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11:00 | Plenary Session Auditorium Professor Olga Onuch,'Ukraine Rises & We Must Too: An Analytical Call to Action' 11:00 (60 mins) Olga Onuch, University of Manchester |
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12:45 | A Victory for Ukraine: International context and implications Auditorium Defining Ukraine’s Victory in a War against Russia 12:45 (15 mins) Mykola Kapitonenko, Kyiv National Taras Shevchenko University Postcolonial and de-colonial approaches to the explanation of Ukraine’s victory aspirations 13:00 (15 mins) Olena Khylko, Fac.of Social & Econ.Sciences, Comenius University A final battle: will Ukraine’s victory set the natural borders of Single Europe? 13:15 (15 mins) Viktor Konstantynov, Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv A Victory of Ukraine and Beyond. Reinventing World Order after the Russian-Ukrainian War. 13:30 (15 mins) Yaroslava Shvechykova-Plavska, Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv |
Energy politics Auditorium Lounge ‘Playing with fire’: implications of Russia’s occupation of Chernobyl and Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plants for the global nuclear order 12:45 (15 mins) Anna Davis (née Davidson), University of Oxford The Distributional Effects of the EU’s Climate Policy in Central Asia 13:00 (15 mins) Morena Skalamera, Leiden University The Evolution of Russia's Discursive Politics of Energy: Identity and Normative Shifts in the Aftermath of Russia's Invasion of Ukraine 13:15 (15 mins) Anna Kuteleva, University of Wolverhampton |
Between Peripheries and Frontiers: Moral Communities and Historical Imagination on the Social Margins CWB Plenary Room Enclaves, peripheries, margins: Urban policies and Romani social exclusion 12:45 (20 mins) Ana Chiritoiu, Uppsala University Frontier Eradications and Terraforming in the Siberian Arctic 13:05 (20 mins) Anastasia Ulturgasheva, IRES, Uppsala University Severed Roots: Contested Memories and Historical Imagination on the Amur River 13:25 (20 mins) Victoria Fomina, University of St Andrews |
The Many Legacies of Antisemitism CWB Syndicate 1 "I could read every piece of literature on the Holocaust and still not have the comprehensive understanding that I have gained from this trip": The Performance of Memory and Spatial Encounters with Auschwitz-Birkenau, 1955-2000 12:45 (15 mins) Beatrice Leeming, University of Cambridge Continuity of Anti-Jewish Violence in Galicia Before and After the Collapse of the Habsburg Empire, 1918 13:00 (15 mins) Jan Kutilek, University of Pardubice From a Broken to a Hostile Neighbourship: German-Jewish relations in Timişoara during the Second World War 13:15 (15 mins) David Borchin, Lucian Blaga University of Sibiu - ISCI Polish-Jewish Émigrés and the Making of Cold War Soviet Studies: The Parallel Lives of Richard Pipes and Moshe Lewin 13:30 (15 mins) Kai Johann Willms, University of Basel |
Art and Culture Post Stalin CWB Syndicate 2 Between Orientalism and Universalism: A Global Perspective on the Popularization of Body-Oriented Yoga Practices in the People's Republic of Poland 1956-1970 12:45 (15 mins) Ulrike Lang, TU Dresden, Institute of Slavic Studies Between Suppression and Empowerment: The Paranormal in Socialist Poland 13:00 (15 mins) Monika Bednarczuk, University of Bialystok Make It Polemical: The Literary Debates in the Official Soviet Press of the 1960s 13:15 (15 mins) Elizaveta Dvortsova, University of Southern California Rehabilitating the Avant-Garde: The Legacy of Soviet Modernist Photography in the 1950s and 1960s 13:30 (15 mins) Jessica Werneke, The University of Iowa Музыка А. Г. Шнитке к пушкинской трилогии А. Ю. Хржановского: синтез прошлого и настоящего 13:45 (15 mins) Megumi Hanya, Personal capacity |
12:45 | Looking Forward, Moving Forward – Decoloniality, Being, and Imagining Alternative Futures for Central Asia 12:45 (90 mins) CWB Syndicate 3 Selbi Durdiyeva, Center for Conflict Studies, Philipps University MarburgElmira Kakabayeva, Independent Researcher Nodira Kholmantova, University of Amsterdam Chair: Diana Kudaibergenova, University of Cambridge Olga Mun, University of Oxford Almira Tabaeva, Nazarbayev University |
Economic and Industrial Exchanges During and After the Cold War Games Room Financing foreign policy: UK banks’ involvement in Central and Eastern Europe during the development of the 1981–82 sovereign debt crisis 12:45 (15 mins) Catherine Lefevre, University of Glasgow Joint construction projects of Comecon member-countries: industrial complex in Darkhan, Mongolia, 1962-1970 13:00 (15 mins) Nikolay Erofeev, University of Kassel No Country(side) for Old Men? Landscape Restructuring and Doing Business in Post-Socialist, Rural Areas since the 1990s. A Case Study from Southern Poland. 13:15 (15 mins) Joanna Rozmus, University of Vienna The ‘Ural’ Moskvich: the Soviet military-industrial complex’s Udmurt car factory 13:30 (15 mins) John Kennedy, European University Institute |
