceum i nauczyciele – „Trzeba się uczyć, upłynął wiek złoty” – Kontakty z dyrektorem Wysłouchem i nowe lektury – Sport w Izbicy – Córka zegarmistrza – Matura, maj 1960 – Pożegnanie Kujaw: aneks do dwóch pierwszych obrazków


Obrazek 3


Pierwsze kroki w dorosłość:  Warszawa i epizod zakopiański (1960–1965) / 107


Mieszkanie przy ulicy Koszykowej – Akademia Wychowania Fizycznego: pierwsze dwa lata studiów – Joseph Nosarzewski – Jak coś się wali, to naraz wszystko – Chen Chi Siang (Małgorzata) – Zakopane (Sanatorium Akademickie na Ciągłówce) – Jeszcze jeden rok w Zakopanem – Zła wiadomość z Torunia i decyzja o pracy na wsi


Obrazek 4


Wczesny wiek męski: praca i rodzina  w Cichem Górnem (1965–1969) / 135


Wioska – Pierwsze gniazdko rodzinne – Utrata wiary w moc sprawczą wychowania – ku socjologii – „Do dzieła!” – poczynania w szkole – A we wsi… – Podzwonne dla Cichego Górnego


 Obrazek 5


Na drodze do kariery naukowej: praca w warszawskim instytucie Polskiej Akademii Nauk, epizod w Bielsku koło Płocka (1969–1974) / 163


Osada Bielsk koło Płocka – Mieszkanie u państwa Przybylińskich – Doktorat w Instytucie Filozofii i Socjologii PAN – Powrót do Warszawy – Moje nowe środowisko społeczne i nowe przyjaźnie – Decyzja o przeprowadzce do Torunia


Obrazek 6


Ku stabilizacji życiowej: Toruń, pierwsza odsłona (1974–1989) / 177


Toruń w okresie PRL-u – Rodzina – Pierwsze trzy dekady socjologii na UMK – Mozolne próby tworzenia socjologii w latach 1976–1989 – Nowe zainteresowania naukowe – Działalność administracyjna – Działalność w opozycji demokratycznej – Ojciec Władysław Wołoszyn


OBRAZEK 7


Pełna stabilizacja życiowa: Toruń, druga odsłona / 211


Toruń w Trzeciej Rzeczypospolitej – Rodzina we własnym domku – Jeszcze raz sport – O potrzebie naprawy uniwersytetu – Instytut Socjologii w rozkwicie – W roli nauczyciela akademickiego – Praca naukowa – Działalność społeczna – Klub Profesorów – Uniwersytet Trzeciego Wieku 1995–2001 – Gimnazjum Akademickie


Tempus fugit / 251


Indeks osób  259


Ilustracje / 267

Thursday, 16 May 2024

Теодор Ойзерман. Запечатленное время. Автобиографические заметки

 Теодор Ойзерман. Запечатленное время. Автобиографические заметки [Theodore Oizerman. Captured Time. Autobiographical notes] М.: Центр гуманитарных инициатив, 2024. 


Книга представляет собой литературную автобиографию Теодора Ильича Ойзермана (1914–2017) – выдающегося российского философа и организатора науки, доктора философских наук, профессора, академика АН СССР и РАН. Она была написана в период с 2005 по 2017 г. События жизни автора вплетены в судьбы Отечества и рассказывают о его дороге в философию, о родственниках и коллегах, друзьях и недоброжелателях в интеллектуальном и культурном контексте, а также на фоне наиболее драматических событий российской истории. Книга повествует о том, как автор осваивал рабочие профессии в эпоху первых пятилеток, учился в ИФЛИ, искал свой путь в художественной литературе, прошел всю Великую Отечественную вой ну, был ранен, награжден боевыми орденами и медалями. Это честный рассказ о его плодотворном труде на ниве философской науки более восьмидесяти лет, об иллюзиях и разочарованиях, о достижениях и их пересмотре. Автор увлекательно и с юмором живописует перипетии своей судьбы, видя в ней соединение счастливых случайностей, неизбежных трудностей и самозабвенной профессиональной работы. Через всю книгу проходит удивление по поводу собственной жизни, которая много раз могла трагически оборваться, но продлилась так долго. Читатель получает в свое распоряжение ценное историческое свидетельство, результат многолетних размышлений и обстоятельного анализа, отличающееся литературными достоинствами. Издание книги приурочено к 110-летнему юбилею со дня рождения Т. И. Ойзермана.

