DAY 1 | Bute Hall | James Watt South Stephenson Room | James Watt South Room 355 | East Quad Lecture Theatre | Humanities Lecture Theatre 255 | DAY 1 | Main Building Room 466 | McIntyre Room 201 | McIntyre Room 208 | Fore Hall | James Watt South Room 375 | DAY 1 | Gilbert Scott Room 356 | Gilbert Scott Room 253 | Gilbert Scott Room 250 | James Watt South Room 361 | Melville Room | DAY 1 | Turnbull Room | Main Building Room 132 | Main Building Room 134 | Gilbert Scott Room 251 | Robing Room | DAY 1 | Hunter Hall |
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11:00 | Keynote Bute Hall Quo vadis Area Studies amidst Russia‘s War against Ukraine? 11:00 (75 mins) Gwendolyn Sasse, Centre for East European and International Studies |
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12:30 | The New Soviet Person from Late Stalinism to Perestroika Bute Hall “Knowledge to the Masses!”: Traveling Lecturers and Molding the New Postwar Soviet Subjects, 1940s-1950s. 12:30 (15 mins) Iuliia Cherniavskaia, Rutgers State University of NJ Perestroika: The Last Attempt to Create the New Soviet Person, 1985-1991 12:45 (15 mins) Courtney Doucette, State University of New York at Oswego Raising a New Soviet Person on Revolutionary Traditions: The Role of the Older Generation in Communist Upbringing in the 1960s. 13:00 (15 mins) Alissa Klots, University of Pittsburgh The holistic approach to male homosexuality under Brezhnev: new evidence 13:15 (15 mins) Irina Roldugina, University of Pittsburgh |
East-Central Europe after 1968 James Watt South Stephenson Room Normalization from Below: A Czecho-Slovak Comparison, 1968-69 12:30 (15 mins) James Krapfl, McGill University Future Perfect: The Strange Case of East Germany’s “Developed Social System of Socialism,” 1968-1971 12:45 (15 mins) Alexander Petrusek, Berlin Program/Free University Berlin Organisational ‘Heroes’ and ‘Anti-Heroes’ in State-Owned Enterprises in Czechoslovakia 13:00 (15 mins) Anna Soulsby, Nottingham University Business School Religion on the Margins: Roma People’s Religious Practice during the Communist Rule in Romania 13:15 (15 mins) Manuela Marin, Lucian Blaga University |
Changing Perceptions in EU-EEU Relations: A Driver for Changing Foreign and Defence Policy James Watt South Room 355 “Zeitenwende”: Sudden Change or Tipping Point of a Long-term Trend of Changing Perceptions? 12:30 (15 mins) Julian Plottka, University of Passau Florence Ertel, University of Passau EU-EEU Relations and the Ukraine War – Political Risks, Changing Perceptions, and Management Responses of MNEs 12:45 (15 mins) Hannes Meissner, University of Applied Sciences BFI Vienna Normative power as a Geostrategic Challenge 13:00 (15 mins) Daniel Göler, University of Passau |
Conservativism, religion, and war in Putin's Russia East Quad Lecture Theatre Traditional values and family policy as sources of contention in church state relations in Russia 12:30 (15 mins) Pål Kolstø, University of Oslo The Concept of a “Just War” in the Russian Political Mainstream since 2014 12:45 (15 mins) Mikhail Suslov, University of Copenhagen Ecclesiastical Populism in Contemporary Russia: "the People" in the Moscow Patriarchate’s Political Discourse 13:00 (15 mins) Bojidar Kolov, University of Oslo Russia’s new illiberal conservatism 13:15 (15 mins) Katharina Bluhm, Freie Universität Berlin |
Energy politics and policy Humanities Lecture Theatre 255 Discussing Japan’s Energy Import Diversification: Can the Russia-Ukraine War be a Catalyst for Change? 12:30 (15 mins) Kazuto Matsuda, Gulf Studies Center, Qatar University India-Russia nuclear energy cooperation: Kudankulam Nuclear Power Plant 1 & 2 12:45 (15 mins) Pallavi Pal, Tampere University Offshore energy development in the Baltic Sea Region: the geopolitics of transnational renewable infrastructures 13:00 (15 mins) Mary Keogh, IFZO, University of Greifswald Russian energy power in Europe and war: positioning, preparing? 13:15 (15 mins) Ingerid Opdahl, Norwegian Institute for Defence Studies, NDUC |
12:30 | Authors Meet Critics: "Creolizing the Modern. Transylvania Across Empires" by Anca Parvulescu and Manuela Boatca, Cornell University Press, 2022 12:30 (90 mins) Manuela Boatca, Germany Anca Parvulescu, United States Chair: Alex Drace-Francis, Netherlands Mariya Ivancheva, UK Redi Koobak, UK Giovanni Picker, UK |