Reconsidering the Political in Soviet History Garden Room Negotiating for Autonomy with Moscow: The Centre-Periphery Relationship in the Khrushchev Era 12:45 (15 mins) Michael Loader, University of Glasgow The Communist Party of Ukraine in the Final Years of the Soviet Union: From Institutional Transformation to Disintegration 13:00 (15 mins) Nataliya Kibita, University of Glasgow The Politics of Modernisation in Late Soviet Belarus (1965–1980) 13:15 (15 mins) Natalya Chernyshova, Queen Mary University of London The Unacknowledged Role of Ekaterina Furtseva in Nikita Khrushchev’s Defeat of the ‘Anti-Party Group’ in 1957 13:30 (15 mins) Ismene Brown, Independent researcher |
Political developments in Belarus before and after 2020: the role of civil society, the opposition and the EU JCR Belarus-EU relations before and after 2020: challenges and opportunities. 12:45 (15 mins) Victoria Leukavets, Swedish Institute of International Affairs Civil Society, Social Movements and Protest Mobilization in Belarus after 2020 13:00 (15 mins) Eleanor Bindman, Manchester Metropolitan University The concept of political opposition in authoritarian contexts: the case of Belarus 13:15 (15 mins) Sofie Bedford, Uppsala University The trajectories of Belarusian diaspora social mobilisation in 2020-2023: from fraud elections to the Russian aggression against Ukraine 12:45 (15 mins) Marta Jaroszewicz, University of Warsaw Kseniya Homel, University of Warsaw |
Vanished Histories/Displaced Communities. Gender Perspective and Centre-Periphery Dynamics in Late Soviet and Early Post-Soviet Creative Communities Linnett Room Analyzing Central-Periphery Relationships in Soviet Fashion from the 1960s to the 1980s 12:45 (15 mins) Iuliia Papushina Representation of Women in the Decorative Art of the USSR Journal as a Reflection of Soviet Regional and Gender Policy 13:00 (15 mins) Alyona Sokolnikova, Independent scholar Russian Festivals of Female Photography of the 1990s: Why Are They Forgotten? 13:15 (15 mins) Victoria Musvik, University of Oxford The Role of Women in Creating and Preserving the Regional Phenomenon of the Research Institute “Prometheus” 13:30 (15 mins) Sorokina Daria, École normale supérieure |
12:45 | Nagorno-Karabakh Selwyn Diamond Suite Normalizing Conflict – Enabling Genocide? Expert Neutrality in Armenian-Azerbaijani Conflict. 12:45 (15 mins) Arsene Saparov, Rabdan Academy Post-conflict rehabilitation: humanitarian dimension (Case of Azerbaijan) 13:00 (15 mins) Gulshan Pashayeva, Center of Analysis of International Relations Russia's Cockfight in the Caucasus: Exploring Adaptive Constellation as a Trigger for War between Non-Western Small States Armenia and Azerbaijan in 2020 13:15 (15 mins) Eduard Abrahamyan, University College London The involvement of Armenian non-state defense actors after the Karabakh 2020 war: from a sectorial disposition to the qui-vive to a transformation of the defense field? 12:45 (15 mins) Aude Merlin, ULB Taline Papazian, Sciences Po Aix |
Project Discussion: "The Encyclopedia of the Dog": A Digital Annotated Edition of Sasha Sokolov's "Between Dog and Wolf" 12:45 (90 mins) Selwyn Kathleen Lyttelton Room Chair: Alessandro Achilli, University of CagliariHelen Stuhr-Rommereim, University of St Andrews Martina Napolitano, University of Trieste Noemi Albanese, University of Rome Tor Vergata |
Methodological Complexities in Oral History Research: Unpacking Traumatic Memory among Ex-Soviet Union Jews in the Context of Ongoing Military Violence
12:45 (90 mins) Selwyn Old Library Room 2&3 Chair: Svetlana Pogodina, University of LatviaMaria Kaspina, Independent Researcher Daria Malyuta, Sorbonne University Elina Vasiljeva, University of Latvia Svetlana Amosova, Personal capacity |
East-West Cooperation in Science and Technology 1: Nuclear Diplomacy, Communication and Technological Sovereignty Selwyn Old Library Room 4 American spy anxiety and East-West cooperation on particle accelerators, 1959-1975 12:45 (15 mins) Barbara Hof, University of Lausanne Experts and International Administrations in Politics of Nuclear Disarmament 13:00 (15 mins) Katja Castryck-Naumann, GWZO Leipzig Scientific exchange between East and West. A Space Constructed by Communication 13:15 (15 mins) Katharina Lenski, Friedrich-Schiller-Universität Jena The ultracentrifuge for uranium enrichment - an East-West technology transfer in the Cold War 13:30 (15 mins) Frank Dittmann, Deutsches Museum Warsaw Pact’s Attempt to Protect its “Scientific-Technological” Potential in the late 1980s 13:45 (15 mins) Matěj Bílý, Institute of Contemporary History, Czech Academy o |
Dealing with Destruction. A selection of the authors to the publication CBEES State of the Region report 2024 "The Consequences of the War and Reactions to these Changes" will discuss its outcome, insights and collected data. 12:45 (90 mins) Selwyn Walters Room Chair: Ninna Mörner, Centre for Baltic and East European Studies, Södertörn UniversityTatiana Kasperski, Centre for Baltic and East European Studies, Södertörn University Johanna Mannergren Selimovic, Centre for Baltic and East European Studies, Södertörn University Irina Sandomirskaja, Centre for Baltic and East European Studies, Södertörn University Vitaly A. Chernetsky, University of Kansas Dmitry Dubrovskiy, Charles University |