Call for papers: Między ideą wolności uniwersytetu a nowymi realiami - Uczelnie wyższe wobec wyzwań nowoczesnego świata w Polsce i Europie w latach 1918-1939

 Call for papers: Między ideą wolności uniwersytetu a nowymi realiami - Uczelnie wyższe wobec wyzwań nowoczesnego świata w Polsce i Europie w latach 1918-1939. Cracow, 18-19 November 2024. CfP: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1gMqyNmt3i42jr7XGvY356Va9JwN5M5cZ/view?usp=sharing .

Katarzyna Bojarska, Ewa Domanska, Piotr Filipkowski, Jacek Malczynski, and Luiza Nader (eds.) Knowledge in the Shadow of Catastrophe: Key Thinkers of Polish Humanities in the Post-War Era

Katarzyna Bojarska, Ewa Domanska, Piotr Filipkowski, Jacek Malczynski, and Luiza Nader (eds.) Knowledge in the Shadow of Catastrophe: Key Thinkers of Polish Humanities in the Post-War Era. Padeborn: Brill Schöningh 2024. ISBN: 978-3-506-79395-9

ToC: https://brill.com/display/title/64620 .

The volume offers the collection of essays penned by eighteen luminous minds of the 20th century humanities and social sciences in Poland: Stefan Amsterdamski, Nina Assorodobraj-Kula, Bronisław Baczko, Jan Błoński, Jolanta Brach-Czaina, Michał Głowiński, Oskar Hansen, Maria Janion, Jerzy Jedlicki, Antonii Kępiński, Anna Pawełczyńska, Krzysztof Pomian, Mieczysław Porębski, Jan Strzelecki, Władysław Strzemiński, Jerzy Szacki, Jerzy Topolski, and Andrzej Turowski. Celebrated as canonical within their respective fields, these works resonate profoundly in academic as well as social environment today. What lies at the centre of this collection is political and historical turbulence – the experience of the horror of war and destruction, always a point of reference for any form of political, intellectual or existential engagement. From the bold manifesto-like essays to groundbreaking theoretical writings that shift paradigms, each piece is a testament to intellectual revolution and courage. These are not just writings; they are beacons of transformative thought and conceptual reinvention. This book can be treated as evidence of the intergenerational dialogue, where scholars whose work and worldview have been to a large extent shaped by the experience of the 1989 political transition, visit their predecessors whose attitudes and ideas emerged in the aftermath of World War II. This is an acknowledgement of genealogy, heritage and influence.

Monday, 13 May 2024

The Shevchenko Scientific Society in the Context of Ukrainian Intellectual History – 150th Anniversary Conference

 hybrid event: The Shevchenko Scientific Society in the Context of Ukrainian Intellectual History – 150th Anniversary Conference. May 19 @ 9:00 am - 7:00 pm EDT / 15:00 - 1:00 CET


UKRAINIAN INSTITUTE OF AMERICA, 2 E 79TH ST, NEW YORK, NY 10075

The conference features three panels with scholars from the US, Ukraine, Canada, Germany, Czech Republic, Poland, and Austria discussing the history of the establishment of the Society, the contexts of its activity, and its influence on Ukrainian intellectual and cultural life from its founding to the present day.

Details and registation: shevchenko.org/event/150th-anniversary-of-shevchenko-scientific-society-conference/ .