Ukrainian domestic politics McIntyre Room 201 Creating Culture of Recilience: Institutional Composition, Political Actors and Civil Society before and during the War in Ukraine 12:30 (15 mins) Yuliya Bidenko, Karazin Kharkiv National University Critical youth in uncertain times: Trust, attitudes to democracy and engagement in independent Ukraine 12:45 (15 mins) Cressida Arkwright, University of Manchester The resilience of local elites during Russian invasion: a side effect of institutional decentralization in Ukraine? 13:00 (15 mins) Oleksiy Bondarenko, University of Warwick Will the multiple political transformations of Ukrainian society following the full-scale Russian invasion of February 2022 help or hinder reform of Ukraine’s governance institutions, post-war? 13:15 (15 mins) David Dalton, UCL SSEES |
Eastern European Processes of Remembering Through Film: Documenting the Past, Archiving the Future McIntyre Room 208 Archiving the “Invisible”: (Dis)Remembering Hungarian Secret Police Through Film 12:30 (15 mins) Lucy Szemetova, University of St Andrews Filming Utopia: Soviet Ukrainian Atomohrads Before Chornobyl Accident 12:45 (15 mins) Stanislav Menzelevskyi, Indiana University Symbolic responsibility: Holocaust Memory and Radu Jude’s Archival Films 13:00 (15 mins) Diana Popa, Tallinn University |
Printing and Printmaking in Ukraine: Art Traditions and National Identities Fore Hall Printmaking at the Kyiv-Pechersk Lavra in the Early Modern Period 12:30 (15 mins) Alice Sullivan, Tufts University From Art Nouveau to Imaging a Nation: Heorhiy Narbut as Arts and Crafts Designer 12:45 (15 mins) Louise Hardiman, - Ornamental Constructivism: Elements of Ukrainian Folk Art in the Avant-Garde Experiments of Vasyl Yermilov 13:00 (15 mins) Katia Denysova, The Courtauld Institute of Art Intermedial Innovations: The Panfuturists' Book Experiment 13:15 (15 mins) Lauren Warner-Treloar, Kingston University |
Between Aesthetics and Politics: Reconfiguring Myth and Narrative in Contemporary Russian Culture. James Watt South Room 375 From Kandagar to Donbass - Svoikh ne brosayem! The Evolution of Afghan Myth through the Prism of Post-Soviet film, literature and popular culture. 12:30 (15 mins) Marina Aptekman, Tufts University Russian Writers as Public Intellectuals: Liudmila Ulitskaya and Boris Akunin. 12:45 (15 mins) Alexandra Smith, University of Edinburgh State supervision in the field of education in the Russian Empire: reception of the European experience 13:00 (15 mins) Mykhailo Honchar, Kherson Academy of Continuing Education Tatyana Tolstaya in the 2000s: from Soviet Nostalgia to Pandemic Baking 13:15 (15 mins) Mikhail Vodopyanov, University of St Andrews |
12:30 | Representing Poles and Jews in Theatre, Literature and Language Gilbert Scott Room 356 Ghosts, Memories, and Mnemonics: The Theatre of Jewish Absence in Poland 12:30 (20 mins) Rachel Moss, Boston University 'Her long blanks and darknesses of abstraction were Polish': Faith and faithlessness in DH Lawrence's depictions of Poles 12:50 (20 mins) Juliette Bretan, University of Cambridge The Polish language in the UK – prospects and challenges. 13:10 (20 mins) Edyta Nowosielska, University of Cambridge |
From communism to post-communism: Romanian paradoxes Gilbert Scott Room 253 From one dictatorship to another: Communist Romania and the Chilean refugees crisis 12:30 (20 mins) Mioara Anton, 'N. Iorga' Institute of History, Romanian Academy Medical Knowledge, Nutrition and Social Change: An Inquiry into the Politics of Life in Late Socialist Romania 12:50 (20 mins) Mara Marginean, Romanian Academy, Cluj branch Moving from Global North to Global South. Romania as Initiator and Beneficiary of Humanitarian Aid (1970-2007) 13:10 (20 mins) Luciana Jinga, IICCMER Romania in post-communism: populism, nationalism and nostalgia 13:30 (20 mins) Daniel Șandru, Institutul de Investigare a Crimelor Comunismului și Memoria Exilului Românesc |
Agencies of/for Democracy Gilbert Scott Room 250 “Why wave the flag?”: (In)visible queer activism in authoritarian Kazakhstan and Russia 12:30 (15 mins) Mariya Levitanus, The University of Edinburgh Stealth Resistance vs Street Protests: The Anti-war Grass-roots Movement in Russia 12:45 (15 mins) Irina Olimpieva, CISRus Talaka or subbotnik: traditional forms of civic engagement in Belarus 13:00 (15 mins) Paula Borowska, University College London Educational Support to Ukrainian Youth in Kazakhstan 2022 13:15 (15 mins) Zhamilya Utarbayeva, KIMEP University |
