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Europe’s Futures Symposium 2020 |
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Seminars and Colloquia |
Alida VracicBernd MarinGrigorij MesežnikovIsabelle IoannidesIvan VejvodaLeszek JazdzewskiNiccolo MilaneseNicole KoenigPéter Krekó |
Series: Seminars and Colloquia
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Series: Seminars and Colloquia
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Europe-Asia Research Platform: Forced Migration |
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Conferences and Workshops |
Ayşe ÇağlarRanabir Samaddar |
Initiating a new research focus at the IWM
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Series: Conferences and Workshops
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Initiating a new research focus at the IWM
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Series: Conferences and Workshops
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Covid-19 Pandemic and the Spectral Presence of Migrant Workers and Refugees |
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Panels and Discussions |
Ayşe ÇağlarRanabir SamaddarAlex Aleinikoff, Roger Zetter |
A round table with Ranabir Samaddar, Alex Aleinikoff and Roger Zetter
Series: Panels and Discussions
The bordering processes unleashed by the Covid-19 pandemic has revealed the existing fault lines of our present-day societies and deepened the current fissures and dilemmas of global capitalist order, state sovereignty, and governance structures. On the basis of Calcutta Research Group’s book, Borders of an Epidemic: Covid-19 and Migrant Workers, edited by Prof. Ranabir Samaddar, which highlights the ethical and political implications of the pandemic, this round table addressed the changing landscape of visibility and invisibility of migrant workers, refugees as well as of national borders, which opens further questions about inequalities, public health, and politics of care.
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A round table with Ranabir Samaddar, Alex Aleinikoff and Roger Zetter
Series: Panels and Discussions
The bordering processes unleashed by the Covid-19 pandemic has revealed the existing fault lines of our present-day societies and deepened the current fissures and dilemmas of global capitalist order, state sovereignty, and governance structures. On the basis of Calcutta Research Group’s book, Borders of an Epidemic: Covid-19 and Migrant Workers, edited by Prof. Ranabir Samaddar, which highlights the ethical and political implications of the pandemic, this round table addressed the changing landscape of visibility and invisibility of migrant workers, refugees as well as of national borders, which opens further questions about inequalities, public health, and politics of care.
Read more
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Junior Visiting Fellows‘ Conference |
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Conferences and Workshops |
Alicja RybkowskaAyşe ÇağlarBiray KolluogluGavin SmithIvan VejvodaMariya IvanchevaMatyáš KřížkovskýStanislas RichardVolha BiziukovaYulia AbibokAdele BlazquezVlasta Kordová |
Series: Conferences and Workshops
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Series: Conferences and Workshops
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Notes on Militant Populism in Contemporary France |
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Seminars and Colloquia |
Winnie Lem |
Contextualising the Gilets Jaunes
Series: Seminars and Colloquia
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Contextualising the Gilets Jaunes
Series: Seminars and Colloquia
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Social and Ecological Movements in “Apocalyptic Times” |
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Seminars and Colloquia |
Adam RamsayLudger HagedornMatyáš Křížkovský |
The Case of Extinction Rebellion
Series: Seminars and Colloquia
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The Case of Extinction Rebellion
Series: Seminars and Colloquia
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The Remains of the Real |
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Seminars and Colloquia |
Jan SowaLudger Hagedorn |
Politics after Postmodernism
Series: Seminars and Colloquia
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Politics after Postmodernism
Series: Seminars and Colloquia
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WhatsApp Israel? |
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Seminars and Colloquia |
Avrum BurgLudger Hagedorn |
Series: Seminars and Colloquia
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Series: Seminars and Colloquia
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Parenting and Education |
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Seminars and Colloquia |
Biray KolluogluLudger Hagedorn |
Navigating Class, Religiosity and Secularity in Turkey
Series: Seminars and Colloquia
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Navigating Class, Religiosity and Secularity in Turkey
Series: Seminars and Colloquia
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Kidnapped from Nazism, or the Greek Tragedy of Central Europe |
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Seminars and Colloquia |
Aspen BrintonLudger HagedornTomáš KordaVlasta Kordová |
Series: Seminars and Colloquia
The paper recalls the essay The Tragedy of Central Europe, written by the Czech novelist Milan Kundera. Vlasta Kordova and Tomas Korda criticize the unhistorical cold-war image of the West that Kundera employs. In his reading, the Second World War just did not take place. They do not mean this objection as an external critique. Since why should someone be interested in Kundera’s omission, after all. They mean their criticism as immanent in the sense that ignoring the WWII, as the “truth” and result of the severe nationalism that was then spread across the continent, precludes the very possibility to apprehend the moral equality or equal legitimacy of the “socialist” East and the “capitalist” West. Since a tragic collision of two powers is set up only by their equal essentiality, Kundera cannot grasp the tragical dimension of the Cold War, and Central Europe respectively. Underpinned by the WWII and thereby elevated into the genuine Greek tragedy, the Cold War cannot know any victors, losers or pure victims and, moreover, both powers of equal essentiality must experience their own respective demise.
Read more
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Series: Seminars and Colloquia
The paper recalls the essay The Tragedy of Central Europe, written by the Czech novelist Milan Kundera. Vlasta Kordova and Tomas Korda criticize the unhistorical cold-war image of the West that Kundera employs. In his reading, the Second World War just did not take place. They do not mean this objection as an external critique. Since why should someone be interested in Kundera’s omission, after all. They mean their criticism as immanent in the sense that ignoring the WWII, as the “truth” and result of the severe nationalism that was then spread across the continent, precludes the very possibility to apprehend the moral equality or equal legitimacy of the “socialist” East and the “capitalist” West. Since a tragic collision of two powers is set up only by their equal essentiality, Kundera cannot grasp the tragical dimension of the Cold War, and Central Europe respectively. Underpinned by the WWII and thereby elevated into the genuine Greek tragedy, the Cold War cannot know any victors, losers or pure victims and, moreover, both powers of equal essentiality must experience their own respective demise.
Read more
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