CONFERENCE SCHEDULE

9:00 – 9:15

Welcome from Vitaly Chernetsky, conference organizer, First Vice President of the Shevchenko Scientific Society

9:15 – 11:00

Panel I: Nineteenth-Century Ukrainian Intellectual Life under Russian Imperial Rule

Chair: Halyna Hryn (Shevchenko Scientific Society/Harvard University)

George Grabowicz (Harvard University): Rethinking the Cyrilo-Methodian Brotherhood: Problems of Historiography and Some New and Old Aporias

Serhiy Bilenky (Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies, University of Alberta): Before NTSh-A: Scholarship and Politics in 1870s Kyiv

Fabian Bauman (University of Heidelberg): Academic Ukrainophilism and Ukrainian Politics in the Russian Empire under the Ems Ukaz

Discussant: Susan Smith-Peter (College of Staten Island, City University of New York)

11:00   Coffee

11: 15 – 1:15

Panel ІІ: The Shevchenko Scientific Society and Its Impact, in Galicia and Beyond

Chair: Oksana Kis (University of Richmond/National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine)

Martin Rohde (University of Vienna): Shevchenko Scientific Society and the Making of Ukrainian “National Science”, 1892–1939

Tomasz Hen-Konarski (Polish Academy of Sciences): The Sorcerer and His Apprentice: Kyrylo Studyns′kyi and Amvrozii Androkhovych as Historians of the Greek Catholic Clerical Education

Jan Surman (Czech Academy of Sciences): (Re)writing Ukrainian Academic Language from Habsburg Galicia to the Soviet Union

Discussant: Frank Sysyn (University of Alberta)

1:15 – 2:30        Lunch Break

2:30 – 4:30

Panel III: Ukrainian Scholarship and Its Sociopolitical Contexts, from the Nineteenth Century to the Present

Chair: Olena Nikolayenko (Fordham University)

Anton Kotenko (University of Düsseldorf): “Scientific Society” or an “Institution of the Most Radical Ukrainophile party”? NTSh in the Materials of the Romanov Imperial Censorship

Maryna Paliienko (Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv, New York University): Ukrainian Diaspora Archives During and After World War II as a Target of Nazi and Soviet Security Services

Steven Seegel (University of Texas, Austin): The NTSh and Geography: On Some Challenges and Legacies in the Making of Modern Ukrainian Maps, from the 1860s to Stepan Rudnyts’kyi and The February 24th Archive Project

Discussant: Vitaly Chernetsky (University of Kansas)

4:30     Coffee

4:45     Concluding Discussion

6:00 – 7:00

Closing Reception


cfp: Ethnolinguistic cartography (18th–21st centuries) in comparative perspective: genre, political conflicts, memory

 CfP: Deadline approaching – Ethnolinguistic cartography (18th–21st centuries) in comparative perspective: genre, political conflicts, memory

The deadline for submitting abstracts (300 words) and a short CV is 15 May 2024. Authors will then be notified of the acceptance or rejection of their proposals by 31 May 2024. Each participant will have 20 minutes for their presentation and there will be time for questions and answers at the end of the presentation. Travel within Europe and accommodation will be covered by the organisers. The organisers plan to publish selected papers either in the conference proceedings or in a thematic section of an open-access scholarly journal.

Organizers: dr. Stanislav Holubec: sholubec@gmail.com | dr. Jitka Močičková: mocickova@hiu.cas.cz

https://www.hiu.cas.cz/aktuality/may-15-2024-application-deadline-ethnolinguistic-cartography-18th-21st-centuries-in-comparative-perspective-genre-political-conflicts-memory

MORE

https://www.hiu.cas.cz/udalosti/ethnolinguistic-cartography-18th-21st-centuries-in-comparative-perspective-genre-political-conflicts-memory

Geography of (Art) Historians: The CIHA and the CISH during the Cold War


Call for Papers

International Conference "A Geography of (Art) Historians: The CIHA and the CISH during the Cold War"

Complutense University of Madrid, 14-15 November 2024

The Comité International d'Histoire de l'Art (CIHA) and the Comité International des Sciences Historiques (CISH) played a crucial role in the advancement of scholarship in the fields of Art History and History during the Cold War. Both NGOs of scholars contributed to building a professional community beyond political borders. Some of the most renowned (art) historians of the time belonged to their Boards or were members representing their country. Furthermore, international congresses and colloquia under the aegis of the CIHA and the CISH served as a forum for intellectual dialogue between specialists from different geographical and cultural regions of the world.