Christian Churches and identity-building in contemporary Belarus James Watt South Room 361 Churches in the 2020 Elections and Anti-War Protests in Belarus: Raising Voices in the Time of Repression and Turmoil 12:30 (20 mins) Nikolay Zakharov, Södertörn University Failure of the "National Church": the Fate of Greek Catholics in independent Belarus 12:50 (20 mins) Aliaksei Lastouski, European Humanities University Identity and Policy Issues in the Context of the Internal Discussions in the Belarusian Orthodox Church 13:10 (20 mins) Sergei Mudrov, Institute of Slavic Studies of the Polish Academy of Sciences |
Colonial Anxieties, Corruption Scandals and Xenophobia in Nineteenth-Century Infrastructure Development in Romania Melville Room ‘Free from ice, free from Europe’. Romania’s anxieties and a national port in Southern Bessarabia (1860s–1870s) 12:30 (15 mins) Constantin Ardeleanu, New Europe College, Bucharest “The mission to connect the East with the West”. Railroad construction projects and controversies (1850s-1860s) 12:45 (15 mins) Sylvia Marton, New Europe College, Bucharest Antisemitism at the Intersection of Corruption and Colonialism: Continuities of Nineteenth-Century Political Rhetoric in Interwar Romania 13:00 (15 mins) Raul Carstocea, New Europe College, Bucharest, Romania The Fantasy of “Jewish Colonialism”: Romania, 1860-1900 13:15 (15 mins) Andrei Dan Sorescu, New Europe College Institute of Advance Studies |
12:30 | Class, Gender and Protest Turnbull Room Gendered Work and Socialist Pasts: Memories and Experiences of Women Repatriates in Germany 12:30 (15 mins) Alina Jašina-Schäfer, BKGE New perspective on elite change and elite (re)production after 1989 in Poland. Insights from a study of members of governments. 12:45 (15 mins) Andrzej Turkowski, University of Warsaw |
Music and Memory Main Building Room 132 Michel Dimitry Calvocoressi’s Activities to Promote Modest Musorgsky’s Legacy in its Authentic Form 12:30 (15 mins) Vasilisa Aleksandrova Viktor Tsoi, myth, and memory: The making of an underground hero 12:45 (15 mins) Caroline Ridler, University of Nottingham The Acceptance of Bulgarian Voices in Japanese Music: Kenji Kawai’s Music for Science Fiction Films 13:00 (15 mins) Kieko Kamitake, Japan Society for the Promotion of Science |
Translation and Translingualism Main Building Room 134 Russian Literature Through the English Lens 12:30 (15 mins) Gaëtan Regniers, Ghent University “Poetry vs Politics: Precarious Loyalties. Natalya Gorbanevskaya translating Czesław Miłosz from the Polish.” 12:45 (15 mins) Zakhar Ishov, University of Kansas Mikhail Zenkevich, Translator of British Authors. 13:00 (15 mins) Svetlana Cheloukhina, Queens College, CUNY (Mis)Translating Deceit: Disinformation as a Translingual, Discursive Dynamic 13:15 (15 mins) Stephen Hutchings, University of Manchester |
Church, religion and state before 1914 Gilbert Scott Room 251 “Land of [Caucasian] Albanians” and Albanian church in the Albanian narratives 12:30 (15 mins) Kamala Imranli-Lowe, University of Oxford Science and Religion: Russian Sophiology as a New Cosmology 12:45 (15 mins) Walter Sisto, D'Youville University |
Creative use of Language Robing Room Humour in contemporary cross-media material from Ukraine 12:30 (15 mins) Khrystyna Monastyrska, Aarhus University The Stylistics of Horror in Gogol's Early Ukrainian Stories 12:45 (15 mins) Antonia Pintaric, University of Zadar Лингвистический портрет глагола « дышать » : семантика и синтаксис. 13:00 (15 mins) Irina Thomieres, University of la Sorbonne Subverting meaning: How Russian trolls attempted to reframe the annexation of Crimea through their use of language 13:15 (15 mins) Maksim Markelov, University of Manchester |
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14:30 | Pluralism, Resilience and Societal Survival: Ukraine under Zelensky Bute Hall Resilience and Cohesion in the Zelensky Team 14:30 (15 mins) Geir Flikke, University of Oslo Politico-Military Cohesion and Resilience in Ukraine – the Effects of War 14:45 (15 mins) Tor Bukkvoll, Norwegian Defence Research Establishment Unity on the Paths Forward? Continuity and Divergence among Ukrainian Attitudes on Post-War Priorities 15:00 (15 mins) Anna Chebotarova, University of Oslo, ILOS Cynthia Buckley, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign |
Departure during the War: Migration from Russia in 2022 James Watt South Stephenson Room Activism in Emigration: Emotional Experience and Collective Action 14:30 (15 mins) Egor Sokolov, University of Oxford Emergency migration from Russia to no-visa countries in March-April 2022: a qualitative study based on the interviews with remotely working professionals 14:45 (15 mins) Daria Kurikhina, Freie Universität Berlin Solidarity Between New Russian Migrants: Evidence from a Conjoint Experiment 15:00 (15 mins) Emil Kamalov, European University Institute |