12:45 | The Eighteenth-century Linguistic and Religious Hybridity in the Balkans: The Sermons against Witches and Sorceresses Seminar Room Language Representation of the Concept of Woman in the So-Called “Zhenski Sbornik”[Women’s Collection] by Josif Bradati 12:45 (20 mins) Darina Stoyanov, Odesa I.I.Mechnikov Natioal University MAGIC AND SORCERY IN THE 18TH CENTURY (Linguistic aspects in THE WOMEN'S COLLECTION BY YOSIF BRADATI) 13:05 (20 mins) Tatyana Braga, Institute for Bulgarian Language Textual and Religious Hybridity in the Pre-modern Balkan Preaching: The works of Josef Bradati and Nicodemos of the Holy Mountain 13:25 (20 mins) Adelina Angusheva-Tihanova, The University of Manchester The Hybrid Language of the Eighteenth-Century Sermons against Magic and Superstitions by Josif Bradati 13:45 (20 mins) Margaret Dimitrova, St. Kliment Ohridski University of Sofia |
Re-telling stories of the Central and East European Jews from transnational, translocal and transmedia perspectives Teaching Room 4 “Multidirectional memory” in transnational Holocaust films made by Polish filmmakers 12:45 (20 mins) Elzbieta Ostrowska, University of Lodz 724-000-32-43 From “Po-lin” to “Three Minutes: A Lengthening“. Film memories of the Jews in mid-war Poland and a transmedia storytelling 13:05 (20 mins) Malgorzata Radkiewicz, Jagiellonian University Transnational and Crosslinguistic Friendship: Exploring the Identities of Two Jewish Writers in Post-Holocaust Contexts 13:25 (20 mins) Urszula Chowaniec, Lund University |
Contemporary post-Soviet necropolitics and necroaesthetics Teaching Room 5 “It’s very hard to convey any arguments or facts to them:” Claims of zombification in the Donbas war 12:45 (15 mins) Emma Rimpiläinen, Uppsala University Orientation—North: Political occultism and necroaesthetics in contemporary Russia 12:45 (15 mins) Maria Engström, Uppsala University “Da, smert’!”: Eduard Limonov’s National Bolshevism and the Death Drive 13:15 (15 mins) Andrei Rogatchevski, UiT The Arctic University of Norway |
Trust and New Literary Forms Teaching Room 6 Authorial Manifestation in the Digital Literary Era: Trust and Distrust in Evgenij Gornyj’s Chuzhye slova 12:45 (20 mins) Giulia Gallo, Sapienza University of Rome Dubious Words, Ruinous Memories: The Reinvention of Historiography in Katja Petrowskaja’s Maybe Esther 13:05 (20 mins) Katerina Pavlidi, University College Dublin LitRPG and RealRPG: Narrative Strategies and Readers’ Expectation 13:25 (20 mins) Anna Murashova, University of Tartu / Leibniz Centre for Contemporary History |
Stand-up Comedy Teaching Room 7 Comedy with an Accent. Modes of Migration Comedy in Eastern Central Europe 12:45 (20 mins) Alfrun Kliems, Humboldt University of Berlin Čuxxlović and Malarina - 'Balkan' Stand-up in Viennese Cabaret 13:05 (20 mins) Miranda Jakisa, University of Vienna, Institut Slawistik The Easy Way to Give up Russian. The Ukrainian Stand-up in the War 13:25 (20 mins) Yaraslava Ananka, Leipzig University |
12:45 | Finding their place: communities and the future Teaching Room A Competing Memories in the Creation of Local Identity: a case study of Kaunas European Capital of Culture 2022 12:45 (15 mins) Daiva Price, Vytautas Magnus University Transcending Mortality: The Intersection of Indefinite Life Extension Technology and Russian Sophiology 13:00 (15 mins) Walter SIsto, D'Youville University Working-class men in Russia: finding space between neoliberalism and Putinism 13:15 (15 mins) Charlie Walker, University of Southampton |
New approaches to the military history of the Russian Civil War Teaching Room B Lavr Kornilov in Turkestan – from Central Asia to the Russian Civil War 12:45 (20 mins) Roman Osharov, University of Oxford Learning Lessons of the Civil War in the Red Army, 1918-1929 13:05 (20 mins) Sofya Anisimova, University College Dublin The Allied Intervention in the Russian Civil War: the french case revisited 13:25 (20 mins) Gwendal Piégais, University College Dublin |
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2:45: | Russian Military, Violent Entrepreneurs and Political Repercussions Auditorium Looking for loyal pockets of efficiency after Prigozhinʼs mutiny 14:45 (15 mins) Jussi Lassila, Finnish Institute of International Affairs Russian Military Reform and Wicked Problems 15:00 (15 mins) Kirill Shamiev, European Council on Foreign Relations The Downfall of Private Propaganda Factory: Organisational Behaviour of Yevgeny Prigozhin’s Patriot Media Group 15:15 (15 mins) Serge Poliakoff, University of Passau |
Russian foreign policy (1) – global engagement Auditorium Lounge Ontological Security and Multipolarity: Imagining Russia’s new world order in Afghanistan, Syria, and the South Caucasus 14:45 (15 mins) Vassily Klimentov, University of Zurich Regional dilemmas in Russia’s engagement with the non-West: A case study of South Asia 15:00 (15 mins) Nivedita Kapoor The Role of Russian and Western Soft Power Competition in Georgian Nation-Building: From Independence to Nowadays 15:15 (15 mins) Vladimir Liparteliani, Durham University |