We invite submissions of 20-minute papers exploring the history of these international organisations and their role in fostering transnational networks, cultural exchanges, and theoretical and methodological debates between scholars. We are also interested in local structures and the impact of international meetings on the development of national historiographies. We especially encourage papers focused on the Eastern Bloc and the Global South.

Topics of interest may include, but are not limited to:

- national committees, but also failed projects to create them, or affiliated associations: scope, funding, members, concerns, projects, debates, scientific conferences; institutions involved; the impact of politics

- international meetings under the auspices of both NGOs: organisation and aftermath; government involvement; scholars in exile attendance; the experience of the participants; intellectual exchange; methodological debates; historiographical trends; political conditions and tendencies as determining factors in the discussions

- state control and cultural diplomacy concerning the activity of both NGOs and their national committees or affiliated associations

Please send an abstract (max. 300 words) and a short CV to coldwar.ciha.cish@gmail.com by June 15th, 2024.  Applicants selected will be notified by July 1st, 2024. The language of the conference will be English.

Organisers: José M. Faraldo (UCM), Patricia García-Montón (UCM/UCLM)

Contact Email

coldwar.ciha.cish@gmail.com

Thursday, 9 May 2024

Call for articles, Authoritarian Geographies in the Former Soviet Bloc and Eastern Europe

Call for articles, Authoritarian Geographies in the Former Soviet Bloc and Eastern Europe, Journal of Historical Geography.

The journal of Historical Geography is pleased to announce a call for a special issue section dedicated to exploring the historical particularities of how geographic information was produced, memorialized, and represented within authoritarian states, with a particular focus on the countries of the former Soviet Bloc, Balkans, and Eastern Europe. This special issue seeks to unravel the intricate layers of political influence and spatial narratives embedded in the cartographic practices, museum exhibitions, monuments, and toponymy of these regions. Through interdisciplinary lenses encompassing historical geography, history of science, political science, cultural studies, and memory studies, we aim to critically examine the ways in which authoritarian regimes manipulated geographic knowledge to assert power, construct national identities, and control territories, as well as how these legacies persist in contemporary landscapes.

We invite scholars to delve into diverse case studies that shed light on the multifaceted nature of geographic information production under authoritarian rule, the processes of memorialization and commemoration, and the politics of toponyms. Contributions may explore topics such as the role of maps and atlases in propagating state ideologies, the transformation of urban spaces through monumental architecture and commemorative practices, the contestation over place names and their symbolic significance, and the challenges of representing and interpreting authoritarian pasts in post-socialist societies. Additionally, we invite contributions that examine the ways in which geography and geographical representations have supported violence and conflicts in the region, exploring how spatial imaginaries, territorial disputes, and cartographic manipulations have fueled tensions and shaped geopolitical dynamics throughout history. By critically engaging with the historical geographies of authoritarianism in this region, we seek to contribute to broader discussions on memory, power, and representation in contemporary geopolitics.

Those seeking to contribute 8,000 - 10,000 essays (including notes) would need to send a brief (one page) description of their project and a maximum two-page CV by the 25th of May to Dr. Sofia Gavrilova, S_Gavrilova@leibniz-ifl.de If accepted, your completed manuscript would need to be sent by the 15th of November.


Piotr Biliński: Adam Vetulani (1901–1976). Historyk prawa polskiego i kanonicznego [Adam Vetulani (1901–1976): Historian of Polish and Canonical Law].

