| Bute Hall | James Watt South Stephenson Room | James Watt South Room 355 | East Quad Lecture Theatre | Senate Room |
| Main Building Room 466 | McIntyre Room 201 | McIntyre Room 208 | Fore Hall | James Watt South Room 375 |
| Gilbert Scott Room 356 | Gilbert Scott Room 253 | Gilbert Scott Room 250 | James Watt South Room 361 | Melville Room |
| Turnbull Room | Main Building Room 132 | Main Building Room 134 | Gilbert Scott Room 251 | Robing Room | DAY 3 | ||||||||
09:00 | Urban Connections: Territorial Imaginations in Central Asia and Azerbaijan James Watt South Stephenson Room Between politics and poetics of social change in contemporary Baku 09:00 (15 mins) Cristina Boboc, Ghent University Building Authority: Bishkek in the 1920s 09:15 (15 mins) Alun Thomas, Staffordshire University Central Asian Migratory Imaginations during Russia's war on Ukraine 09:30 (15 mins) Joni Virkkunen, University of Eastern Finland Challenging a Socialist Way of Life: Comrades’ Courts and Volunteers’ Militias in 1960s Soviet Tashkent 09:45 (15 mins) Zayra Badillo Castro, School of Oriental and African Studies, London Remembering Baku’s oil barons 10:00 (15 mins) Leyla Sayfutdinova, University of St Andrews |
Intellectuals as Memory Generators – Forging the Origins of Nations, States, Religions, and People James Watt South Room 355 The millennium of Christianity and the Croatian narrative of the origins 09:00 (15 mins) Agata Domachowska, Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń Illyrian or Pelasgian? – cementing the theory of the Albanians’ origin in communist Albania and Kosovo. 09:15 (15 mins) Rigels Halili, University of Warsaw The (post)Soviet anniversaries regarding the legacy of Kievan Rus’. Change, continuity, and the influence of the intellectuals 09:30 (15 mins) Łukasz Gemziak, Nicolaus Copernicus University What were the origins of the Bulgarian alphabet? Discussions around the 1100th anniversary of the Moravian Mission in socialist Bulgaria 09:45 (15 mins) Ewelina Drzewiecka, Cyrillo-Methodian Research Centre, BAS |
Russian domestic politics – institutions and information East Quad Lecture Theatre Norilsk and Nornickel: Local Government-Business Relations in a Russian Monotown 09:00 (15 mins) Miriam Pollock, University College London Russia’s ontological (in)security: domestic values versus external enemies 09:15 (15 mins) Federica Prina, University of Glasgow War for children: the dynamics of militarism and anti-militarism in Russia 09:30 (15 mins) Kasia Kaczmarska, University of Edinburgh |
New Directions in World War II History Senate Room Fatherland or Motherland? Banat German Rural Ascriptions of National Belonging in the Romanian Banat under the Aegis of National Socialism (1940-1944) 09:00 (15 mins) David Borchin, ULBS - ISCI Jan Patočka, Philosophical Production, and the Freiburg Idyll. 09:15 (15 mins) David Aitken, McGill University The national motor vehicle fleet and the Red Army during the German-Soviet War 1941-1945 09:30 (15 mins) Hugh Davie, University of Wolverhampton War, Fun, and the Yugoslav Partisans 09:45 (15 mins) Iva Jelusic, Christian Michelsen Institute |
09:00 | 'Weapons of the weak': Small acts of resistance during social upheavals Main Building Room 466 "Why do I keep seeing terrible inequality?" Politicisation and invisible dissent of teenage women in the post-war USSR 09:00 (15 mins) Ella Rossman, University College London, School of Slavonic and East European Studies “Always in My Hands…”: Smartphones Use by the Ukrainian Refugees children 09:15 (15 mins) Natalia Khvorostianov, Ben Gurion University, Negev From Infrapolitical Resistance to Political Rebellion: Trajectories of Dissent and Dynamics of Contention in Montenegro's Antibureaucratic Revolution 09:30 (15 mins) Bojan Baca, University of Gothenburg From small acts of defiance to organised protests: older people exercising social, economic and political citizenship Belarus 09:45 (15 mins) Anna Shadrina, UCL SSEES |
Socialist and Communist Experiences of Women's Liberation in the West and the East, 1907-1930 McIntyre Room 201 A Liberal Feminist in an Early Soviet Working-Class Neighborhood: Medical Policing, Expertise and Gender Across the 1917 Revolutionary Divide 09:00 (15 mins) Pavel Vasilyev The Zhenotdel and veiled women in 1920s Uzbekistan. 09:15 (15 mins) Anne McShane Women and Men within the Communist International: the Complex experiences of Communist Women in the East and the West, 1920-1924. 09:30 (15 mins) Daria Dyakonova, International University in Geneva |