(In)visible hierarchies of Soviet and Russia's post-Soviet colonial modernities: Gendered and centre-periphery dynamics James Watt South Room 355 Academic Hierarchies and Public Intellectuals: The Role of Women in Soviet and Post-Soviet Philosophy 14:30 (15 mins) Tatiana Levina, Kulturwissenschaftliches Institut Essen, KWI Soviet design beyond Moscow: The professional role of women in the system of regional branches of the VNIITE (1960-80s) 14:45 (15 mins) Alyona Sokolnikova, Independent scholar Women in public administration and gendered institutional logics in Russia 15:00 (15 mins) Valeriya Utkina, Aleksanteri Institute, University of Helsinki |
Under Pressure? Nationality, Ideology and Borders in Soviet Political History and Russian Politics East Quad Lecture Theatre ‘Suslov’s 1970s: Detente or Anti-Imperialism? The Last Hurrah of Mikhail Suslov’ 14:30 (20 mins) Alex Marshall, Glasgow University Beria vs. Khrushchev: The Power Struggle over Nationality Policy and the Case of Latvia 14:50 (20 mins) Michael Loader, University of Glasgow The Soviet and post-Soviet borders and symbolic geography of Russian nationalism 15:10 (20 mins) Alexander Titov, Queen's University Belfast |
The Baltic in world politics from the Early Modern to the present Humanities Lecture Theatre 255 A Fortress Built on Sand: The Duchy of Courland's Engagement with Africa in the Seventeenth Century 14:30 (20 mins) John Freeman, University of Cambridge Commerce, neutrality and blockade: lessons from Britain’s relationship with the Baltic Sea Region, 1766-1815 14:50 (20 mins) Hugo Bromley, Centre for Geopolitics, University of Cambridge Pouring Swiss wine into an old Russian bottle? The Vilnius conflict in the League of Nations, 1920-1922 15:10 (20 mins) Donatas Kupciunas, University of Cambridge “Geopolitics of Sympathy”: George F. Kennan and NATO Enlargement 15:30 (15 mins) Kaarel Piirimae, University of Helsinki |
14:30 | Ukrainian Literature and Culture Main Building Room 466 Sculpting in Time and Sound: Time, Memory, and Motion in the late-Socialist Era 14:30 (15 mins) Richard Gillies, University of Glasgow Sick of War: Epidemic Narratives in Contemporary Ukrainian Literature 14:45 (15 mins) Dmytro Yesypenko, University of Alberta Lesya Ukrainka and the Medical Humanities 15:00 (15 mins) Melissa Miller, Colby College Ukraine’s early 20th century urban literature 15:15 (15 mins) Uilleam Blacker, UCL |
Russian Poets in Dialogue McIntyre Room 201 Ida Nappelbaum’s poetic dialogue with Nikolai Gumilev 14:30 (15 mins) Dave Weller, University of Exeter Antiworlds: Voznesensky's dialogue with Western Poets 14:45 (15 mins) Emily Lygo, University of Exeter Escaping Solitude: Twentieth-Century Russian Poets Speaking to Absent Friends 15:00 (15 mins) Katharine Hodgson, University of Exeter Where the Good Begins: A Study of the Arkadii Dragomoshchenko Prize 15:15 (15 mins) Yoonmin Kim, Yale University |
Production of strategic narratives and audience perception McIntyre Room 208 Conflict narratives, emotionality, and colloquialism in the public performance and discourse of populist leader George Simion 14:30 (15 mins) Andreea Mogos, Babes-Bolyai University Orthodoxy 2.0: Explaining the Online Activity of Religious Bloggers 14:45 (15 mins) Dragos Samsudean, Babeș-Bolyai University Remembering the 1993 'Black October' in Russian Documentaries: Politicisation of the Silenced? 15:00 (15 mins) Roberto Rabbia, King's College London The reception of Russia’s strategic narratives among Russophone youth in Latvia 15:15 (15 mins) Emma Rönngren, IRES, Uppsala University What some will do, others will see: production and perceptions of Russian TV documentaries in 2012-2018. 15:30 (15 mins) Anastasia Kriachko Roeren, University of Oslo |
Climate Adaptation and Knowledge in the Russian Arctic Fore Hall Companies, climate adaptation and knowledge in the Russian Arctic 14:30 (15 mins) Arild Moe, Fridtjof Nansen Institute Official knowledge - Russia’s expanding adaptation agenda and its limitations 14:45 (15 mins) Erdem Lamazhapov, Fridtjof Nansen Institute Societal knowledge - perceptions on origins and impacts of climate change in Murmansk 15:00 (15 mins) Anna Korppoo, Fridtjof Nansen Institute The Uncertain Future of Arctic science - Russian scientific participation in the Arctic Council 15:15 (15 mins) Serafima Andreeva, Fridtjof Nansen Institute |