 Piotr Biliński: Adam Vetulani (1901–1976). Historyk prawa polskiego i kanonicznego [Adam Vetulani (1901–1976): Historian of Polish and Canonical Law]. Cracow: Wydawnictwo UJ 2023. ISBN: 978-83-233-5265-5


Adam Vetulani (1901–1976), profesor Uniwersytetu Jagiellońskiego i sekretarz generalny Polskiej Akademii Umiejętności, zajmował poczesne miejsce w krakowskim środowisku naukowym już przed II wojną światową. Miał opinię godnego następcy Oswalda Balzera i Stanisława Kutrzeby. Jako wybitny historyk prawa polskiego i kanonicznego cieszył się autorytetem wśród uczonych europejskich i amerykańskich, do których zaliczali się: Gabriel Le Bras, Stephan Kuttner, Jean Gaudemet, René Metz i Gérard Fransen. Uznawany przez uczestników swego seminarium za niezrównanego mistrza, we wspomnieniach niektórych z nich jawił się równocześnie jako warsztatowy rygorysta. Do jego uczniów należeli znakomici historycy prawa: Wacław Uruszczak, Stanisław Grodziski, Stanisław Płaza, Ludwik Łysiak, Wojciech Bartel i Stanisław Roman.


Pomimo niekwestionowanych sukcesów naukowych życie Vetulaniego obfitowało w tragiczne wydarzenia: w czasie II wojny światowej przez ponad pięć lat był internowany w Szwajcarii, na skutek bombardowania jego żona, Irena z Latiników, zmagała się z trwałym kalectwem, a w 1965 roku zginął młodszy syn uczonego – Jan. W okresie komunistycznego zniewolenia Vetulani podejmował próby obrony autonomii nauki, między innymi walczył o odtworzenie Wydziału Teologicznego na Uniwersytecie Jagiellońskim i uczestniczył w zabiegach o reaktywację Polskiej Akademii Umiejętności. Nie zaskakuje więc, że był stale inwigilowany przez bezpiekę, która uniemożliwiała mu wyjazdy na zagraniczne konferencje i kongresy naukowe, ze szkodą dla pozycji Polski w akademickich kręgach Europy Zachodniej.


Vladimír Karpenko, Ivo Purš: The Alchemical Laboratory in Visual and Written Sources

Vladimír Karpenko, Ivo Purš: The Alchemical Laboratory in Visual and Written Sources. Prague: Academia 2024. ISBN 978-80-200-3547-9


Alchemy was an experimental laboratory activity that involved numerous disciplines. It was practised over time and among various strata of society, ranging from artisans and burghers, physicians and clergy, to nobility and rulers. It was part of the natural sciences, but also included medicine, religion and the fine arts, which is why the study of its history requires an interdisciplinary approach. This book analyses images of alchemical laboratories, and their textual sources, as they appeared in manuscripts and printed alchemical treatises, especially during the Early Modern Period. Our study also integrates illustrations from treatises on mining and metallurgy, and seventeenth-century Dutch and Flemish genre painting. In terms of methodology, our analysis works within the wider context of contemporary depictions of scientific subjects and technology. Based on a representative sample of sources, we reconstruct the basic laboratory equipment and show how the vessels and apparatus were related to particular processes. We also describe the development of depicting laboratory equipment with respect to its significance for the history of art and of technology. The final part of the book is devoted to depictions of alchemists at work, from both alchemical sources and genre painting.

Monday, 6 May 2024

Kwartalnik Historii Nauki i Techniki, 2024, Issue 1 is online

Kwartalnik Historii Nauki i Techniki, 2024, Issue 1 is online. open access, Polish with English abstracts. Open access: https://ejournals.eu/czasopismo/kwartalnik-historii-nauki-i-techniki/numer/issue-1-84 .


Spis treści 

ARTYKUŁY 

Andrzej Cichy, Zbigniew Tucholski, Leśniczówka Kaczew (Szwedówka) – dawny dwór myśliwski Radziwiłłów oraz rys historyczny leśnictwa dóbr nieborowskich . . . . . .9 

Piotr Daszkiewicz, Marcin Jan Kamiński, Dariusz Iwan, Steller’s Sea Cow – Benedykt Dybowski’s Little-Known Contributions to European Zoological Museography. . . . . . .67 

Hubert Wilk, Samochód dla Kowalskiego. Polaków drogi do masowej motoryzacji i codzienność motoryzacyjna w okresie 1971–1989 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .77 

KOMUNIKATY I MATERIAŁY 

Iwona Arabas, Mineralogiczna kolekcja w Gabinecie Historii Naturalnej księżnej Anny z Sapiehów Jabłonowskiej . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .109 