Russia’s Natural Environment: Epistemologies and Materialities McIntyre Room 208 Amber crafting in Russia: informality, precarity, and temporality 09:00 (15 mins) Daria Kurikhina, Freie Universität Berlin Contentious Politics in Putin's Russia: Environmental Struggles as a Key Platform and the Case of Shies 09:15 (15 mins) Maria Chiara Franceschelli, Scuola Normale Superiore Vulnerability: the half-baked concept in Russia’s climate change discourse. A case study in Moscow, Russia 09:30 (15 mins) Aliaksandr Ilyukevich, King's College London |
The (neo)imperial imaginaries of nature and environment in contemporary Russian media Fore Hall Ecocritical Geopolitics in the Time of War: Chornobyl/Chernobyl as a Post-Humanist Site 09:00 (20 mins) Mika Perkiömäki, University of Helsinki / Tampere University Snow Maidens and Cold Bodies in Sakha Horror 09:20 (20 mins) Natalya Khokholova, Kyrgyz Aviation Institute The (Neo-)Imperial Imaginary of the Arctic in Recent Russian Film 09:40 (20 mins) Adelaide McGinity-Peebles, University of Nottingham |
Reflections of Affective Experience in Latvian Poetry and Life Writing James Watt South Room 375 Affect and Time in Inara Verzemnieks’ Memoir "Among the Living and the Dead" 09:00 (20 mins) Artis Ostups, Institute of Literature, Folklore and Art of the University of Latvia Accumulating Negative Affects: The Diaries of the Soviet Latvian Film Director Gunārs Piesis 09:20 (20 mins) Janis Ozolins, Art Academy of Latvia Ugly Feelings of the Soviet Latvian Underground Queer Poet 09:40 (20 mins) Karlis Verdins, University of Latvia |
09:00 | Queer Cross-Cultural Exchanges in Russian Film, Literature, and Law Gilbert Scott Room 356 1990s Lesbian Journals and Ancient Greece: Seeking a Russian Queer Aesthetic 09:00 (15 mins) Georgina Barker, UCL a cinematic experiment in russian homonationalism: desiring the ‘non-russian’ masculine body in Olga Stolpovskaya’s You I Love 09:15 (15 mins) Misha Yakovlev, Film and Television, University of Warwick A Crisis of Identity: The Bisexual Russian-Ukrainian-Romany Throuple in Faina Grimberg’s Novella Mavka (2001) 09:30 (15 mins) Charlotte Dowling, University of Oxford How “European” Were Imperial Russian Laws Against Homosexuality? 09:45 (15 mins) Nick Mayhew, University of Glasgow |
The First World War in the Caucasus and Central Asia Gilbert Scott Room 253 Displacement, Refugees, and Russian Imperial Policies during the First World War in the Caucasus 09:00 (20 mins) Asya Darbinyan, Clark University Refugee Relief and Displacement in Turkestan During the First World War 09:20 (20 mins) Hanna Matt, University of Manchester What the papers said – Turkestan newspapers in the First World War years 09:40 (20 mins) Roman Osharov, University of Oxford |
Security through militarized patriotism. Militarizing processes in Central Eastern European and post-Soviet states and their effects on civil society Gilbert Scott Room 250 Assembling the war: Everyday practices of militarization before the full-scale invasion of Ukraine 09:00 (15 mins) Elizaveta Gaufman, University of Groningen Living on a Mental Frontline. The Use of War Veterans in Russian Patriotic Education 09:15 (15 mins) Elena Racheva, University of Oxford, Department of Sociology The history of battles and victories: approaching the history of Russia thought the Russian National Atlas (2004-2008). 09:30 (15 mins) Sofya Gavrilova, Leibniz Institute for Regional Geography |
Politics of Soviet and Post-Soviet Literary Self-Fashioning James Watt South Room 361 Evgenii Evtushenko as the Soviet Bard of Cuba 09:00 (30 mins) Benjamin Musachio, Princeton University Greek literature in Mariupol in the 1930s? 09:30 (30 mins) Panayiotis Xenophontos, University of Oxford 'The Lake School' in Moscow of the 1930s: Self-fashioning and Intellectual Autonomy at IFLI (1931-1941) 10:00 (30 mins) Peter Budrin , Queen Mary University of London Touring Writers and Performed Literary Personalities 10:30 (30 mins) Angelos Theocharis, Durham University |