Resisting Imperialism through Decolonisation CWB Plenary Room Haunted Soviet: Postmemory and the Resonance of a Toxic Past in Contemporary Russian Art 14:45 (15 mins) Elena Konyushihina, The Courtauld Institute of Art Decolonizing Slavic and East European Academic Collections via Cultural Diplomacy, Inclusivity, and Repatriation: 15:00 (15 mins) Alena Aissing, UCLA Young Research Library Thinking through Literature: Mamardashivili and the topology of resistance 15:15 (15 mins) Tora Lane, Södertörn University Overcoming the Soviet in Soviet Georgian music 15:30 (15 mins) Maia Sigua, Tbilisi State Conservatoire John Nelson, Aleksanteri Institute Censorship, Self Censorship and Resistance – discourse of the Studies of Old Georgian Literature in Soviet Period 15:45 (15 mins) Sophia Guliashvili, The University of Georgia |
Human Rights and Democracy in Wartime Ukraine CWB Syndicate 1 Gendered aspects of internal displacement in Ukraine: amplifying the voices of internally displaced women. 14:45 (15 mins) Daryna Dvornichenko, University of Oxford Human Rights Protection Activity of Ukraine since the beginning of the armed conflict on the part of Russia. 15:00 (15 mins) Alina Bondarenko, University of Bristol Representative Democracy Rights in Wartime Ukraine 15:15 (15 mins) Olena Chub, University of Bristol Law School Social Dialogue and Labour Rights: Challenges for Wartime Ukraine and Post-War Recovery 15:30 (15 mins) Yana Simutina, University of Bristol Law School |
Poland – policy and politics CWB Syndicate 2 Margaret Thatcher and the governing elite of the Polish People’s Republic in the 1980’s. Study of an encounter of political cultures 14:45 (15 mins) Mateusz Drozdowski, University of the National Education Commission Preferential (re)immigration - The case of the Polish diaspora repatriation initiatives 15:00 (15 mins) Anna Jeglinska, Uppsala University The dynamics of liberal media discourse on the Middle Eastern migration crises: the case of Polish newspaper Gazeta Wyborcza in 2015 and 2021 15:15 (15 mins) Polina Klochko, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München Shaping Higher Education policies in a polarized party system - Polish parliamentary debates in a long-term perspective (1990-2021) 15:30 (15 mins) Mareike zum Felde, Research Centre for East European Studies |
2:45: | Czechoslovakia and Poland: Cultural and Political Histories CWB Syndicate 3 Czechoslovak Realpolitik and the Second World War 14:45 (15 mins) Pavel Krejci, University of Hong Kong Masaryk's castle as the center of power, administration, and ideology in Czechoslovakia between the World Wars. 15:00 (15 mins) Jakub Štofaník, Masaryk Institute and Archives of the Czech Academ The Paradox of Prague Spring’s Political Scene: Performing the Human Face(s) of Socialism 15:15 (15 mins) Kristina Broučková, Faculty of Arts, Charles University Violence alongside Czechoslovak-Polish border in Silesia 1945-1947 15:30 (15 mins) Ondřej Kolář, Slezské zemské muzeum (Silesian Museum) The Polish Crisis 1980–1982 from Western Perspective 15:45 (15 mins) Piotr Długołęcki, Polski Instytut Spraw Międzynarodowych |
Imperial Russia in the Long 19th Century Games Room Paul I and the colonization of Southern Ukraine and Crimea: evolving concepts 14:45 (15 mins) Oleksandr Kravchuk, University of Bristol (UK) The Dark Side of the Peasants' Land Bank: Discriminatory Practices Among Rural Actors in Governmental Banking Sector of the Russian Empire (1882-1917) 15:00 (15 mins) Arina Fedorova, European University Institute |
Wither internationalism? Decolonisation narratives and the (im)possibility of supranational feminist, socialist, and pacifist solidarities 14:45 (90 mins) Garden Room Chair: Kristen Ghodsee, University of PennsylvaniaAdriana Zaharijević, University of Belgrade Agnieszka Mrozik, Polish Academy of Sciences Chiara Bonfiglioli, University of Venice |
Soviet Culture and Cold War Politics JCR Disco Culture Under the Late Socialism: Youth, National Feelings and the Bee Gees 14:45 (15 mins) Ekaterina Kokovikhina, New York University Fashion Across Borders: Soviet Ukraine’s Soft Power and Diplomacy 15:00 (15 mins) Olha Korniienko, The Leibniz Centre for Contemporary History From “reasonable needs” to “consumer society”: Developed socialism as a preparatory stage during the transition of the USSR from the ideals of communism to capitalism 15:15 (15 mins) Kristina Chernolikh Politics for Children: How Murzilka informed its readers 1956 - 1964 15:30 (15 mins) Helen Lachal, Helen Lachal Alternative life of teenagers in Soviet Lithuania 1956-1972 15:45 (15 mins) Ieva Balciune, Lithuanian Institute of History |
Parliaments in Socialist Federations: Institutional Designs and Functions of Soviet, Czechoslovak, and Yugoslav Assemblies, 1968–1987 Linnett Room A Socialist Parliament: The USSR Supreme Soviet and Its Domestic Functions 14:45 (20 mins) Ivan Sablin, Heidelberg University The Yugoslavian parliamentary experiment in the 1970’s 15:05 (15 mins) Jure Gasparic, Institute of Contemporary History Undemocratic parliament as a showcase of socialist federalism 15:20 (15 mins) Adéla Gjuričová, Institute of Contemporary History, CAS |