Monika Paś, Kilka słów o parze ochronnych okularów w zbiorach Muzeum Narodowego w Krakowie . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .143

BIOGRAFIE

Joanna Schiller-Walicka, Andrzeja Walickiego biografi a intelektualna. Ostatnie dziesięciolecie . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .153 

KRONIKA Elżbieta Orman, Résumé z konferencji „Od informacji do inspiracji. Słowniki biografi czne uczonych i studentów w nauce i historiografi i”, Polska Akademia Umiejętności w Krakowie, 17–18 maja 2023 r. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .187 

Karolina Karpińska, Jan Koroński, Profesor Krzysztof Maślanka – profesor emeritus IHN PAN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .193 

Joanna Zwierzyńska, Sprawozdanie z międzynarodowych warsztatów „Felix Klein’s Foreign Students: Opening up the Way for Transnational Mathematics” w Oberwolfach (15–20 października 2023 r.). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .197 

Paulina Żelazko, Jubileusz 90. urodzin prof. Andrzeja Kajetana Wróblewskiego na posiedzeniu Rady Naukowej IHN PAN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .201 

Karolina Piszczałka, Sprawozdanie z warsztatów „Neue Forschungen zu Klöstern und Orden im Ostseeraum”, Bordesholm, 2–3 listopada 2023 r. . . . . . . .203 

LISTY DO REDAKCJI 

Jolanta Żyndul, Wyjaśnienie w sprawie edycji dziennika Bronisława Piłsudskiego wydanej przez Narodowy Instytut Polskiego Dziedzictwa Kulturowego za Granicą POLONIKA. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .209


online event: Ticks, Viruses, and Soviet Medical Biology

online event: Ticks, Viruses, and Soviet Medical Biology: Revisiting the Narrative, May 21, 16:00 CET / 10:00 EDT, 


Presenter: Anna Mazanik (Max Weber Foundation and the University of Munich)

Discussant: Ann Kelly (King's College London; Princeton's Institute for Advanced Study)

Organizer & chair: Anastasia Fedotova (Institute for the History of Science and Technology, St. Petersburg)

Registration: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1cNNAvSsEnNfo2eVSAlTrmwwQfA0G75I56jywK8Mgvng/viewform .

The presentation focuses on the history of tick-borne encephalitis (TBE), a potentially deadly infection of the brain endemic in non-tropical Eurasian forests. The disease, the virus and the vector were first identified in 1937 in the Soviet Far East by the expedition of Lev Zilber. As TBE was the first big discovery of Soviet virology and the first major viral tick-borne infection to be identified globally, it attracted huge state and international attention and resources to that still relatively new discipline; it propelled the careers of many scientists and laid the paths for international cooperation that would shape the field for decades to come. At the same time, largely on the basis of TBE research, parasitologist Evgeny Pavlovsky developed his famous natural nidality theory of infectious disease that became an important framework of Soviet public health and today is viewed as one of the precursors of the One Health agenda, which integrates the study of human and animal health and the environment.

The story of the Soviet TBE expeditions is well known but, as I will show in my presentation, that story was in fact misrepresented in the scientific literature and obscured by Soviet (self-)censorship. I will argue that understanding the early history of TBE is impossible without acknowledging the distinct socio-political circumstances of the Stalinist colonization of the Far East, based on the involuntary resettlement and forced labor, and the specific disease ecologies they produced—the factors that had not only historical and ethical relevance but also empirical and theoretical implications. In my talk, I will discuss how those expeditions fit into the broader Soviet scientific, environmental, and socio-political context and what it means for the interpretation of Soviet research and the history of TBE.

Anna Mazanik is a research fellow at the Max Weber Network Eastern Europe and an academic coordinator of the research project “Russia’s North Pacific” at the Max Weber Foundation and the University of Munich. She is a medical and environmental historian of Russia. Her first book studied public health and environment in imperial Moscow. At the moment she is working on the new book “Nature’s Infections: Disease, Environment and Soviet Medicine in the Pacific Borderlands” which studies tick-borne encephalitis and Japanese encephalitis in the Soviet Far East, Manchuria and North Korea.

