| Auditorium | Auditorium Lounge | CWB Plenary Room | CWB Syndicate 1 | CWB Syndicate 2 |
| CWB Syndicate 3 | Games Room | Garden Room | JCR | Linnett Room |
| Selwyn Diamond Suite | Selwyn Kathleen Lyttelton Room | Selwyn Old Library Room 2&3 | Selwyn Old Library Room 4 | Selwyn Walters Room |
| Seminar Room | Teaching Room 4 | Teaching Room 5 | Teaching Room 6 | Teaching Room 7 |
| Teaching Room A | Teaching Room B | DAY 3 | ||||||||||
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9:00 | The EU (2) – war, power, and influence Auditorium Lounge The European Union in the Caucasus: a Power Audit in Contested Times 09:00 (15 mins) Kevork Oskanian, University of Exeter The war in Ukraine and the transformation of the EU as a normative power 09:15 (15 mins) Kamil Zwolski, University of Southampton |
Russian domestic politics (3) – governance and the state CWB Plenary Room A decade of violence: monitoring anti-LGBTQ hate crimes in Russia in the era of aurocratization 09:00 (15 mins) Sergey Katsuba, University College Dublin Challenging Russian state on its own ideological field: The Wagner Group’s domestic political PR 09:15 (15 mins) Yahor Azarkevich, University of Warwick |
Re-Imagining Decolonisation in the Baltic Region: Memory Politics, Identities, and Epistemologies CWB Syndicate 1 Concrete dust versus angel’s wings? Semiotic tensions of post-colonial memory politics in Latvia. 09:00 (15 mins) Deniss Hanovs, Art Academy of Latvia/CERS PROJECT VPP-LKRVA-2023/1-0001 Crying Over “the Killing Machine”: Redescribing Grey Zones of Decoloniality in the Baltic States 09:15 (15 mins) Alina Jašina-Schäfer, University of Mainz Lena Hercberga, Copenhagen Business School Decolonization in Lithuania? Revisiting the concept of cultural resistance under foreign rule 09:30 (15 mins) Violeta Davoliute, Vilnius University |
Impacts of the war in Ukraine on Russian energy sector and climate policy CWB Syndicate 2 Russian oil and gas sector after two years of war 09:00 (20 mins) Tatiana Lanshina, No organization Scenarios for the Russian coal sector: focus on regions 09:20 (20 mins) Anna Korppoo, Fridtjof Nansen Institute Climate Strategies of Russian export companies: status and prospects 09:40 (20 mins) Oleg Pluzhnikov, Perspectives |
9:00 | Media, Cultural and Intellectual Freedom in Late Imperial Russia and the Soviet Union CWB Syndicate 3 Cherchez la femme: looking for the women’s images in the Ukrainian Soviet cinema in the 1920s. 09:00 (15 mins) Yana Prymachenko, Institute of history of Ukraine, NASU From the Elbe to Big Sur: Unveiling Cold War Narratives in Soviet Media's Portrayal of Esalen Institute 09:15 (15 mins) Ksenija Iljina, University College London Press Freedom before, during and after the 1905 Revolution: Conceptions and Practices in the Mass Newspaper Press in Moscow and St. Petersburg 09:30 (15 mins) Sophia Polek, University of Basel The Ьuseum of Populism or (counter) Revolution? “Great Retreat” and the State Museum of Revolution in Petrograd-Leningrad, 1920-1930s. 09:45 (15 mins) Nikolay Sarkisyan, University of Oxford |
The Mass-Elite Attitude Congruence towards the EU in Eastern Europe Games Room ‘Preserving the natural order’: Religious extremism and anti-LGBTQI+ activism in Romania 09:00 (15 mins) Vlad Marginas, U. Babes-Bolyai/U. de Genève/U. libre de Bruxelles Dissensus or Cheap Talk? People’s Attitudes and Politicians Rhetoric about the EU 09:15 (15 mins) Sergiu Gherghina, University of Glasgow Nullgaria at the gates? Elite-mass congruence of opinion on a potential termination of the Bulgarian EU membership 09:30 (15 mins) Petar Bankov, University of Glasgow |
Contesting Identity in Soviet and Post-Soviet Societies Garden Room “The Soviet Union is like a radish: red on the outside but white on the inside” – a Historical and Philosophical analysis of National Bolshevism within its context 09:00 (15 mins) George Bocean, Durham University Queer Subculture of the Post-Soviet Space: Reconsidering Identity Formation and Post-Soviet Transition 09:15 (15 mins) Ioana Zamfir, University of Toronto Republic within Republic – Daily Life of a Military Plant in Soviet Estonia 09:30 (15 mins) Ivan Lavrentjev, University of Tartu Dysfunctional Uses of History? Revolutionary History in the Russian Protest Art (2008-2012) 09:45 (15 mins) Nadezda Petrusenko, Umeå University |