2:45: | Queering and gender in film and media Selwyn Diamond Suite Embodying Soviet Norms; Women on Thawing Screens 14:45 (15 mins) Natasha Vinnikova, University of the Arts London Queering Soviet Fairy Tale Morozko 15:00 (15 mins) Alexander Kondakov, University College Dublin Queering Telegram: Independent Channels in Russophone LGBTQ+ (Self) 15:15 (15 mins) Emma Tarasenko, University of Manchester |
Besieged by the Future 1: In the Shadow of Military Strategy Selwyn Kathleen Lyttelton Room Dreams Under the Mushroom Cloud: Indigenous Knowledge and “Big Science” in Techno-Futuristic Writings of a Nenets Hunter from Novaya Zemlya 14:45 (20 mins) Dmitry Arzyutov, Ohio State University The Last Utopia of the Twentieth Century? The Semiotic and Behaviour Control in the Soviet Management, Policy and Strategy Thought 15:05 (20 mins) Egle Rindzeviciute, Kingston University London War, They Wrote: Programming the Future and Geopolitical Science Fiction in Putinist Russia 15:25 (20 mins) Mikhail Suslov, University of Copenhagen |
Cultural map of Ukraine. How has value been changed through the Russian invasion? Selwyn Old Library Room 2&3 Open Innovation in Ukraine: Generating Innovative Solutions Through Collaboration in Times of War 14:45 (20 mins) Olga Miroshnychenko, Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv Was the Ukrainian economy colonial? A historical view 15:05 (20 mins) Kseniia Lopukh, Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv |
East-West Cooperation in Science and Technology 2: Technology and Science Diplomacy Selwyn Old Library Room 4 Agents in their own service? Czechoslovak techno-experts working for the UNO/UNECE in the Czechoslovak intelligence collection management 14:45 (15 mins) Jiří Janáč, Institute of Contemporary History of the Czech Aca Future Shock: Computers, Linguistics and New Technologies in Eastern Europe 15:00 (15 mins) Doubravka Olsakova, Institute of Contemporary History, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic Scientific Diplomacy & Knowledge Exchange: Mathematicians and Computer Scientists Navigating the Cold War US-USSR Interacademy Program 15:15 (15 mins) Brit Shields, University of Pennsylvania |
Russia's war on Ukraine Selwyn Walters Room "Brothers" or "neo-nazis" ? : legitimation of the Russian genocide in Ukraine 14:45 (20 mins) Katerina Sviderska, Université de Montréal The Failure of Russian Propaganda 15:05 (20 mins) Jon Roozenbeek, University of Cambridge |
2:45: | Teaching of Slavonic Languages Seminar Room Island Double Vision: Examining Chekhov’s and Doroshevich’s Turn-of-the-Century Sakhalin 14:45 (15 mins) Alex Maxwell, University of Virginia Case Context: what is it and how does it affect the oral production of case forms? 15:00 (20 mins) Natalia V. Parker, University College London Introducing Diversity in Russian Language Teaching: A Case Study in Producing a New Edition of 'Colloquial Russian: The Complete Course for Beginners'. 15:20 (20 mins) Mikhail Vodopyanov, University of St Andrews The Key to Using Language: The Role of Knowledge on Society in Foreign Language Learning (Illustrated by the Example of Teaching Polish as a Foreign Language) 15:40 (20 mins) Barbara Łukaszewicz, University of Warsaw |
BASEES/ZOiS Book Roundtable: The Many Voices and Faces of Ukraine 14:45 (90 mins) Teaching Room 4 Chair: Gwendolyn Sasse, Centre for East European and International Studies (ZOiS)Tamara Martsenyuk, University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy Tetiana Kostiuchenko, National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy Olena Palko, University of Basel Roman Horbyk, University of Basel |
Lithuanian Society in Transition Teaching Room 5 "I feel mature, but not an adult." Transition to adulthood in Lithuania in the 21st century 14:45 (20 mins) Sigita Kraniauskiene, Klaipeda University A Personal networks, intergenerational relationships and intimate lives: the perspective of Lithuanians born from 1980 to 2000. 15:05 (20 mins) Irena Juozeliūnienė, Vilnius University Childhood autonomy during Transformation period in Lithuania 15:25 (20 mins) Goda Damaseviciute, Vilnius university Social Change and Current Challenges: Social Careers 15:45 (20 mins) Laima Zilinskiene, Vilnius University Social Policy and Life Course Regimes: Post-Authoritarian Transformations in Lithuania 16:05 (20 mins) Jekaterina Navickė, Vilnius University |
Badly Behaved Pasts: On Monuments, Graffiti, Film, and Plays that 'refuse to go' Teaching Room 6 ‘Nasi Spanci’ on Stage: Yugoslav productions about the Spanish Civil War 14:45 (15 mins) Alma Prelec, The Royal Central School of Speech and Drama Monumental Propaganda: dismembering, remembering, and resurrecting the Zombie Monument. 15:00 (15 mins) Kitty Brandon-James, School of Slavonic and East European Studies, UCL Paint versus Concrete: Whose Hands Hold the Power? Graffiti at Three Sites in Bulgaria, Ukraine and Russia 15:15 (15 mins) Elisa Bailey, Lord Cultural Resources Resonance of Memory: Historical Trauma and Contemporary Anxieties in Valery Rubinchik's "Savage Hunt of King Stakh" (1980) 15:30 (15 mins) Kate Tomashevskaya, USC |