Russian domestic politics – ideas, ideology, and propaganda Melville Room A Historical Catechism of the Putin Era: The Official Version of Russia’s History and Its Political Significance 09:00 (15 mins) Marcin Skladanowski, The John Paul II Catholic University of Lublin NIP 712-016-10-05 Patriotism as Populism: Memory and Identity in (non)contemporary Russia 09:15 (15 mins) Victor Apryshchenko, Bard College The Dark Carnival: Bakhtin, Schmitt and Russia's War against Ukraine. 09:30 (15 mins) David Lewis, University of Exeter Organizations with foreign agent status in Russia: mechanisms of repression and practice of activity (empirical research 2019-2021) 09:45 (15 mins) Magdalena Lachowicz, Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznan |
09:00 | Russian migrants' anti-war activism Turnbull Room Choosing Between Prison or Exile: Russian Activists Abroad after the 2022 Invasion of Ukraine 09:00 (15 mins) Elizabeth Plantan, Stetson University Democracy in Exile? Trajectories of Russian Anti-War Migrants in Eurasia 09:15 (15 mins) Margarita Zavadskaya, Finnish Institute of International Affairs (FIIA) Pro-democracy activism by Russian migrants in Germany and Georgia in the context of the Russian war against Ukraine 09:00 (15 mins) Tatiana Golova, Centre for East European and International Studies (ZOiS) Tsypylma Darieva, ZOiS, Centre for East European and international studies |
Discussing Pål Kolstø's new book Heretical Orthodoxy: Lev Tolstoi and the Russian Orthodox Church (Cambridge University Press 2022)
09:00 (90 mins) Chair: Pål Kolstø, Norway Ulrich Schmid, Switzerland Ruth Coates, UK Vera Tolz-Zilitinkevic, UK |
Central European Literatures and Cultures Main Building Room 134 Peripheral Enlightenment: Reading the first Slovak novel as a world classic 09:00 (15 mins) Dobrota Pucherova, Inst. of World Lit., Slovak Academy of Sciences Multilingual Pest-Buda: Hungarians, Serbs and Germans in literature in 1800 09:15 (15 mins) Zsuzsanna Varga, Editor, Slavonica Between Self-Aggrandizement and Self-Deprecation: Czech and Hungarian Fin de Siècle Orientalisms in Comparative Perspective 09:30 (15 mins) Dmitrii Kuvshinov |
Russia’s Development from Electoral to Closed Authoritarianism: Implications for Research 09:00 (90 mins) Chair: Matthew Blackburn, Poland Bo Petersson, Sweden Geir Flikke, Norway Derek Stanford Hutcheson, Sweden Karen-Anna Eggen, Norway |
The boundaries of Slavonic lexicography: new approaches to words, phrases and collocations Robing Room Multilingual dictionary of phraseme construcions and its didactic potential 09:00 (15 mins) Anna Pavlova, University Mainz Polish ethnolinguistic lexicography: problems and methods 09:15 (15 mins) Oleksiy Yudin, Ghent University Какие словари нужны изучающим славянские языки? Формат и перспективы двуязычного тематического словаря «Russian for All Occasions» 09:30 (15 mins) Shamil Khairov, University of Glasgow Русский язык в международной базе данных англицизмов «GLAD» 09:45 (15 mins) John Dunn, University of Glasgow |
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11:00 | When societies (re-)create: Youth(ful) ideas and nascent politics in the South Caucasus James Watt South Stephenson Room Social media, ‘imaginary collectivity’ and individualities of political activism in Azerbaijan 11:00 (15 mins) Najmin Kamilsoy, Charles University The Shame Movement in the Context of Georgia’s 30 years of Transformation: A Gramscian Analysis of Civil Society 11:15 (15 mins) Nino Khelaia, Georgian Insitute of Public Affairs Bringing the lyrical to the political: The socio-political landscape in the Southern Caucasus through the lens of young people 11:30 (15 mins) Veronika Pfeilschifter, Institute for Caucasus Studies Women’s Movement Perspective in Post-Revolutionary Armenia 11:45 (15 mins) Olga Azatyan, Yerevan State University |
Political parties James Watt South Room 355 Post-Communist Far-Right under Transformation? Romanian and Bulgarian far-right since 2014 11:00 (15 mins) George Kordas, Panteion University of Social and Political Scienc Troublemakers and Game Changers: Political Parties and the Halt of Democratic Backsliding in Bulgaria 11:15 (15 mins) Sergiu Gherghina, University of Glasgow Singling Out the Collective: Collective Leadership, Electoral Performance and Organisational Development in the Cases of Lewica Razem in Poland and Zdruzena Levica in Slovenia 11:30 (15 mins) Petar Bankov, University of Glasgow Understanding political theories and legal doctrines to justify political party prohibition 11:45 (15 mins) Bohdan Bernatskyi, European University Institute |