Russia as a "civilisation-state": the role of civilisational and religious discourses in the Kremlin's secular ideology after Feb 2022 JCR Orthodoxy, Velikoderzhavnost', and Civilisational Nationalism: The Political Theology of the World Russian People's Council (1993-2023) 09:00 (15 mins) Bojidar Kolov, University of Oslo Putinism and the Russian Orthodox Church: A Parting of ways? 09:15 (15 mins) Mikhail Suslov, University of Copenhagen Securing the “Civilization-State” and a “fair” global order: Russia’s evolving civilizational imaginary at home and abroad. 09:30 (15 mins) Matthew Blackburn, Norwegian Institute of International Affairs The new opium of the people? State-Church civilizational discourse and the Russo-Ukraine war. 09:45 (15 mins) Luke March, The University of Edinburgh |
Civil society under pressure Linnett Room From Authoritarian Repression to Activism in Exile: Pathways of Russian Environmentalists 09:00 (15 mins) Maria Tysiachniouk, University of Eastern Finland Neither Voice nor Exit: Volunteering in Russia as a Form of Protest against the War in Ukraine 09:15 (15 mins) Irina Olimpieva, IERES, GWU The Value Change in the First Post-Communist Generation from the Viewpoint of Ronald Inglehart’s Theory: a Critical Analysis 09:30 (15 mins) Laura Dauksaite, Vilnius University |
9:00 | Images of Siberian Exile and the Preservation of Cultural Memory Selwyn Diamond Suite Breshkovskaia’s Siberian Exile as Imagined by an American Newspaper in September 1915 09:00 (20 mins) Alison Rowley, Concordia University Images of Siberia in Maria Volkonskaia's Memoirs and Letters 09:20 (20 mins) Ludmilla Trigos, Independent Scholar Picturing Siberia, Creating Memories: Places of Exile in Photographs of the Late 19th Century. 09:40 (20 mins) Tatiana Saburova, Indiana University |
How to Tell Left from Right : Political Fragmentation, Hierarchization, and Exclusion in the Russian Public Sphere since the Early 1990s 09:00 (90 mins) Selwyn Kathleen Lyttelton Room Chair: Victoria Musvik, University of OxfordTatiana Levina, Kulturwissenschaftliches Institut Essen, KWI Alina Parker, University of Massachusetts Amherst Vladimir Ponizovskiy, Durham University |
Authoritarian backsliding and forms of resistance 2 Selwyn Old Library Room 2&3 Judges' Strategies in Defending Judicial Independence: Insights from Poland, Hungary, and Romania 09:00 (20 mins) Leonardo Puleo, University College Dublin Judicial legal consciousness: authoritarian backsliding as a catalyst of change in Poland 09:20 (20 mins) Agnieszka Kubal, University College London ‘Sword of Damocles’: the foreign agents’ law experienced through fear 09:40 (15 mins) Mercedes Malcomson, Birkbeck College |
Art and Culture in the Balkans Selwyn Old Library Room 4 Confessions and Transgressions: Trans Life-writing in the Balkans 09:00 (15 mins) Natalija Stepanovic, UCL, SEES Examining Paratextual Elements in Literary Translations to and from Macedonian 09:15 (15 mins) Svetlana Jakimovska, University Goce Delcev Metaphoricity of a Cosmopolitan System - Yugoslav Polemicist Writing and its Cosmopolitan Attitude on the Example of Jovan Hristić and His Writing 09:30 (15 mins) Marija Tepavac, Alpen Adria University Utopia and Nationalism in the formation of Socialist Yugoslavia 09:45 (15 mins) Iva Dimovska, Democracy Institute |
Ukraine in Literature and Culture Selwyn Walters Room Bringing Margins to the Front: International Solidarity and Decolonial Epistemic Practices in 1920s Ukrainian Literature 09:00 (15 mins) Rossella Caria, University of Milan Environmental tragedy in the novel Volodymyr Yavorivskyi, “Maria with Wormwood at the End of the Century” 09:15 (15 mins) Mariam Mokhammad, H.S. Skovoroda Kharkiv National Pedagogical Uni Memory and postmemory in the novel "Amadoka" by Sofia Andrukhovych. 09:00 (15 mins) Olena Saikovska, Eberhard Karls Universität Tübingen The Image of Chornobyl in Western Graphic Narratives 09:45 (15 mins) Tetiana Ostapchuk, University College London |