Russian foreign policy – concepts and ideas James Watt South Room 375 “United Russia”: Vladimir Putin’s Securitisation of the Threat to Russia’s Territorial Integrity in Domestic and Foreign Policy 14:30 (15 mins) Vassily Klimentov, European University Institute A fragmented state? The patron-client networks and the role of domestic economic actors in Russia's foreign policy 14:45 (15 mins) Marcin Kaczmarski, University of Glasgow, CEES Information and Culture as national security policy: evolutions in the rhetoric and reality of Russian foreign policy under Putin 15:00 (15 mins) Precious Chatterje-Doody, The Open University The Impact of Neo-Eurasianism on Russia’s Foreign Policy 14:30 (15 mins) Joachim Diec, Uniwersytet Jagielloński/Jagiellonian University NIP 6750002236 |
14:30 | “East of the West, West of the East”: Narrating Identity and Difference in Modern and Contemporary Polish Prose Gilbert Scott Room 356 The Accident of Presence: Zbigniew Herbert’s Polish Traveller in Western Europe 14:30 (15 mins) Marianna Leszczyk, University of Oxford Prismatic Emigration in Stefan Themerson and Maria Kuncewicz 14:45 (15 mins) Ola Sidorkiewicz, University of Oxford Reimagining the Past Through Literature: Narratorial Creativity and Story-Building in Olga Tokarczuk’s “Dom dzienny, dom nocny” and Artur Daniel Liskowacki’s “Eine kleine” 15:00 (15 mins) Olga Grochowska, University of Oxford |
Investigating "National Form" in Early Soviet Culture, 1917-1953 Gilbert Scott Room 253 Redefining Ukrainian National Form after the Soviet Annexation of Western Ukraine, 1939-1941 14:30 (15 mins) Stefan Lacny, MMLL Faculty, University of Cambridge Oil and Wool: Handicrafts and “Nationalist in Form, Socialist in Content” in Early Soviet Culture, 1921-1953 14:45 (15 mins) Sohee Ryuk, Columbia University Lessons in Revolution on the Western Border: Uprisings in Ukraine and Belarus in 1920s-1930s Soviet Film 15:00 (15 mins) Pavel Stepanov, University of Cambridge, MMLL Constructing National Art of Uzbekistan in 1920-1930 in the Context of the National Policy 15:15 (15 mins) Alexandra Alexandrova |
Family, the Life Course and Social Change Gilbert Scott Room 250 Children and Childhood spaces during Transformation period in Lithuania 14:30 (15 mins) Goda Damaseviciute, Vilnius university Family Narratives on Unfulfilled Migration Intentions: Insights from the Post-Communist Context 14:45 (15 mins) Zuzanna Brunarska, Centre of Migration Research, University of Warsaw Life scenarios of the 1990-2000 cohorts during the Covid-19 pandemic: the case of Lithuaniastract 15:00 (15 mins) Laima Zilinskiene, Vilnius University The parental satisfaction with inclusive education for SEN children in Armenia, Belarus, Georgia, Russia and Ukraine 15:15 (15 mins) Nikita Bolshakov The transition to adulthood in the context of historical transformations: a case of Lithuania 15:30 (15 mins) Sigita Kraniauskiene, Klaipeda University |
Colonial Efforts and the Habsburg Monarchy: Hungarian Perspectives from the Balkans (1867-1918) James Watt South Room 361 Bosnia-Herzegovina: The Habsburg Colony (1878-1918) 14:30 (15 mins) Krisztián Csaplár-Degovics, Research Centre for the Humanities Bureaucracy as a Tool of Colonization: The Case of Bosnia-Herzegovina under Habsburg Rule (1878-1918) 14:45 (15 mins) Matyas Erdelyi, University of Vienna From Soft Imperialism to Colonization: Hungary in the Balkans (1867-1914) 15:00 (15 mins) Gabor Demeter, Research Centre for the Humanities, HAS |
Future Spaces: Tourism, Heritage and Architecture Melville Room Classical architecture in Astana: “out of reach” or “neocolonial”? 14:30 (15 mins) Federico Marcomini, University of Florence, dpt. of Architecture Encountering other pasts in Russian post-imperial tourism 14:45 (15 mins) Alena Pfoser, Loughborough University Investigating Space Heritage for Tourism and Environmental Preservation: A Case Study of Baikonur, Kazakhstan. 15:00 (15 mins) Guillaume Tiberghien, University of Glasgow Projecting the Future: Novel Technologies of Spectacle in Astana, Kazakhstan 15:15 (15 mins) David Gogishvili, University of Lausanne |
14:30 | Ethnography in the Times of Empires: resources and collections 14:30 (90 mins) Ekaterina Rogatchevskaia, UK Chair: John Bates, UK Eleanor Peers, UK Olga Topol, UK Anna Malenova, UK |