Researching in the Former Soviet Union. Stories From the Field. 11:00 (90 mins) Chair: Jasmin Dall'Agnola, United States Andrea Peinhopf, UK Ruta Skriptaite, UK Rasa Kamarauskaite, UK Abigail Karas, UK |
Perspectives on Health, the Body and the Mind in the Soviet Union Senate Room ‘The Fullness and Richness of “Man Himself”’: Diversity of the Body in the Stalin Era 11:00 (20 mins) Claire Shaw, University of Warwick Cinema, Psychiatry and the Neurological Gaze in the Early Soviet Union 11:20 (20 mins) Anna Toropova, University of Warwick Swaddled minds: ‘National character’, Soviet babies and authority in ‘The People of Great Russia’ (1949) 11:40 (20 mins) Hannah Proctor, University of Strathclyde |
11:00 | New perspectives on the Russian Civil War Main Building Room 466 Civil War and Gossip. Monument to Judas Iscariot in Sviyazhsk, 1918 11:00 (15 mins) Bartek Gajos, Mieroszewski Centre Demobilization in the Mobilizational State: The End of the Civil War Red Army, 1920-21 11:15 (15 mins) Thomas Stevens, University of Pennsylvania Diverging Paths?: The South Slavic Left and Revolutionary Russia before 1922 11:30 (15 mins) Samuel Foster, University of East Anglia Historical-Revolutionary Museums in Russia: Projects and Implementation before and after 1917 11:45 (15 mins) Nikolay Sarkisyan, University of Oxford |
Conflict, communication, and politics in the Caucasus McIntyre Room 201 Nagorno-Karabakh conflict: failure to understand leading to the failure to resolve 11:00 (15 mins) Murad Muradov, Azerbaijan Investment Holding The Joint Russian-Turkish Monitoring Centre in the framework of Turkey’s security policies in the South Caucasus 11:15 (15 mins) Simona Scotti, Topchubashov Center Towards the Armenian-Azerbaijani peace treaty: undeniably, challenging road ahead 11:30 (15 mins) Gulshan Pashayeva, Center of Analysis of International Relations |
Representation of gender and body in the Soviet culture McIntyre Room 208 Fashioning the Social Role of Soviet Women on Stagnation Screens 11:00 (15 mins) Natasha Vinnikova, University of the Arts London Images of Internationalism: Gender, Ethnicity, and Relationships at University in Vladimir Rogovoi’s Balamut (The Meddler, 1979) 11:15 (15 mins) Serian Carlyle, UCL Nudity in the USSR during the Thaw: the censorship frameworks 11:30 (15 mins) Ekaterina Vikulina Screening East European sexualities. Queer time and space in 'Brothers of the Night' 11:45 (15 mins) Izabella Wodzka, University College London |
Transformations of Muslim Lives in Bulgaria and Yugoslavia Fore Hall Gender Policies Towards Muslim Men in Socialist Yugoslavia and Bulgaria 11:00 (15 mins) Ivan Simic, Charles University Muslim reformism: An unexpected influence on Yugoslav communist gender discourses 11:15 (15 mins) Andreja Mesarič, Faculty of Arts, Charles University Population Politics and Nation-Building: Migrations of Turkish and Muslim Populations from Bulgaria to Turkey (1925-1939) 11:30 (15 mins) Slavka Karakusheva, Independent researcher Socialist Transformation of Muslim Girls Education in Yugoslavia 11:45 (15 mins) Jelena Gajic, Charles University |
Voting and elections James Watt South Room 375 An economic offer they cannot refuse! Economic expectations on incumbent government support in Core and Periphery European Countries 11:00 (15 mins) Andreea Stancea, National School of Political and Administrative St Analysis of the 2020 presidential elections in Belarus: long-term factors, short-term triggers and key enabling mechanisms which have led to post-electoral protests. 11:15 (15 mins) Victoria Leukavets, Stockholm Center for Eastern European Studies Substituting the Opposition Under Electoral Authoritarianism: The Case of the Russian Regional Parliamentary Elections in 2021 11:30 (15 mins) Daniil Romanov, The University of Oxford THREATS AND OPPORTUNITIES IN E-VOTING AND ITS SUITABILITY FOR ELECTION 11:45 (15 mins) Marina Gorbatiuc, The Institute of Legal,Political and Sociological Unity and centering as a democracy-building electoral strategy after the 2022 Hungarian parliamentary election: An intersectional analysis 12:00 (15 mins) John Gould, Colorado College |
