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Culture After Empire
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Lecture
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Dilip GaonkarGyan PrakashLudger Hagedorn
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Series: Lecture
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Series: Lecture
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Czernowitz as a Cultural Palimpsest
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Seminars and Colloquia
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Clemena AntonovaIgor Pomerantsev
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Series: Seminars and Colloquia
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Series: Seminars and Colloquia
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Das Fremde hinter der Fremde
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Lecture
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Ludger HagedornMichael KeglerSusann Urban
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Series: Lecture
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Series: Lecture
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Das Leben Passiert Nicht Außerhalb der Geschichte
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Seminars and Colloquia
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Radka DenemarkováLudger Hagedorn
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Series: Seminars and Colloquia
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Series: Seminars and Colloquia
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Debating Citizenship and Emancipation during the Long 19th Century
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Seminars and Colloquia
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Holly CaseConstantin Iordachi
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Series: Seminars and Colloquia
Holly Case has called the period spanning the late-18th to the second half of the 20th century “The Age of Questions,” which included the Eastern question, Jewish question, social question, and countless others. In his recent book Liberalism, Constitutional Nationalism, and Minorities: The Making of Romanian Citizenship, c. 1750–1918 (2019), Constantin Iordachi shows how the succession of transnational “questions” that were at the heart of European and North-Atlantic politics during the long nineteenth century, and the interplay between them, impacted citizenship policies in Romania and beyond. He further describes the transfer of novel institutions of citizenship across temporal and political boundaries. In this discussion, Iordachi briefly outlined some of his broader conclusions regarding citizenship and statebuilding across the nineteenth century, after which he and Case engaged in a discussion about the role of “questions” in this dynamic and across this critical span of European and global history.
Read more
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Series: Seminars and Colloquia
Holly Case has called the period spanning the late-18th to the second half of the 20th century “The Age of Questions,” which included the Eastern question, Jewish question, social question, and countless others. In his recent book Liberalism, Constitutional Nationalism, and Minorities: The Making of Romanian Citizenship, c. 1750–1918 (2019), Constantin Iordachi shows how the succession of transnational “questions” that were at the heart of European and North-Atlantic politics during the long nineteenth century, and the interplay between them, impacted citizenship policies in Romania and beyond. He further describes the transfer of novel institutions of citizenship across temporal and political boundaries. In this discussion, Iordachi briefly outlined some of his broader conclusions regarding citizenship and statebuilding across the nineteenth century, after which he and Case engaged in a discussion about the role of “questions” in this dynamic and across this critical span of European and global history.
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Decolonial Desires: Thinking through Discipline and Difference
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Seminars and Colloquia
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Clemena AntonovaSaurabh DubeJulian Strube
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Series: Seminars and Colloquia
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Series: Seminars and Colloquia
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Decolonizing Forced Migration Studies: Lessons from Borderlands
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Seminars and Colloquia
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Ayşe ÇağlarNergis Canefe
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Series: Seminars and Colloquia
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Series: Seminars and Colloquia
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Decolonizing Slavic Studies
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Lecture
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Daryna KorkachEwa Thompson
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Series: Lecture
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Series: Lecture
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Degenerations of Democracy, Regenerations of Democracy
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Panels and Discussions
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Charles TaylorDilip GaonkarLudger HagedornShalini RanderiaCraig Calhoun, Mukulika Banerjee, Yogendra Yadav
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Series: Panels and Discussions
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Series: Panels and Discussions
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Delhi, Oxford, Moscow.
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Lecture
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Andrei SoldatovArundhati Virmani
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Series: Lecture
Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan, philosopher, academic, intellectual, president of the Indian Republic, spent his life in building and crossing unexpected bridges: between the multifarious activities he undertook during his lifetime, between places that he chose to inhabit, or where he was sent. His multifaceted profile thus led him from his native southern India to the seat of the British empire in Calcutta, to academic citadels in Britain and in the United-States, and later, at the heart of the Cold War, as ambassador to the Soviet Union. His trajectory allows us to follow these multilateral exchanges at different scales and leads us to consider the complex exchanges between distant places belonging to civilizational blocs like Europe, India and Russia beyond traditional binary poles, while viewing them in very contemporary contexts. The intervention examines how Radhakrishnan’s biography challenges our classic understandings of colonial and post-colonial categories and relationships.
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Series: Lecture
Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan, philosopher, academic, intellectual, president of the Indian Republic, spent his life in building and crossing unexpected bridges: between the multifarious activities he undertook during his lifetime, between places that he chose to inhabit, or where he was sent. His multifaceted profile thus led him from his native southern India to the seat of the British empire in Calcutta, to academic citadels in Britain and in the United-States, and later, at the heart of the Cold War, as ambassador to the Soviet Union. His trajectory allows us to follow these multilateral exchanges at different scales and leads us to consider the complex exchanges between distant places belonging to civilizational blocs like Europe, India and Russia beyond traditional binary poles, while viewing them in very contemporary contexts. The intervention examines how Radhakrishnan’s biography challenges our classic understandings of colonial and post-colonial categories and relationships.
Read more
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