Peripheral Histories?: Decolonisation in Eurasian Regions since Spring 2022 14:30 (90 mins) Chair: Hanna Matt, UK Olena Palko, Switzerland Timothy Blauvelt, Georgia Sophie Qiaoyun Peng, UK Maria Chiara Franceschelli, Italy Steve Swerdlow, United States |
Book Discussion: Una Bergmane "Politics of Uncertainty: the United States, the Baltic Question, and the Collapse of the Soviet Union." (OUP, 2023) 14:30 (90 mins) Chair: Una Bergmane, Finland David Smith, UK Mart Kuldkepp, UK Eglė Rindzevičiūtė, UK Diana Kudaibergenova, UK |
Economic development in Central, Eastern and Southeast Europe Gilbert Scott Room 251 Dependency and modernisation theory. Two paradigms of development in Visegrad Group countries 14:30 (15 mins) Filip Leśniewicz, Inalco Impact of service quality on economic development and trade 14:45 (15 mins) Valery Kuzmenok, Individual entrepreneur Public debt expectations: the more you know about public debt, the less optimistic you are 15:00 (15 mins) Andreea Stancea, National School of Political and Administrative St The New Institutional Economics and Belarus 15:15 (15 mins) Kacper Wańczyk, Akademia Leona Koźmińskiego |
Language as Ever-Changing Phenomenon Robing Room Imperative constructions in Russian everyday speech: a corpus-based pragma-semantic analysis. 14:30 (20 mins) Ilenia Del Popolo Marchitto, Tallinn University School of Humanities Migrant families in Estonia: Family language policies, Ideologies and Beliefs 14:50 (20 mins) Anastassia Zabrodskaja, Tallinn University Историческое развитие русских слов на фоне иноземних влияний 15:10 (20 mins) Atmoja Bose, University of Delhi |
14:30 | New Perspectives on Dostoevsky Hunter Hall The “Comedic Coefficient” in Dostoevsky: Tragicomedy in The Idiot 14:30 (15 mins) Alina Wyman, New College of Florida “Imitatio Christi in Dostoevsky’s Demons” 14:45 (15 mins) Katya Jordan, Brigham Young University The Problem of Deification in Crime and Punishment 15:00 (15 mins) Octavian Gabor, Methodist College Dostoevsky's idea of Russianness: a decolonial critique 15:15 (15 mins) Sarah Hudspith, University of Leeds Auditory Autism in Dostoevsky’s Underground Man 15:30 (15 mins) Daniel Schümann, University of Cologne |
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16:15 | Russia's war on Ukraine (1) Bute Hall Modification of the Ukrainians’ image in Polish-language social media after February 24, 2022 16:15 (15 mins) Bartosz Hordecki, Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań Andrzej Stelmach, Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznan Personal epistemology on the conflict in Eastern Ukraine in 2021: constructing and deconstructing knowledge 16:30 (15 mins) Evija Djatkovica, Riga Stradins University Where are Russia's soldiers' mothers now? 16:45 (15 mins) Jennifer Mathers, Aberystwyth University Why are Russians and Ukrainians willing to fight in war? 17:00 (15 mins) Roman David, Lingnan University |
Studying the Baltic States in Britain: Interdisciplinary Perspectives 16:15 (90 mins) Chair: David Smith, UK Michael Loader, UK Siobhán Hearne, UK Rasa Kamarauskaite, UK John Freeman, UK Dmitrijs Andrejevs, UK |
Developing new forms of collaborations in East-Central Europe James Watt South Room 355 “For Your Freedom and Ours”: Poland’s Solidarność and the British Left, 1980 – 1989 16:15 (15 mins) Tom Palmer, University of Oxford French economic policy in interwar Central and Eastern Europe. A reconsideration of Impérialisme du pauvre in Poland 16:30 (15 mins) Jerzy Łazor, Warsaw School of Economics In Search of the Third Way: The British Left and Yugoslav Self-Management in the 1960s and 1970s 16:45 (15 mins) Vladimir Unkovski-Korica, University of Glasgow The view of Bosnian (Muslim) diaspora magazines on the state of affairs in Yugoslavia from the 1950s and 1960s 17:00 (15 mins) Omer Merzić, Dobra knjiga |
Cold War dinamics, exchanges and mobilities within the Socialist World and beyond East Quad Lecture Theatre Academic Exchanges between Romania, East Germany and West Germany during the Cold War 16:15 (15 mins) Irina Nastasa-Matei, University of Bucharest Cold War on Screen: The Censorship of Foreign Films in Communist Romania 16:30 (15 mins) Alina Popescu, Univeristy of Bucharest In Solidarity: Cross-regional Socialist Artistic Connections between Countries of the “Socialist Second World” 16:45 (15 mins) Caterina Preda, University of Bucharest Solidarity Exhibitions in Socialist Romania 17:00 (15 mins) Irina Carabas, University of Bucharest |