11:00 | Post-Soviet and Post-Memory Gilbert Scott Room 356 Open System, Closed Outcome?: Kitchen Debates and the Limits of the Fake in Moscow Artistic Circles, 2012 - 2020. 11:00 (15 mins) Kitty Brandon-James, School of Slavonic and East European Studies, UCL Global Campaigning: The anti-Comics Debate in 1950s Poland 11:15 (15 mins) Ewa Stanczyk, University of Amsterdam The Holocaust’s as Ontological Legacy. Polish Jewish writing of the 21 st century 11:30 (15 mins) Katarzyna Zechenter, UCL SSEES Coping with the Soviet past in Russian graphic novels 11:45 (15 mins) Annamaria Vass, Debreceni Egyetem (Adószám:17782218) |
The Future of Ukrainian Children's Literature 11:00 (90 mins) Chair: Emily Finer, UK Viktoriia Medvied, UK |
Security through militarized patriotism. Militarizing processes in CEE and post-Soviet states and their effects on civil society (II) Gilbert Scott Room 250 How Russian Patriotic Education Was Changed to Support War: Military Masculinity as a Hegemonic Discourse and Practices of Resistance 11:00 (15 mins) Jonna Alava, University of Helsinki Forging Frontline Russians: Militarized Patriotism and Identity Policy in Occupied Ukraine 11:15 (15 mins) Håvard Bækken, Norwegian Institute for Defence Studies (IFS) The power of belonging for (para)military security production in Poland 11:30 (15 mins) Bettina Bruns, Leibniz Institute for Regional Geography |
Imagining the Orient in the Russian Empire and the Soviet Union James Watt South Room 361 Between Imagination and Ethnography: Fokine’s The Polovtsian Dances 11:00 (20 mins) Jordan Lian, University of Cambridge Centre and periphery in the production of knowledge about Central Asia in the Russian Empire 11:20 (20 mins) Roman Osharov, University of Oxford Relics of Orientalism: imperial and anti-imperial museology in early Soviet Tashkent 11:40 (20 mins) Mollie Arbuthnot, Jesus College |
Border in/securities – at the nexus of space and emotions in Central- and Eastern Europe I Melville Room A Un/Bordered Nation: Ukraine’s new “flickering diaspora” and its “long-distance relationship” with the home country 11:00 (15 mins) Valeria Korablyova, Charles University Alter-geopolitics and de-bordering Romania and Poland in the context of the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine 11:15 (15 mins) Kathryn Cassidy, Northumbria University Peripheral geopolitical orientations: Borderland views on geopolitical questions in Georgia and Hungary 11:30 (15 mins) Gela Merabishvili, ELTE (Eotvos Lorand University) Projecting and Experiencing Informational Borders in Eastern Ukraine pre-2022 11:45 (15 mins) Ekaterina Mikhailova, Leibniz Institute for East and Southeast European |
11:00 | Demystifying Open Access 11:00 (90 mins) Chair: Madeleine Markey, UK Stella Rock, UK |
Queer Security and Belonging in Russia and Georgia Main Building Room 132 "I'd Like to Get Beaten Up": Complexities of Living a Secure Queer Life in Georgia 11:00 (15 mins) David Rypel, UCL SSEES “We are still here”: Russian queer parents and migration 11:15 (15 mins) Olga Doletskaya, UCL Bisexual Belonging Online: A Case Study of ‘Bi Life Stories’ on Gay.ru 11:30 (15 mins) Charlotte Dowling, University of Oxford Waiting for the revolution: Russian LGBTQ+ activism and belonging in Georgia 11:45 (15 mins) Talia Kollek, University of Oxford, St Catherine's College |
Social Values and Norms in the Contemporary Russia Main Building Room 134 Growing dependency: changes in public perception of poverty coping strategies in Russia 2011-2021 11:00 (20 mins) Nina Ivashinenko, University of Glasgow Knowledge production about Russia: changes in the center-periphery relations, 1990-2020 11:20 (20 mins) Katerina Guba Tobacco and alcohol consumption and military service over the life course in Russia 11:40 (20 mins) Jamie Edwards, University of Oxford |
History, Reproductive Rights, Social Change. Polish Society in Images and on Streets Gilbert Scott Room 251 New Polish Film and Photography Engaged in the World in Conflict 11:00 (20 mins) Justyna Budzik, University of Silesia in Katowice 'The politics of street renaming, the legacies of transition and the material heritage of communist dictatorship in Poland' 11:20 (20 mins) Ewa Ochman, The University of Manchester Women’s Complaint as a window into the Polish society. Legal mobilization against authoritarian backsliding following the Abortion Law 11:40 (20 mins) Agnieszka Kubal, University College London |