The Metamodern Turn in Russian Culture: Affect, Ambiguity and Recycling Teaching Room 7 Russia-as-Affect: Metamodernism and the civilizational turn in Russian popular culture 14:45 (15 mins) Maria Engström, Uppsala University Patrioprotest: ambiguity as survival strategy and aesthetic style 15:00 (15 mins) Marco Biasioli, University of Manchester SibKul’tKommuna: Unserious Utopianism in Post-Soviet Siberia 15:15 (15 mins) Thomas Drew, The University of Manchester The Same Old Future: New Russian Cyberpunk 15:30 (15 mins) Aleksei Semenenko, Umeå University |
2:45: | Remnants of the 'Russian World' in Europe's Online and Offline Spaces 14:45 (90 mins) Teaching Room A Chair: Tatiana Romashko, University of JyväskyläVera Zvereva, University of Jyväskylä Kapitolina Fedorova, Tallinn University Jade McGlynn, Middlebury Institute of International Studies Tatiana Golova, Centre for East European and International Studies |
Women's Rights in 20th Century Eastern Europe Teaching Room B Intimacy and Abortion in early-twentieth-century Revel’: Three Cases. 14:45 (20 mins) Sasha Rasmussen, University of Nottingham, Department of History Red Days on the Calendar? Remembering Soviet Menstrual Trauma in Contemporary Russia 15:05 (20 mins) Pavel Vasilyev |
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4:45: | Political Economy of Illiberalism in Central and Eastern Europe Auditorium A retrospective on Soviet economic imperialism in CMEA 16:45 (15 mins) Michael Bernhard, University of Florida Sailing the Tides of Populism: Navigating Central Banks in Central and Eastern Europe 17:00 (15 mins) Jana Gritteršová, Paris School of Economics The EU and the political economy of illiberalism in Hungary 17:15 (15 mins) John Gould, Colorado College |
Russian foreign policy (2) – history, imperialism, and symbolism Auditorium Lounge Former Soviet Elite in the Contemporary Russia-led Regional Organizations: Gender Patterns and Sets of Values in Eurasian Regionalism. 16:45 (15 mins) Vita Zeyliger, OEI Post Cold War European Security Structure Related to Russia 17:00 (15 mins) Milos Rastovic, Duquesne University Symbolic Elements of the Russian Posture in International Affairs 17:15 (15 mins) Dinara Urazova, Northwestern University The imperial meaning of the Soviet concept of “friendship of peoples” 17:30 (15 mins) Georgii Khazagerov, Independent Researcher The Implementation of The Russian National-Imperial Project in Ukrainian Lands: Historical Parallels 17:45 (15 mins) Natalia Gromakova, University of Aberdeen |
Identities and discourses – civic, ethnic, and national CWB Plenary Room Football clubs and kin-state ties: the cases of Zrinjski Mostar and DAC 1904 16:45 (15 mins) Craig Willis, European Centre for Minority Issues Impact of extensive citizenship policies of Hungary on the political representation of Hungarians in Slovakia 17:00 (15 mins) Martin Hochel, Comenius University in Bratislava, Faculty of Social and Economic Sciences Internal Othering and Representation of Estonianness in Mass and Elite Identity Discourses from 1990 until 2020 17:15 (15 mins) Alar Kilp, University of Tartu Towards an ethnopolitical framework - an envisaged case study of ethnic politics in Latvia 17:30 (15 mins) Gustav Lundberg, Södertörn University |
Who is Polish - What is Polishness? Practising and challenging language, literature, identity and culture CWB Syndicate 1 Adult learners of Polish as a heritage language in the UK: Motivations, methods and multilingualism 16:45 (15 mins) Aurora Gao, University of Cambridge Coping with a crisis: the relationship between citizenship and mental health as experienced by LGBTQ population in Poland 17:00 (15 mins) Maria Obrebska, N/A Earth, Soil, Dust and Photography 17:15 (15 mins) Justyna Budzik, University of Silesia in Katowice Who was afraid of Anne of Green Gables, Winnie the Pooh, and many more… Books for kids from behind the Iron Curtain under the “care” of the postwar Polish censorship office (1944-1990). 17:30 (15 mins) Anna Wiśniewska-Grabarczyk, University of Lodz |
Empire and the Arts: Objects, Collections, and the Russian Taste for Western Luxury CWB Syndicate 2 Old Art – New Meaning. The Display of Acquisitions from Spain and France in Alexander I’s Hermitage 16:45 (15 mins) Catherine Phillips, Independent Scholar Taste, Empire, and British-Russian Relations: New Research on Russian Decorative Art at Dorich House Museum 17:00 (15 mins) Louise Hardiman, Kingston School of Art Signed by Flames: Royal Objects and Discourse of Belonging after the 1837 Fire in the Winter Palace 17:15 (15 mins) Nikita Balagurov, Lund University |