Ann H. Kelly is Professor of Anthropology and Global Health at King's College London. Her ethnographic work focuses on the socio-material conditions that structure the production of global health knowledge, and the local ecologies of labour that circumscribe its circulation and use. She explores these themes in a forthcoming book with Duke University Press on pasts and futures of mosquito control, with Javier Lezaun. She serves as a member of the WHO Strategic Advisory Group of Experts (SAGE) for Ebola Vaccines and Vaccination and as currently a Fellow at Princeton's Institute for Advanced Study for the year.


Miller, Michael L. and Szapor, Judith. Quotas: The 'Jewish Question' and Higher Education in Central Europe, 1880-1945

Miller, Michael L. and Szapor, Judith. Quotas: The 'Jewish Question' and Higher Education in Central Europe, 1880-1945, New York, Oxford: Berghahn Books, 2024. https://doi.org/10.1515/9781805395294


ABOUT THIS BOOK

In 1920, the Hungarian parliament introduced a Jewish quota for university admissions, making Hungary the first country in Europe to pass antisemitic legislation following World War I. Quotas explores the ideologies and practices of quota regimes and the ways quotas have been justified, implemented, challenged, and remembered from the late nineteenth century until the middle of the twentieth century. In particular, the volume focuses on Central and Eastern Europe, with chapters covering the origins of quotas, the moral, legal, and political arguments developed by their supporters and opponents, and the social and personal impact of these attempts to limit access to higher education.

AUTHOR / EDITOR INFORMATION

Michael L. Miller is head of the Nationalism Studies Program at Central European University in Vienna, Austria. He is the author of Rabbis and Revolution: The Jews of Moravia in the Age of Emancipation (2011) and other works on Habsburg and Habsburg-Jewish history. He is currently completing a book manuscript entitled “Manovill: A Tale of Two Hungarys.”

Judith Szapor is associate professor in the Department of History and Classical Studies, McGill University in Montreal, Canada. Her latest monograph, Hungarian Women’s Activism in the Wake of the First World War: From Rights to Revanche was published in 2018. In her current project, she explores the intended and unintended impact of the numerus clausus on Hungarian Jewish women and families.

Michael L. Miller is head of the Nationalism Studies Program at Central European University in Vienna, Austria. He is the author of Rabbis and Revolution: The Jews of Moravia in the Age of Emancipation (2011) and other works on Habsburg and Habsburg-Jewish history. He is currently completing a book manuscript entitled “Manovill: A Tale of Two Hungarys.”

Thursday, 2 May 2024

Historia Medicinae Slovaca VIII (2023).

 Historia Medicinae Slovaca VIII (2023). Teoretické koncepty  a prax medicíny v dejinách [Theoretical concepts and the practice of medicine in history]. Editori: Matej Gogola, Adam Mesiarkin. Bratislava 2023


open access: https://www.fmed.uniba.sk/fileadmin/lf/sucasti/Teoreticke_ustavy/Ustav_socialneho_lekarstva_a_lekarskej_etiky/historia/Historia_Medicinae_Slovaca_VIII_n.pdf .

CfP: Displaced, Exiled: Thinking and Making Europe through the Experience of Exile and Displacement (20th–21st century)

 Displaced, Exiled: Thinking and Making Europe through the Experience of Exile and Displacement (20th–21st century)

Call for papers, deadline 15 June 2024

Clermont-Ferrand (France), 25-27 November 2024


The conference “Displaced, Exiled: Thinking and making Europe through the experience of exile and displacement” will explore the role of displaced and exiled populations in the construction of Europe, whether they came from European countries or other regions of the world. Taking a resolutely multi-disciplinary approach, it will especially focus on the period that began with the Spanish Civil War and the outbreak of the Second World War, although it will not exclude looking at earlier periods. The central question will be to examine how these populations conceived of and made Europe — how they contributed to its construction, or on the contrary to its failure.