Illuminating Misplaced Archives: Researching Soviet and Post-Soviet Photography in Latvia Robing Room Biography of an Archive: Incorporation of Soviet Photo Club Culture into the Canon of Latvian Photography 11:00 (20 mins) Liga Goldberga, Art Academy of Latvia Inherited ways of looking: A Case Study of Aivars Liepiņš photography series "Children's Carehome No. 2. Baldone" 11:20 (20 mins) Agnese Zviedre, Art Academy of Latvia Through the Lens of an Architect: Representation of Modernist and Postmodernist Architecture in Soviet Latvian Photography 11:40 (20 mins) Ineta Done, Art Academy of Latvia |
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12:45 | Poles and Jews in Mid-century Europe. Identity Building as a Tool of Minority Politics James Watt South Stephenson Room “Every Pole has not only a right, but the duty to return to his country”: Post-war Polish Repatriation from British-occupied Germany 12:45 (20 mins) Samantha Knapton, University of Nottingham Are we in the same boat? How did Polish exiles’ experience of British Imperialism affect their position within the Windrush Generation? 13:05 (20 mins) Josef Butler, King's College London Confronting the Holocaust. The Polish Government-in-Exile's Policy Concerning Jews 1939-1945 13:25 (20 mins) Piotr Długołęcki, Polski Instytut Spraw Międzynarodowych Landscapes of Jewish Memory in Poland. Jewish Agency and Memoryscape in Gierek’s Poland. 13:45 (20 mins) Janek Gryta, University of Wales Trinity Saint David |
Practices of Inclusion and Exclusion in East-Central Europe before 1939 James Watt South Room 355 How to feed the body of your own nation (and to starve the body of another)? Polish women and the National Democratic Party at the beginning of the 20th century 12:45 (15 mins) Claudia Snochowska-Gonzalez, Instytut Slawistyki PAN Making something new out of the old? Dilemmas and strategies of the Slovak authorities in the transition period (1919-1920) 13:00 (15 mins) Etienne Boisserie, Inalco School for democracy: co-operation movement as a platform for democratic opposition in Estonia in 1934–1940 13:15 (15 mins) Liisi Veski, University of Tartu / University of Glasgow The Image of Women in the Romanian Sports Press in the Interwar Period 13:30 (15 mins) Cosmin-Ștefan Dogaru, University of Bucharest The missing phase of psychiatric institutionalization and the early attempts at providing care for the mentally ill in nineteenth-century Hungary 13:45 (15 mins) Janka Kovács, Research Centre for the Humanities |
Politics of Waiting. Narratives beyond Wasting Time, and Linear Progression East Quad Lecture Theatre Expectations and Delays: Soviet Mass Housing, Privatization and the Post-Socialist City 12:45 (15 mins) Lois Kalb, European University Institute The (Geo)politics of Waiting and Boredom of Café Routine in Southern Mitrovica (Kosovo) 13:00 (15 mins) Rozafa Berisha, University of Prishtina The ‚Not-Yet’ Memorial: Negotiating the Past and Making the City of Tbilisi (Georgia) 13:15 (15 mins) Laura Maffizoli, University of Manchester Waiting as a Way of Living Geopolitics at the Border Triangle between Ukraine, Moldova, and Romania 13:30 (15 mins) Claudia Eggart, Centre for East European and International Studies |
Constructing Identities: National and Transnational Senate Room Between the Balkans, Mediterranean and Central Europe. Mental Maps in the Memories of the Dalmatian Writer Enzo Bettiza 12:45 (15 mins) Maciej Czerwinski , Jagiellonian University of Krakow Tengrism as a Lived Religion in Kazakhstan and its Role in National Identity Building 13:00 (15 mins) Abigail Scripka, University of Glasgow Memory, Identity, Belonging in Yuriy Tarnawsky’s Autobiographical Novel Warm Arctic Nights (2019) 13:15 (15 mins) Tetiana Ostapchuk, University College London Rethinking Soviet selfhood in the era of the Anthropocene: self, body, environment 13:30 (15 mins) Epp Annus, Tallinn University / Ohio State University |
12:45 | Government and governance Main Building Room 466 Populist and Liberal Mythology in Polish Political Discourse. In Search of Linguistic Indicators of Mythologisation 12:45 (15 mins) Anna Stanisz-Lubowiecka, SSEES, University College London Shift in emphasis: changes in the composition of the Hungarian government 2010-2022 13:00 (15 mins) Ványi Éva, Budapesti Corvinus Egyetem (HU-19156972) The reconstruction of the Hungarian theatrical sphere – A case study 13:15 (15 mins) Daniel Beck, Corvinus University of Budapest Russian Organized Corrupt Network under Putin regime. 13:30 (15 mins) Serguei Cheloukhine, John Jay College, CUNY |