4:45: | Decolonizing Understanding of Disability in the Baltic and Eastern European Countries CWB Syndicate 3 “Nothing about us without us”: neurodiversity movement and the role of the medical anthropologist in a self-advocacy culture 16:45 (20 mins) Daiva Bartušienė, Vytautas Magnus university In search of identity: the history of the movement for the rights of people with disabilities in Ukraine 17:05 (20 mins) Hanna Zaremba-Kosovych, The Ethnology Institute National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine Piecing together the history of disability in Latvia during Soviet times: A case study of the Association of the Blind community in Cēsis 17:25 (20 mins) Agnese Zviedre, Art Academy of Latvia |
From Modernity to Degrowth: Environmental Realities and Alternatives from the Socialist Anthropocene Games Room Between Chemical Suicide and Chemical Welfare. Negotiating Chemical Modernity in Gomułka’s Poland. 16:45 (20 mins) Jan Burek, University College London Towards a Socialist Anthropocene: Debating Degrowth in East Germany, 1972-1989 17:05 (20 mins) Alexander Petrusek, Institute of Advanced Studies/UCL |
Religion and the State since the 19th Century Garden Room Ethno-cultural memory of Ukrainian special resettlers and agency of the underground Greek Catholic Church in Soviet Kazakhstan 16:45 (15 mins) Nestor Manichkin, French Institute for Central Asian Studies Religious Mission or Diasporic Church: Changing Roles of the Russian Ecclesiastical Mission to China, 1860s-1940s 17:00 (15 mins) Anastasiia Akulich, University of Leeds The Abolition of the UGCC as a Soviet Colonial Practice: A Case of the Post-War Eastern Galicia 17:15 (15 mins) Kateryna Budz, University of Edinburgh |
Anti-Gender Backlash and Feminist Resistance in the Post-Soviet States JCR Belarussian Women’s Response to Anti-Gender Politics: From Domestic Violence to Street Protests 16:45 (15 mins) Yuliya Brin , University of Helsinki Cultivating Conservatism: Exploring Gender Discourses of Regional Female Civil Servants in Russia 17:00 (15 mins) Valeriya Utkina, Aleksanteri Institute, University of Helsinki Examining the Reception of Feminist Discourses through American Pop Culture among University Students in the Republic of Georgia 17:15 (15 mins) Georgy Slavin-Rudakov, International Black Sea University No woman’s land: New ethics, traditionalism and “philosophical mobilisation” 17:30 (15 mins) Tatiana Levina, Kulturwissenschaftliches Institut Essen, KWI |
Towards Reshaping East-Central Europe and Eurasia. New directions and institutional changes in British academia since February 2022. 16:45 (90 mins) Linnett Room Chair: Olena Palko, The RUTA Association for Central, South-Eastern, Eastern European, Baltic, Caucasus, Central and Northern Asian StudiesGeorge Gilbert, University of Southampton Francis King, UEA East Centre Andy Willimott, The Centre for Eurasian, Russian, and East European Studies (CEREES) at Queen Mary University of London |
4:45: | Representation of social and ethnic groups in Soviet and post-Soviet media Selwyn Diamond Suite Cinematic Portraits of Identity and Resistance: Exploring the Imaginary Communities (Rodnovertsy and Meryans ) through Film. 16:45 (15 mins) Maria Grigoryeva, University of Helsinki Representations of Post-Soviet Nostalgia And Late Socialism in Russian TV Series 17:00 (15 mins) Anna Svetlova, Jagiellonian University Rethinking the Soviet through satirical magazines: the example of representations of the intelligentsia in cartoons of the late 1980s and early 1990s 17:15 (15 mins) Oksana Hela, University of Basel Orientalisation and Folklorisation of Central Asia in Soviet Wartime Cinema 17:30 (15 mins) Assiya Issemberdiyeva, Queen Mary University of London Authoritarian Laughter: Political Humor and Soviet Dystopia in Lithuania 17:45 (15 mins) Neringa Klumbytė, Miami University |
Besieged by the Future 2: Embodiments and Aesthetics Selwyn Kathleen Lyttelton Room Crossing Boundaries: The Transnational Futurist Anti-Book Collaborations of Transcaucasia (1917-1922) 16:45 (20 mins) Lauren Warner-Treloar, Kingston University Future (Im)perfect: Envisioning the Body in the Soviet 1920s 17:05 (20 mins) Claire Shaw, University of Warwick |
Populist Solidarity and the Prospects of Development Selwyn Old Library Room 2&3 "Not all immigrants are the same?" (In)solidarity with immigrants in Czech politics beyond the populist and non-populist divide 16:45 (15 mins) Vladimír Naxera, University of West Bohemia Civility, Vulgarity, and Solidarity in post-pandemic Slovakia 17:00 (15 mins) Nicolette Makovicky, University of Oxford Hungarian Kurultaj Festival: A Laboratory of Populist Solidarity 17:15 (15 mins) Tatiana Safonova, Comenius University Online solidarities in times of the Covid-19 pandemic 17:30 (15 mins) Jitka Kralova, UCL SSEES |