9:00 | Saints and Recensions: (Old) Church Slavonic in Diversity Seminar Room Dispalatalization of the word-final t’ in verbs: The case of the Ukrainian recension of Church Slavonic and Southwest (Hutsul) Ukrainian 09:00 (20 mins) Oksana Lebedivna, National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy Paratexts in old printed Cyrillic books: quantitative and qualitative linguistic approach 09:20 (20 mins) Ivan N. Petrov, University of Lodz, Poland The Authorship of the Vita Constantini-Cyrilli 09:40 (20 mins) Thomas Daiber, Justus-Liebig University Giessen The Divine Polyglot? Constantine the Philosopher against Sībawayhi and Saadiah ben Joseph Gaon 10:00 (20 mins) Andriy Danylenko, Pace University, Modern Languages Department |
Roundtable/Masterclass: Teaching Russian and Eurasian Studies in the New Political Environment. Challenges and Prospects 09:00 (90 mins) Teaching Room 4 Chair: Basil Bessonoff , Global Language CenterNatasha Parker, SSEES, University College London |
Post-Soviet Russophone Literature 1 Teaching Room 5 Contemporary Russophone Poetry and the Reinvention of the Russian Language 09:00 (20 mins) Miriam Finkelstein, University of Konstanz Ukrainian Russophone Poetry on the Eve of the Full-Scale Invasion: The "Ton'kie linii" Poets 09:20 (20 mins) Alessandro Achilli, University of Cagliari |
Ukrainian National Identity in Literary Texts: Across Languages and Genres Teaching Room 6 “Cry for the lost homeland” by Borys Chichibabin: The problem of loss of a person’s national identity in the (post) Soviet era 09:00 (15 mins) Olha Honcharova, Keele University A search for Ukrainian identity in Victoria Belim’s memoir The Rooster House 09:15 (15 mins) Tetyana Lunyova, University of York Executed Renaissance: Ukrainian Identity and Experimental Literature 09:30 (15 mins) Mariia Pshenychna, University of Stirling Ukrainian self-identification and poetics of Vasyl Stus 09:00 (15 mins) Svitlana Kryvoruchko, Institution State University of the Central West - UNICENTRO Iaroslav Goloborodko, Horlivka Institute for Foreign Languages of Donbas State Pedagogical University Volodymyr Pidpalyi: “Even If We Are Not Going to Reach it – Let’s go Anyway…”: Literary Resistance of The Sixtiers And Representation of The National Code 10:00 (15 mins) Maryna Zuyenko, PoltavaKorolenko National Pedagogical University |
9:00 | Anthropology: Multilingualism and Multiculturalism Teaching Room B Exploring the trajectories of Slovak migrants in the UK: Towards a linguistic ethnography of negotiated identities 09:00 (20 mins) Lenka Kast, UCL IOE “They owe us”: making claims in Russian-speaking towns in the Baltics 09:20 (20 mins) Marija Norkunaite, Vilnius University Vanishing multilingualism in Transylvania and Banat 09:40 (20 mins) Cora Saurer, University Babes - Bolyiai, Cluj |
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11:00 | The Russia-Ukraine War and the Evolving Security Dilemmas in Central and Eastern Europe Auditorium Lounge A Shift in the Security Paradigm in Central and Eastern Europe: The Case of NATO's Eastern Flank during the Russia-Ukraine War 11:00 (15 mins) Tomasz Stepniewski, Institute of Central Europe and KUL The Arctic Ramifications of Russia's War in Ukraine. 11:15 (15 mins) George Soroka, Harvard University War as an Integral Element of Putin's Russia: Implications for Regime Stability and State Integrity 11:30 (15 mins) Oleksii Polegkyi, Institute of Political Studies, Polish Academy Sc. |
Chaos or Control: Russian Politics in Wartime CWB Plenary Room Growing inefficiency of Putin’s personnel system at a time of war 11:00 (15 mins) Nikolai Petrov, German Institute for International and Security Af The Known Unknowns: Change and Continuity in System Performance and Legitimacy since February 2022 11:15 (15 mins) Matthew Blackburn, Norwegian Institute of International Affairs The war (didn't) change that: Russia's foreign policy before and after the invasion of Ukraine 11:30 (15 mins) Damian Strycharz, Krakow University of Economics |
Open meeting: UG degree programmes in Russian CWB Syndicate 1 |
Networks of power, networks of sociability: Epistolary sources on the Russian history in the 18th century. CWB Syndicate 2 Politics, networks and self-fashioning in the family correspondence of Jacob and Peter von Staehlin (1760s-1780s) 11:00 (15 mins) Vladislav Rjeoutski, German Historical Institute in Paris The correspondence of Catherine II with Count Burkhard Christoph Münnich 11:15 (15 mins) Aleksandr Lavrov, Sorbonne Université The meeting in Kaniv (1787): the informal relationships between Russian and Polish-Lithuanian courts in Augustus Poniatowski’s private correspondence. 11:30 (15 mins) Anastasiia Lystsova, Princeton University |