Literary responses to the Russian Revolution, c. 1905-1930s Humanities Lecture Theatre 255 Memory and fact: Revolution in Marc Aldanov’s novels and essays 16:15 (20 mins) Ekaterina Rogatchevskaia, British Library Political violence in Russian literature, 1905-1914 16:35 (20 mins) Ben Phillips, University of Exeter 'We are socialists. The Russian side is our side': G. B. Shaw on the Russian Revolution 16:55 (20 mins) Olga Sobolev, London School of Economics and Political Science |
16:15 | DIY Queers. Self-Made Gender and Sexual Identities in Interwar Poland Main Building Room 466 ‘Never has any “minority” been as oppressed as this one’: Homoerots as Poles in the Empire of the Straight 16:15 (20 mins) Kamil Karczewski, Institute of Historical Research Ambiguous Descent: Bronisława Staszel-Polankowa and the Queering of Highlander Identity 16:35 (20 mins) Katherine Lebow, University of Oxford Fashioning Jewish gay self-identities in interwar Poland 16:55 (20 mins) Piotr Laskowski, University of Warsaw |
Did ‘Western’ academia get the war wrong? Blindspots, learning curves and ethical futures following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine 16:15 (90 mins) Precious Chatterje-Doody, UK Chair: Stephen Hall, UK Maxine David, Netherlands Aglaya Snetkov, UK Natasha Kuhrt, UK Andrew Wilson, UK |
“Sensory Afterlives of the War Violence in (Former) Yugoslavia. Artistic Responses” McIntyre Room 208 Caught in a net of military logic. Adela Jušić`s video artwork Snajperist (The Sniper, 2007) 16:15 (20 mins) Zeljana Tunic, Martin Luther Unversity of Halle-Wittenberg The Memorial Centre “Lipa Remembers”: Metamusealogical strategies in narrating the history 16:35 (20 mins) Nataša Jagdhuhn, KontextSchule 'We might fall through.' Stuck in the Abyss of the Past 16:55 (20 mins) Linda Paganelli, Friedrich-Schiller-Universität |
Agents of Internationalism in Central and Eastern Europe during Late Socialism Fore Hall Arms Dealing in Normalization-era Czechoslovakia in Three Biographies 16:15 (20 mins) Rosamund Johnston, Research Center for the History of Transformations Beyond bilateralism? Economic and technical cooperation in the Non-Aligned Movement 16:35 (20 mins) Anna Calori, University of Vienna Shades of ‘Red’: Solidarity with the Native American Sovereignty Movement in Late Cold War Central Europe 16:55 (20 mins) Gyorgy Toth, University of Stirling |
The European Union – politics, policy, and law James Watt South Room 375 Reassessing Post-Socialist Legal Development: The Politics of Unevenness, Imitation, and Re-Traditionalization 16:15 (15 mins) Cristian Collina, Department of Law University of Turin Securitization of the Neighbourhood: From Discourse Creation to Narrative Contestation on European Neighbourhood Policy: EU Driven Framing Projections on Partner Countries in South and East 16:30 (15 mins) Tamar Gamkrelidze, College of Europe Strategic Sovereignty, Strategic Autonomy, and the EU - Towards Federalization or a Union of States? 16:45 (15 mins) Galina Yakova, Freelance Researcher & Lecturer War in Ukraine and the Death of Normative Power Europe 17:00 (15 mins) Kamil Zwolski, University of Southampton |
16:15 | Revising the Russian Canon Gilbert Scott Room 356 Global Russian Literature in the Time of War: Reformatting the Paradigm 16:15 (15 mins) Roman Katsman, Bar-Ilan University Publications in Russian Literature over 1990-2020: Authors, Topics and Figures 16:30 (15 mins) Angelika Tsivinskaya The history of Russian literature between the Golden and Silver ages: the chrononyms issue 16:45 (15 mins) Anastasia Kozyreva, Inalco Взросление в романах Гайто Газданова «Вечер у Клэр» и «Полёт» 17:00 (15 mins) Maria Turgieva, Sorbonne Université |
Revisiting Room 101: Understanding State Violence in Early Soviet Literature Gilbert Scott Room 253 From 'Chocolate' to 'Darkness at Noon': Recognizing the Soviet Carceral System in Inter-War Europe 16:15 (15 mins) Muireann Maguire, University of Exeter Marx’s White Shirt: Vladimir Zazubrin’s The Chip (1923) and the Boundaries of Early Soviet Literature 16:30 (15 mins) James Ryan, Cardiff University Revisiting the Warrior Women of Early Soviet Literature: Gender, Violence, and Revolution 16:45 (15 mins) Lara Green, Erasmus University Sanatoriina Zona as a panopticon of state violence in early Soviet Ukrainian literature 17:00 (15 mins) Olena Palko, University of Basel |