Lessons for Russian Foreign and Security Policy from Russia's War in Ukraine 12:45 (90 mins) Chair: Kevork Oskanian, UK Marcin Kaczmarski, UK Natasha Kuhrt, UK Ruth Deyermond, UK Isabell Burmester, Switzerland Bettina Renz, UK |
Research challenges, ethics and data in the time of war McIntyre Room 208 Libraries Bracing Themselves for a New Ice Age - The Russian War against Ukraine and its Consequences for the Acquisition and Accessibility of Media for Research on Russia and Eastern Europe 12:45 (20 mins) Juergen Warmbrunn, Herder-Institut Forschungsbibliothek Visual Regimes of the Russo-Ukrainian War: From "The Soldiering Self" to Arrested War, and Beyond 13:05 (20 mins) Roman Horbyk, Örebro University |
Russian foreign policy – regional activities Fore Hall Russian Foreign Policy and ontological vectors: a case study of the reversal of priorities as a result of the Euromaidan 12:45 (15 mins) Eric Pardo Sauvageot, Deusto University Central Asia in Russian Foreign Policy Imagination: Before and After the Beginning of the War in Ukraine 13:00 (15 mins) Kristiina Silvan, Finnish Institute of International Affairs Regional Security in Northeast Asia: Responses and Trends in Russian Foreign Policy 13:15 (15 mins) Nivedita Kapoor Russia in the South Pacific 13:30 (15 mins) Jonathan Ludwig, Oklahoma State University |
Trade, mobility and environment in late imperial Central Asia James Watt South Room 375 “At the meeting of the nine roads”: Environmental and economic networks at the Karkara fair 12:45 (20 mins) Jennifer Keating, University College Dublin Moving through mountains: Pamir and its mobile subjects under imperial rule 13:05 (20 mins) Malika Zehni, University of Cambridge Rivers of the Empire and Land of the Rivers: Waterscape of Semirechie in Russian Exploration and Colonization. 13:25 (20 mins) Tatiana Saburova, Indiana University Short Stops and Excursions: Anglo-American Expeditions along the Trans-Caspian Railway up to 1920 13:45 (20 mins) Alun Thomas, Staffordshire University |
12:45 | Social foundations of the war: multiscalar accounts of conflict and political economy Gilbert Scott Room 356 (Post)War reconstruction of Ukraine: state-society-capital complex, class, sex, gender, and national identity 12:45 (20 mins) Yuliya Yurchenko, University of Greenwich Militarised civil society and the informal economy of war in Ukraine since 2014 13:05 (20 mins) Taras Fedirko, University of Glasgow Russian everyday political economy: libidinal perspectives in wartime 13:25 (20 mins) Jeremy Morris, Aarhus Universitet Vibes: Political attitudes and media consumption practices of young Russians (prior to the full-scale invasion) 13:45 (20 mins) Armen Aramian, SSEES UCL |
Legitimation, identity politics, and "war nationalism" in Putin's Russia: strategies and fallout Gilbert Scott Room 253 Crossing the Rubicon: Continuity and Change in Kremlin Legitimation Strategies (2020-23) 12:45 (15 mins) Matthew Blackburn, University of Warsaw Did Traditionalist Values Help Putin Escape Term Limits in 2020? 13:00 (15 mins) Henry Hale, IERES Russia's New "War Nationalism": How Official Nationalist Rhetoric Contributed to Legitimising the Invasion of Ukraine 13:15 (15 mins) Jules-Sergei Fediunin, EHESS Traditional Values and Civic Activism 13:30 (15 mins) Regina Smyth, Indiana University |
Contested motherhood: between state politics and subjective/material experiences (Lithuania, Russia and Eurasian migrants in Sweden) Gilbert Scott Room 250 “Strong family makes strong Russia.” “Good mothers” and “traditional values” in a militarizing statebstract 12:45 (20 mins) Yulia Gradskova, Södertörn University Maternalism old and new: redefining ‘good-motherhood’ through state awards for Lithuanian mothers of many children 13:05 (20 mins) Ieva Bisigirskaitė, Philology Department, Vilnius University Migrant mothers from post-Soviet countries in Central Asia and Caucasus region in Sweden – Practices, values and challenges 13:25 (20 mins) Soheyla Yazdanpanah, Genusvetenskap, Södertörns högskola |