11:00 | Rethinking binaries in the pre-modern Slavonic world: politics, space and faith CWB Syndicate 3 Beyond darughas and basqaqs: looking again at Mongol governance in Rus’ 11:00 (15 mins) Angus Russell, University of Cambridge Formal and informal canon law in Rus' of the 11-13th centuries 11:15 (15 mins) Vera Gagarina, University of Cambridge Rethinking the Secular and Sacred: the Social, Religious, and Commercial Functions of Churches in Medieval Novgorod. 11:30 (15 mins) Amelia Gardner-Thorpe, University of Cambridge The Wavering Faith: Paradigms and Binaries of Slavic faith in Helmold of Bosau’s Chronica Slavorum 11:45 (15 mins) Natalia Radziwillowicz, University of Nottingham |
The First World War as Incubator of State Formations in Eastern an Southeastern Europe: Knowledge - Experts - Entaglements Games Room A Hetman for Everyone - Aleksandr Maliarevskii‘s Visions of Ukraine in 1918 11:00 (20 mins) Immo Rebitschek, Friedrich Schiller University How to frame your claim? Premodern History as an argument in State Building Discourses during the First World War. Insides into a recent Data Base Project 11:20 (20 mins) Sven Jaros, Martin-Luther-University Halle-Wittenberg Keeping Poland Alive: Diasporan Political Agency 1848-1891 11:40 (20 mins) Graham Cox, University of Birmingham |
Forging Political Identities through Protest and Resistance Garden Room (Inter)national self-determination in the Kosovo student protests 1968 11:00 (15 mins) Helena Trenkic Alesia Laci, University of Cambridge, Homerton College Lifestyle against Politics: (Sub)cultures of Czech and Russian Postsocialist Antifascism 11:15 (15 mins) Ondřej Daniel, Charles University 'Like A Dew On a Dry Soul'. Objects of Memory and Resistance Through Culture of Women Political Prisoners in Czechoslovakia 1948–1968 11:30 (15 mins) Marie Koval, Faculty of Humanities, Charles University |
Conceptions of Trauma and Mental Distress in Late Imperial Russia and the Soviet Union JCR “Roots and Routes of ‘Siberian Hysteria’: Colonialism and Mental Disorder in Late Imperial Siberia, 1880s-1910s” 11:00 (15 mins) Chechesh Kudachinova, Bonn Center for Dependency and Slavery Studies Early Soviet Cinema, Psychiatry and the Problem of Neurosis 11:15 (15 mins) Anna Toropova, University of Copenhagen Trauma in the Archive of the Ukrainian Republican Neurosurgical and Neuropsychiatric Hospital for Invalids of the Great Patriotic War 11:30 (15 mins) Robert Dale, Newcastle University |
Citizenship and social identities in the context of war Linnett Room A Tale of Two Contexts: The Ukrainian and Afghan Refugee Crises in Canada and the UK 11:00 (15 mins) Raluca Bejan, Dalhousie University Gender Equality and Women’s Activism in Ukraine in Times of War 11:15 (15 mins) Tamara Martsenyuk, University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy Instrumentalization of Citizenship during Russia-Ukraine War 11:30 (15 mins) Lidia Kuzemska, Forum Transregionale Studien Race, class, ethnicity and nation: The politics of welcoming Ukrainians in Romania 11:45 (15 mins) Raluca Bejan, Dalhousie University Social Capital Gaining, Loosing and Mobilizing During the Full-Scale War of Russia in Ukraine” 12:00 (15 mins) Tetiana Kostiuchenko, National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy / Leuphana University |
11:00 | Games as a tool for pedagogy and outreach 11:00 (90 mins) Selwyn Diamond Suite Chair: Emma Rimpiläinen, Uppsala UniversityBriana Bowen, Royal Holloway University of London George Fforde, University of Melbourne |
Kin-state minorities and media consumption 11:00 (90 mins) Selwyn Kathleen Lyttelton Room Chair: Craig Willis, European Centre for Minority IssuesAndreea Udrea, Royal Holloway University of London Federica Prina, University of Glasgow Lara Sorgo, Institute for Ethnic Studies David Smith, University of Glasgow |