Displaced, Exiled: Thinking and Making Europe through the Experience of Exile and Displacement (20th–21st century)

At the end of the Second World War, Europe faced the twofold challenge of restoring peace and rebuilding, as well as confronting the displacement and exile of millions of people as a result of the war and the Holocaust. In the ensuing decades, decolonization and the violent conflicts connected to it induced further movements that came on top of and intertwined with previous displacements, including those whom historian Andrea Smith has referred to as “invisible migrants”. Since then, Europe has never ceased to be “on the move”, to use the phrase coined by sociologist Eugen Kulischer, himself a Jewish refugee of Russian origin who arrived in the United States in 1941. This also brings to mind the boat people of the 1970s, those displaced by the Yugoslav Wars in the 1990s, and more recently Ukrainian refugees. Europe continues to be confronted with population displacements in the twenty-first century, contending with a major challenge over the last decade: in 2015 alone, one million people crossed the Mediterranean on their way to what Aleida Assmann has called the “European dream”.


The conference “Displaced, Exiled: Thinking and making Europe through the experience of exile and displacement”, to be held in Clermont-Ferrand from 25-27 November 2024, will explore the role of displaced and exiled populations in the construction of Europe, whether they came from European countries or other regions of the world. Taking a resolutely multi-disciplinary approach, the conference will especially focus on the period that began with the Spanish Civil War and the outbreak of the Second World War, although it will not exclude looking at earlier periods. The central question will be to examine how these actors conceived of and made Europe — how they contributed to its construction, or on the contrary to its failure. We will explore how these populations experienced European conflicts, violence, and control mechanisms, in other words the resources, uses, representations, and statements that have shaped this Europe on the move.


We notably seek to question not only what Europe is and wants to be, but also its transnational dynamic and ability to respect the norms and values it affirms, human rights in particular, as demonstrated by the recent pantheonization of Missak and Mélinée Manouchian in France. We thereby hope to confront Europe with its history and memory. The conference ties in with research that approaches Europe through the prism of its multiple movements, such as Eugen Kulischer's Europe on the Move, Klaus Bade's Europa in Bewegung, and more recently Aleida Assmann's Der Europäische Traum, in addition to Peter Gatrell's The Great Migration. Special emphasis will be given to three topics: spatial reconfigurations, the experience of regulatory frameworks, and representations of Europe in the face of exile and population displacement.


The conference is part of the commemorations held each year by the University of Clermont Auvergne to honour victims of the raid that occurred in Clermont-Ferrand on 25 November 1943. The topic of this year’s conference is highly symbolic, as it marks the 85th anniversary of the University of Strasbourg’s arrival in Clermont-Ferrand, as well as the 80th anniversary of the return of Strasbourg’s exiles from Clermont-Ferrand to Alsace.


Proposals for papers (maximum 500 words), accompanied by a brief CV (maximum 1 page), should be sent before 15 June 2024 to the following address:

colloque-exiles-deplaces.msh@uca.fr


Participants' travel and accommodation costs will be covered. The working languages of the conference will be French and English.


Scientific Committee:

Laura CALABRESE (Université Libre de Bruxelles, Belgique), Dorota DAKOWSKA (Science Po, Aix en Provence), Corine DEFRANCE (CNRS, Paris 1-Panthéon Sorbonne), Karim FERTIKH (Science Po Strasbourg), Oscar FREÁN-HERNANÁNDEZ (Université de Lyon 2), Ségolène PLYER (Université de Strasbourg), Brian SHAEV (Leiden University), Lina VENTURAS (Panteion University, Athènes)


Contact

colloque-exiles-deplaces.msh@uca.fr


Journal of the Russian National Committee for the History and Philosophy of Science and Technology

 Журнал Российского национального комитета по истории и философии науки и техники - Journal of the Russian National Committee for the History and Philosophy of Science and Technology

ТОМ 1, №1, ТОМ 2, №1: HTTPS://RNCHPST.RU/JOURNAL/ENG .

hybrid event: Mikołaj Getka-Kenig: Muzeum jako placówka naukowa

 hybrid event: Mikołaj Getka-Kenig: Muzeum jako placówka naukowa – problem polskiej polityki kulturalnej przełomu lat 40-tych i 50-tych XX w...