Joggling with the Transnational: Romanian Humanitarian Networks after Ceausescu's Nationalist Turn James Watt South Room 361 Romania and the Scholarships Programs for African Students during the 1980s 12:45 (20 mins) Stefan Bosomitu, IICCMER Romanian Policy in the United Nations towards the Humanitarian Aid in the 80s 13:05 (20 mins) Daniel Filip-Afloarei, New Europe College, IICCMER Solving the National-Transnational Paradox in Ceausescu’s Romania: Humanitarian Networks and East-West Relations after 1971 13:25 (20 mins) Dalia Bathory, IICCMER |
Border in/securities – at the nexus of space and emotions in Central- and Eastern Europe II Melville Room Beekeeping with/out borders in Moldova and Ukraine: Cooperation and Conflict in Defending Carpathian Honeybee Territory 12:45 (20 mins) Tanya Richardson, Wilfrid Laurier University Providing water and power across front lines : the actors, practices and limits of operating critical infrastructure in conditions of insecurity in the war Ukraine (2014-present). 13:05 (20 mins) Sophie Lambroschini, Centre Marc Bloch Sensuous Nostalgia: Insecurity in the Borderlands of the Fergana Valley 13:25 (20 mins) Asel Murzakulova, University of Central Asia |
12:45 | Global Soviet Union Turnbull Room Complimentary Assistance: Exchanges Between Mongolia, the Soviet Union, China and Poland during the Cold War 12:45 (15 mins) Nikolay Erofeev, University of Oxford Fighting for the New East: Soviet international law and self-determination in the Rif War (1921-1926) 13:00 (15 mins) Alexandra Day, Trinity College Dublin The Birth of the Soviet Proxy War: International Red Aid, Comintern and Transatlantic Internationalist Movements 13:15 (15 mins) Yevhenii Monastyrskyi, Yale University Under the shadow of Aswan: perspectives of economic and technical cooperation between Brazil and the USSR (1962-1964) 13:30 (15 mins) Gianfranco Caterina, University of Sao Paulo, Brazil |
The 1990s: Societies in transition Main Building Room 132 Building a Multiethnic Military in Post-Yugoslav Bosnia and Herzegovina 12:45 (15 mins) Elliot Short, Zinc Network Intellectual confrontation with Mečiarism in Slovakia during the 1990s 13:00 (15 mins) Dirk Dalberg, Institute of Political Science of the Slovak Acade The Chimera Parliament: Analysing the Russian Congress of People's Deputies from 1990-1993. 13:15 (15 mins) Jeffrey Hawn, LSE |
Russian Nationalism and Anti-Globalism Main Building Room 134 Textual Paratexts in Post-Soviet Russian Literature as a Tool of Representing Russian National Thinking 12:45 (15 mins) Dmitry Mazalevsky, University of Debrecen HU17782218 A Critical Assessment of Nobel Laureate Alexander Solzhenitsyn’s Anti-Ukrainianism and Its Legacy since 2014 13:00 (15 mins) Elisa Kriza, Bamberg University The West as Russia's Enemy. Anti-Western and Anti-liberal Narratives in the Prose of Alexander Prokhanov 13:15 (15 mins) Michał Kołakowski, University of Warsaw No peninsula is an island: Aksyonov’s Crimea as a symbolic land 13:30 (15 mins) Annamaria Vass, Debreceni Egyetem (Adószám:17782218) |
Decolonial Perspectives Gilbert Scott Room 251 Neo-Gothic of Liudmila Petrushevskaia’s "Nomer Odin" (2004) and "Chernaia Babochka" (2008) in the Postcolonial Eastern European Context and Intersections with the Ukrainian Example of Andrii Liubka’s "Karbid" (2015). 12:45 (15 mins) Inna Tigountsova, The Brilliant Club/Researchers in Schools Towards a “colonialism without colonies”? Constructing ‘black Africa’ in late Imperial Russia 13:00 (15 mins) Anita Frison, University of Padua Decolonial Practices and the Language of a City at War in Kharkiv, Ukraine 13:15 (15 mins) Viktoriia Grivina, St Andrews University The Russo-Harlem Renaissance: Searching for a Black Voice in Jean Toomer’s Cane (1923), Zora Neal Hurston's Their Eyes Were Watching God (1937), and Dorothy West's The Living is Easy (1948) 13:30 (15 mins) Saffy Mirghani, University College London |
Nineteenth-Century Literature and Ideas Robing Room « Satire and travel writing in Vladimir Sollogoub’s Tarantass » 12:45 (15 mins) Léandre Lucas, Lille University “History, folk tale, poetry everywhere”. Romantic “fashion for Scotland” in the travel memoirs of 19th-century Polish voyagers 13:00 (15 mins) Aleksandra Gintowt, University of Wrocław Transformation in Perception of Knowledge: How Specialization Influenced Mid-19th-Century Russian Intellectual History 13:15 (15 mins) Po-yi Chen, University of Texas, Austin A Tale of Three Grandmothers: Božena Němcová’s `Babička' in translation 13:30 (15 mins) Susan Reynolds, British Library |
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