The Era of the Cold War: Crisis, Conflict and International Collaboration Selwyn Old Library Room 2&3 An Unlikely Friendship?: The Entangled Histories of Socialist and Middle Eastern Modernisation in the 1960s and 1970s 11:00 (15 mins) Szinan Radi, University of Cambridge East European Refugees in the Vatican’s Anti-Communist Agenda in the early Cold War 11:15 (15 mins) Katarzyna Nowak, University of Vienna Red light from Moscow. The Soviet Union and the Beginning of the Iran-Iraq War 11:30 (15 mins) Dmitrii Asinovskii, Central European University |
Art History and Aesthetics Selwyn Old Library Room 4 Books as Witness: The Chinese Translated Soviet Art Books in the 1950s 11:00 (15 mins) Huiyu Cara Zhao, Durham University Marian Prefigurations in the Church of St Georg at Pološko 11:15 (15 mins) Ana Popova, Independent Researcher On the Shared Idea of "Vision" In the Poetry of Osip Mandel'shtam and Ol'ga Sedakova 11:30 (15 mins) Yuchun Lan, University of Oxford Re-defining twentieth-century image culture: Aby Warburg and Wassily Kandinsky on symbols 11:45 (15 mins) Marina G. Ogden, The Warburg Institute, School of Advanced Study, University of London |
Behind the iron Curtain. Economic Historians During the Cold War, 1945–1989. Palgrave Studies in Economic History new book presentation. 11:00 (90 mins) Selwyn Walters Room Chair: Antonie Dolezalova, Charles University, PragueCatherine Albrecht, . Anna Sosnowska, University of Warsaw Zarko Lazarevich, . Bogdan Murgescu, . |
11:00 | Slavonic Languages in Politics and (New) Media Seminar Room Media Text Genres in Selected Slavic Languages 11:00 (15 mins) Roman Sacharov, University of Lodz Method of Psycholinguistic Analysis for Identification of Manipulative and Indirect Hate Speech in Media (Case Study) 11:15 (15 mins) Yuliya Krylova-Grek, National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy The argumentative strategies of the spokesperson of the Russian Foreign Ministry, Maria Zakharova, in relation to ethos 11:30 (15 mins) Anna Semenova, Sorbonne Université О лингвистической креативности в интернет-дискурсе (на материале русского и хорватского языков) 11:00 (15 mins) Nika Zoričić, University of Zadar Marina Radchenko, University of Zadar |
Russia-Ukraine War: music and sculpture Teaching Room 4 Narrating home in times of war: Ukrainian popular music after the Russian full-scale invasion 11:00 (15 mins) Anna Glew, The University of Liverpool Never Ever Can We Be Brothers and Sisters: Wartime Sculpture in Ukraine, Belarus and Russian Federation 11:15 (15 mins) Pavel Voinitski, Montenegro European Art Community Russian Musicians' Anti-War Poetical Manifestoes: Zemfira, Shevchuk, Aigel, etc. 11:30 (15 mins) Kristina Vorontsova, Jagiellonian University Subversive Femininities in Ukrainian Popular Music in the Aftermath of Russia's Full-Scale Invasion 11:45 (15 mins) Iryna Shuvalova, University of Oslo |
Post-Soviet Russophone Literature 2 Teaching Room 5 “Strangers Everywhere:” Hybridity in Post-Soviet Russophone Autofiction 11:00 (20 mins) Alexey Shvyrkov, Columbia University Ecocriticism and Central Asia's Postcolonial Culture 11:20 (20 mins) Tamar Koplatadze, University of Oxford Identity and Diversity in Post-Soviet Russophone Literature: Guzel Yakhina, Alisa Ganieva and Khamid Ismailov 11:40 (20 mins) Natasha Rulyova, University of Birmingham |
Soviet Literature and Culture Teaching Room 6 "I apply Marxism when it’s needed, and don’t apply it when it’s not": Aleksei Losev and Marxism 11:00 (15 mins) Egor Sokolov, University of Oxford “Mom, shall we die together?” Motherhood and Death in Takyr by Andrej Platonov 11:15 (15 mins) Giuseppina Larocca, University of Macerata (Italy) Ahead of the Curve: Mathematics and Non-Euclidean Geometry in Zamiatin’s My and Kaverin’s Bochka 11:30 (15 mins) Emma Baxter, University of Oxford Ecopoetry & Elena Shvarts’ Leningrad Samizdat Publications 11:45 (15 mins) Sarah Matthews, University of Southern California |
Parties and elections Teaching Room 7 Does ideology matter? Voter-party mismatch and the success of new parties in Central and Eastern Europe 11:00 (15 mins) Jan Goedeking, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München Igor Dodon and the Party of Socialists: a case study of conservative ‘radical left’ populism? 11:15 (15 mins) Luke March, The University of Edinburgh Informality, corruption, and rivalry: how political party interactions in Moldova and Georgia impact democracy reforms 11:30 (15 mins) Amy Eaglestone, University of Birmingham Party Members and Digitalization: Evidence from Romania 11:45 (15 mins) Sergiu Gherghina, University of Glasgow |