East-West Cooperation in Science and Technology 3: East-East and East-South Relations Selwyn Old Library Room 4 Activities of Czechoslovak Experts in Africa through the Lens of Secret Service Documents (1960s, 1970s) 16:45 (15 mins) Barbora Buzássyova, Institute of History of Slovak Academy of Sciences Czechoslovak geologists in the Global South in the service of the state and intelligence 17:00 (15 mins) Barbora Menclová, Faculty of Social Sciences, Charles University in Prague Scientists? Diplomats? Businessmen? Spies? Czechoslovak-Chinese Joint Commission for Scientific and Technological Cooperation as a Czechoslovak vehicle for gathering scientific, economic and political intelligence about the PRC 17:15 (15 mins) Jan Adamec, independent scholar Yogurt and Technology - Bulgarian-Japanese "intelligent" cooperation in the 1980s Lyubomir Pozharliev 17:30 (15 mins) Lyubomir Pozharliev, Leibniz-Institut für Länderkunde |
Changes in Ukrainian Society' values. Current situation and consequences to the post-war economy. 16:45 (90 mins) Selwyn Walters Room Chair: Kristina Babenko, Newcastle University Business SchoolYevgeniia Gnatchenko, University of East Angliia Olga Danylyuk, University of London Royal Central School of Speech & Drama Olga Miroshnychenko, Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv |
4:45: | Linguistic Perspectives on Slavonic Literary Texts Seminar Room A cognitive stylistics approach to supernatural in Gogol's "May Night, or the Drowned Maiden" 16:45 (20 mins) Antonia Pintaric, University of Zadar A Luxury Cruise Voyage with Tatyana Tolstaya, a Russian Writer in the 2020s. Discursive Shifts and Commercialisation of Self. 17:05 (20 mins) Mikhail Vodopyanov, University of St Andrews |
Media and geopolitical shifts Teaching Room 4 Censorship to Cyber Warfare – The Legacy of The Soviet Period On Estonian Science Fiction Today 16:45 (20 mins) Brent McKenzie, University of Guelph Creative Landscapes: 90 years from Holodomor 17:05 (20 mins) Sara Nesteruk, Manchester Metropolitan University Cultural Connections and Geopolitical Shifts: The Evolving Landscape of Russian Film Festivals in the Czech Republic 17:25 (20 mins) Ksenia Hain, Palacký University |
Memory and Trauma Teaching Room 5 “It made it more personal”: Being Western at Museums of Communism 16:45 (15 mins) Samantha Vaughn, Newcastle University Decolonizing the Past: Сontemporary Russian Culture and the Rights of the Dead 17:00 (15 mins) Svetlana Novikova, PhD, none |
Czechoslovakian Literature and Culture Teaching Room 6 `Osvobozené Francie nejkrásnější syn’: the Czech death and after-life of Robert Desnos 16:45 (15 mins) Susan Reynolds, British Library Avant-garde on the Periphery: Depiction of the Slovak Rural Milieu in Early Work of Peter Jilemnický 17:00 (15 mins) Zuzana Kubusová, Università di Bologna Old Young Literature: Literary Gatekeeping During Normalisation in Slovakia 17:15 (15 mins) Viliam Nádaskay, Institute of Slovak Literature of SAS Poetic Staging of the Communicative Situation in the Poetry of Slovak Modern School 17:30 (15 mins) Romana Kališová, Institute of Slovak Literature of SAS Leoš Janáček and the Late National Revival in Moravia 17:45 (15 mins) Miloš Zapletal, Silesian University in Opava |
Growing Up under Socialism: Soviet Adolescence and Life-Writing Teaching Room 7 “I Will Become Someone”: Adulting Strategies in a Soviet Teenager’s Diary (1937–1941) 16:45 (20 mins) Ekaterina Zadirko, University of Cambridge Late Soviet Collective Life-Writing and Coming-of-Age Experience 17:05 (20 mins) Ella Rossman, University College London, School of Slavonic and East European Studies Young Women and Motherhood in Brezhnev-Era Films from the Gorʹkii Studio 17:25 (20 mins) Serian Carlyle, UCL |
4:45: | Language and Identity Teaching Room A “They can’t take that from us!” Identity construction by Russian speakers of the Baltic countries through social networking and memorial practices: the case of Victory day celebration in 2023 16:45 (20 mins) Kapitolina Fedorova, Tallinn University EU Roma migrants' experiences of language learning and lived citizenship 17:05 (20 mins) Blair Biggar, University of Glasgow Sociolinguistic tendencies in Ukraine under Russian invasion (2014-2023) 17:25 (20 mins) Lesia Myklash, Lviv Polytechnic National University |
Circulating social and economic values Teaching Room B Circulating narratives of justice: what can we learn from cultural policies in Kazakhstan 16:45 (15 mins) Olga Chumicheva, University of Manchester Round-tripping in Cyp-Rus? A Critical Review of the Round-tripping Framework Based on Analysis of the TNK-BP Case-study and Macro Data. 17:00 (15 mins) George Hajipavli, University of Oxford The time of crisis? The mobility chances of Israelite ex-soldiers in the Horthy-era 17:15 (15 mins) Robert Szabo, Eötvös Loránd University The transformation of the moral order in Russian society 1976-2021 17:30 (15 mins) Anna Smolentseva, University of Cambridge |
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8:00 | Film Screening and discussion - Wardens’ Gardens by Dmitry Omelchenko Auditorium Lounge Wardens’ Gardens A Film Screening + Discussion 20:00 (60 mins) Judith Pallot, Aleksanteri Institute |
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9:50: | 9:50: | 9:50: | 9:50: | 9:50: | 9:50: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
9:55: | 9:55: | 9:55: | 9:55: | 9:55: | 9:55: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
10:00 | 10:00 | 10:00 | 10:00 | 10:00 | 10:00 |