Public Attitudes and Collective Mobilisation Gilbert Scott Room 250 Azov and Far-Right Parties in Ukraine 16:15 (15 mins) Lenka Bustikova Siroky, University of Oxford Should all Russians be blamed for Russia’s war in Ukraine? Public opinion in Norway on relations with Russia and Russians 16:30 (15 mins) Aadne Aasland, NIBR, Oslo Metropolitan University Negationism of international crimes. Official Russian response to reports of war crimes committed by the Russian army or occupation authorities in Ukraine. 16:45 (15 mins) Lukasz Adamski, Mieroszewski Centre |
Empires' Multiple Peripheries James Watt South Room 361 "The end of bread, the beginning of stone": environment, tourism and the Czech reconquest of the Western Carpathians, 1867-1918 16:15 (15 mins) Emma Nabi-Bourgois, University of Oxford “It’s better to go to Siberia”: the exile of the Finns from the Grand Duchy of Finland 16:30 (15 mins) Larisa Kangaspuro, University of Helsinki Matter of Taste: On Coloniality of Dietary Discourses in the 18th century Ethnographic Texts from Siberia 16:45 (15 mins) Olga Trufanova, Lüdwig-Maximilians-Universität München The Imperial Policy on the Native Language Education in Private Schools of the Polish and Baltic Provinces at the Beginning of the Twentieth Century 17:00 (15 mins) Yoko Aoshima, Hokkaido University |
The urgency of contemporary post-Soviet popular music: Politics and aesthetics 16:15 (90 mins) Chair: David-Emil Wickström, Germany Ann Werner, Sweden Elizaveta Gaufman, Netherlands Ekaterina Ganskaya, Italy Ondrej Daniel, Czech Republic |
16:15 | Alternative scenarios for a future Russia across 1917 Turnbull Room Searching for a New Identity? Russian Radical Right in Exile, 1918-1945. 16:15 (20 mins) Zbynek Vydra, University of Pardubice Germany's Attempts at Organising an Uprising of Oppressed Peoples of Russia in 1915-1916 16:35 (20 mins) Mart Kuldkepp, UCL (University College London) Laughing at “the Enemies of the People:” Narratives of Denunciation in Krokodil (1928-1929) 16:55 (15 mins) Alina Amvrosova, Boston University |
Crime Fiction and Prison Culture Main Building Room 132 A Wildcat of Language: Yelena Moskovich's Crime Fiction 16:15 (15 mins) Emma Crowley , University of Bristol Criminal Matters: Exploring Human Remains in Late Imperial Russian Detective Fiction 16:30 (15 mins) Grace Docherty, Russian Department, University of St Andrews Female Crime Writers in Late Imperial Russia: The Cases of Aleksandra Sokolova and Kapitolina Nazar’eva 16:45 (15 mins) Claire Whitehead, University of St Andrews What’s in a Word?: Russian Prison Slang Dictionaries, an Overview 17:00 (15 mins) Alex Maxwell, University of Virginia |
From Bamlag to Ukraine: Intersections of Class, Ethnicity, and Nationality in the Context of Punishment, 1930S - 2023. Main Building Room 134 Ghosts of the Gulag: Negotiating Specters of the Penal Past in Northern Russia 16:15 (15 mins) Gavin Slade, Nazarbayev University Forced-labour Camp as a Site of the Nation Building? Bamlag’s Cultural-Education Department and Ethnic Minority Prisoners, 1930-1934. 16:30 (15 mins) Mikhail Nakonechnyi, University of Helsinki Governance, ethnicity, and language in Baltic prisons. 16:45 (15 mins) Olga Zeveleva, University of Helsinki Prisons, Patriotism and State formation in the Russo-Ukrainian war. 17:00 (15 mins) Judith Pallot, Christ Church |
Economic development in Russia Gilbert Scott Room 251 Russian SOEs abroad after February 2022 – sanction evasion strategies 16:15 (30 mins) Karel Svoboda, Charles University The rentier relationship in Russia: Historical evidence and recent developments of resource and administrative rents in state capitalism 16:45 (30 mins) Cornelia Sahling The Russian Invasion of Ukraine and the Interests of the GCC Hydrocarbon Producers 17:15 (30 mins) Nikolay Kozhanov, Qatar University |
Language Pedagogy and Linguistics Robing Room Teaching winged phrases from Soviet films in Russian-as-a-foreign-language classroom: challenges and opportunities 16:15 (20 mins) Natallia Kabiak, The University of Melbourne The Corpus-Based Russian Economics Word List: Technical Vocabulary in Languages for Special Purposes 16:15 (20 mins) Mikhail Kamrotov Ekaterina Talalakina, Tampere University The Role of Gender in the Acquisition of Russian Case 16:55 (20 mins) Natalia V. Parker, University College London |
16:15 | Book Discussion: Alex Drace-Francis, The Making of Mamaliga (Central European University Press, 2022) 16:15 (90 mins) Cathie Carmichael, UK Alex Drace-Francis, Netherlands Constantin Ardeleanu, Romania |
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