11:00 | Cartography as a propaganda tool for nation- and empire-building in Eastern Europe Teaching Room A "Imperial" and "national" ethnic mapping – practices, goals and reliability of ethnic mapping in the Balkans (1840s-1910s) 11:00 (20 mins) Gabor Demeter, Research Centre for the Humanities, HAS In the Service of Power and Science. Ethnic maps in Hungary at the beginning of the 20th century 11:20 (20 mins) Margit Kőszegi, Eötvös Loránd University Siberian Geographical Imaginations: The Creation of the Birobidzhan Project 11:40 (20 mins) Diego Repenning, Pontificia Universidad Católica, Chile |
Anthropology: Contested Memory and Narratives Teaching Room B Counter-narrating the State: The Politics of Citizenship in the Margins of the Georgian State 11:00 (15 mins) Mariam Shalvashvili, Ilia State University From Parents to Children: The Narratives of Homeland in Georgian Families in Moscow 11:15 (15 mins) Maria Sakirko, The University of Cambridge Mnemonic Populism in Central and Eastern Europe: Everyday Memory Practices and Populist Sentiments in the Silesian Borderland 11:30 (15 mins) Johana Wyss, Institute of Ethnology, Czech Academy of Sciences Was Dagestan ever conquered? Defeat, grief and submission to Russia in the narratives of modern Dagestani. 11:45 (15 mins) Grigory Grigoryev, University of Helsinki |
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1:00 | China and Taiwan – foreign policy, support, and influence Auditorium Lounge And Eastern Europe Shall Lead Them: Small Power Support for Taiwan 13:00 (15 mins) Jonathan Ludwig, Oklahoma State University Challenging the Past, Building a 'Shared Future'? China's Strategic Visions in Central and Eastern Europe and in Central Asia: A Comparative Study. 13:15 (15 mins) Maryia Danilovich, Uppsala University, Göttingen University Andreea Budeanu, IFRAE-INALCO (Paris) The Logic of the Belt and Road Initiative for Connectivity in the South Caucasus: Practical Content and Correspondence to Local Policy 13:30 (15 mins) Jing Shi, Tsinghua University |
Environmental Peacebuilding through the Length War against Ukraine CWB Plenary Room Realization of budget deficit concepts in Ukraine: Evidence from the State budget for 2022-2023 13:00 (15 mins) Olha Haponenko, University of Southampton The energy component in the Russian Federation’s hybrid aggression against Ukraine 13:15 (15 mins) Tetiana Kurbatova, University of Sussex Rising from war as a Green Phoenix : Challenges and Prospects of Ukraine’ Green Reconstruction and Recovery 13:30 (15 mins) Ievgeniia Kopytsia , University of Oxford Environmental peacebuilding and reparations: How to make Russia pay for environmental damage in Ukraine 13:45 (15 mins) Nataliia Slobodian, Canterbury Christ Church University Social activism for peace during the war in Ukraine in the Baltic States in a comparative perspective 14:00 (15 mins) Magdalena Lachowicz, Adam Mickiewicz University |
Britain and Eastern Europe from the Victorians to the Cold War CWB Syndicate 1 “The Burns Connection”: the Scotland-USSR Society and Cold War cultural diplomacy 13:00 (15 mins) Niall Gray, University of Strathclyde British Colony in Moscow: A Century of Impact (1825-1920) 13:15 (15 mins) Elena Watson, Independent researcher British Travellers in 19th-Century Russian Ukraine 13:30 (15 mins) Iwona Sakowicz-Tebinka, University of Gdańsk James Baker: a Bristolian and Bohemia 13:45 (15 mins) Julia Sutton-Mattocks, University of Bristol |
Telegram and political communication CWB Syndicate 2 Mapping the pro-war/pro-Russian Telegram channels: Continuities, contradictions, and transformations 13:00 (15 mins) Alina Parker, University of Massachusetts Amherst Online government communication in wartime Ukraine: A computational network analysis of political actors on Telegram 13:15 (15 mins) Anastasiya Kosyk, University of Munster Pro-war mobilisation on Telegram: A case study of Russian-speaking migrants in Germany 13:30 (15 mins) Tatiana Golova, Centre for East European and International Studies (ZOiS) Liliia Sablina, Central European University |
1:00 | The Second World War in Eastern and Southeastern Europe Games Room "Calling on a Tsar and not on Stalin": Soviet Ultranationalism and its Nazi Observers 13:00 (15 mins) Philip Decker, Princeton University "Inspired by the Fascist example": Race policies as a means of italian power politics in south-eastern Europe, 1937-1939 13:15 (15 mins) Luca Fiorito, Università degli Studi di Genova The civil war in Slovenia during the Second World War: explaining the post-war extra-judicial killings of the collaborationist armed forces by the Slovene Partisans. 13:30 (15 mins) Zala Pochat Križaj, King's College London |
Transformation of Second World War Memory after the Russian Aggression Garden Room (Un)Recognized Genocide: Changing the War Memory in Belarus 13:00 (15 mins) Aliaksei Lastouski, European Humanities University “In Storms of Steel”. Is there a Normalisation of Collaboration with the Nazis in Ukraine? 13:15 (15 mins) Yurii Latysh, European Humanities University Lithuanian history policy in the context of Russian aggression against Ukraine 13:30 (15 mins) Rasa Cepaitiene, Lithuanian institute of History Ukraine’s Second World War Memoryscape in the Context of Russian Aggression 13:45 (15 mins) Hanna Bazhenova, Institute of Central Europe |
Russia as exceptional: second thoughts? 13:00 (90 mins) JCR Chair: Raymond Taras, Tulane UniversityBo Petersson, Malmo University Mikhail Suslov, University of Copenhagen Peter Duncan, University College London Kevork Oskanian, University of Exeter |
The impact of war and autocratic regime on knowledge production in Russia Linnett Room Academic freedom for scholars in exile in Europe 13:00 (15 mins) Dmitry Dubrovskiy, Charles University Academic rights and wrongs: who protects students' freedoms? 13:15 (15 mins) Elizaveta Potapova, PPMI Alternative Academia as a Place of Resistance: Russian Para-Academic Projects Two Years After the Invasion of Ukraine 13:30 (15 mins) Petr Torkanovskiy, King's College London Constructing (Dis)Trust in Polls: Public Opinion Research in Today's Russia 13:45 (15 mins) Arsenii Verkeev, Ruhr University Bochum Dynamics of trust and distrust in Russian universities at the beginning of the war 14:00 (15 mins) Lidia Yatluk, University of Groningen |
1:00 | Uncovering 'Forgotten Histories' through Popular Literature Selwyn Diamond Suite Decolonising Stalin's Cult of Personality: Stalinism through Soviet Georgian Literature 13:00 (15 mins) Megi Kartsivadze, Oxford School of Global and Area Studies Gender, Ethnicity and Political Agency in Stalin’s Exile: “Siberian Diary” by Arpenik Aleksanyan (1949-1954) 13:15 (15 mins) Ella Rossman, University College London, School of Slavonic and East European Studies Women and the Prison Microcosm: Freedom and Gendered Power Relations in Gulag Memoirs and in US Prison Literature 13:30 (15 mins) Elisa Kriza, Bamberg University |
The Struggle for the Past: History, Heritage and Historiography Selwyn Kathleen Lyttelton Room “Augusterlebnis” and “the Spirit of 1914”? Reconsidering the Historiography on the Reaction to the Outbreak of the First World War 13:00 (15 mins) Teodoras Zukas, Vilnius University Development and the Drive to Closure: Overlapping Layers of the Authoritarian Temptation in Romanian History 13:15 (15 mins) Victor Rizescu, University of Bucharest Galician Conservatives' attitudes towards Pan-Slavism (1863-1914). 13:30 (15 mins) Piotr Hennel, Uniwersytet Łódzki Laws of war and cultural heritage. Slavonic manuscripts of the Romanian Academy under German protection (1917) ? 13:45 (15 mins) Claudiu-Lucian Topor, Alexandru Ioan Cuza University Inside the black box of Europeanization. Analysing the European Commission’s leverage to drive the Europeanization of post-communist administrations. A case study of Romania, Serbia and Moldova between 2000-2020. 14:00 (15 mins) Claudia Badulescu, Institut d'études européennes (IEE-ULB) |
Constructing Ukrainian Cultural Identity Selwyn Old Library Room 4 Evolution of contemporary art institutions in Ukraine (early 1990-s – 2020) 13:00 (15 mins) Anna Luhovska, University of Basel Instrumentalization of Nikolai Gogol (a brief outline of Gogol’s existence on the border of two identities and cultures) 13:15 (15 mins) Mykyta Grygorov, The Institute for Ideas and Imagination Rethinking Ukrainian Culture: Decolonized Implication of Maria Pryimachenko’s Art 13:00 (15 mins) Olga Gomilko, The National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine Ukrainian Modernism on the Global Map of International Avant-gardes. “Critical Art Geography” versus Post-colonial Studies 13:45 (15 mins) Marina Dmitrieva, Independent researcher |
Gender and feminism: regional approaches Selwyn Walters Room Developing a Gender Lens for Social Science Research Ethics in Central Asia 13:00 (15 mins) Almira Tabaeva, Nazarbayev University Learning and transmission of gender norms in contemporary Russia: a study of pedagogical programmes at gender holidays 13:15 (15 mins) Vincent Exiga, Université de Genève The "Queer Lens" on Migration in Kazakhstan 13:30 (15 mins) Elliot Napier, University of Glasgow What's Left of Feminism in Eastern Europe? 13:45 (15 mins) Grazina Bielousova, University College London |
1:00 | Languages in Contact: Slavonic Languages and English Seminar Room English Language Morphological Neologisms Reflecting the War in Ukraine 13:00 (20 mins) Nadiya Ivanenko, University of Oxford Patterns of unretranslatability in the Hungarian (re)translations of James Joyce's Ulysses 13:20 (20 mins) Árpád Mitruly, Babeș–Bolyai University To copy-paste or not to copy-paste? 13:40 (20 mins) Natasha Stojanovska-Ilievska, UKIM - Filološki fakultet 'Blaže Koneski' |
Russian Theatre and Performance Teaching Room 4 Aleksandr Sumarokov’s ‘Dimitri Samozvanets’: a New Type of Villain and the Transformation of Neo-Classical Tragedy 13:00 (15 mins) Margarita Kildiusheva, University of Oxford Tchaikovsky’s “Swan Lake” as a Political Emblem 13:15 (15 mins) Katya Jordan, Brigham Young University The Feminization of the Soviet-Russian Post-Stalin Opera 13:30 (15 mins) Magdalena Marija Meašić, University of Rijeka Tragicomedy on the Soviet periphery: a decolonial perspective on Aleksandr Vampilov 13:45 (15 mins) Jesse Gardiner, University of St Andrews |
Transnational and Multilingual Cultural Exchange Teaching Room 5 Andrei the 'Red Cat'?: The Beats’ Initial Adoption of Andrei Voznesenskii 13:00 (15 mins) Benjamin Musachio, Princeton University Remizov, Mirsky, Harrison, and Woolf: Cross-Cultural Contacts and Literary Collaboration Between Russian Émigrés and British Elites in 1920s Paris 13:15 (15 mins) Maria Teresa Badolati, Sapienza University of Rome Speaking (many) languages in Early Rus’ annals 13:30 (15 mins) Ines Garcia de la Puente, Boston University/University of Cambridge |
Ukraine – policy and politics Teaching Room 6 “Away from Moscow!” And other lines in Ukraine’s strategic narrative, 2014-2022 13:00 (15 mins) Joanna Szostek, University of Glasgow Democratization, Civic Society, and the New Ukrainian School during the Acute Phase of War 13:15 (15 mins) Carl Mirra, Adelphi University Nation Building and Identity Branding: How to Be Brave Like Ukraine 13:30 (15 mins) Andrii Smytsniuk, Slavonic Studies, MMLL, University of Cambridge Ukraine's national identity and its foreign policy, 1994-2004 13:45 (15 mins) Artur Nadiiev, University of Nottingham |
Russia-Ukraine War: prose and poetry Teaching Room 7 Deixis as a marker of subjectivity in contemporary Ukrainian and Russian poetry 13:00 (20 mins) Olga Sokolova Exploring the War Narratives in Social Media and Literature: A Psycholinguistic Study of Stories by War Witnesses Bohdan Lepkyi and Present-Day Ukrainians 13:20 (20 mins) Serhii Zasiekin, Lesya Ukrainka Volyn National University; University College London Reading on the Frontline in the Russo-Ukrainian War 13:40 (20 mins) Iryna Kovalchuk, UCD |
1:00 | Anthropology: Epistemology and Knowledge Production Teaching Room B “Doubt as a way to truth”: techniques of discerning truth among natural scientists in Western Siberia 13:00 (20 mins) Roosa Rytkönen, University of Birmingham How and When Should We (Not) Speak?: Ethical Knowledge Production About the Russian War Against Ukraine 13:20 (20 mins) Valeria Lazarenko, Humboldt University of Berlin The Traumatized Body: Varlam Shalamov’s Ethics of Testimony in the Philosophy of Valery Podoroga 13:40 (15 mins) Boris Podoroga, University of Lille |
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