|
Maria Winowska and the Search for a Modern (but Illiberal) Central and Eastern Europe
|
|
Cancelled
|
Katherine YoungerPiotr Kosicki
|
|
Series: Cancelled
|
Series: Cancelled
|
|
War and the Future of Ukraine - Conference
|
|
Conferences and Workshops
|
Katherine YoungerPaul Chaisty, Roy Allison, Gwendolyn Sasse, Timothy Garton Ash
|
|
Speakers: Katherine YoungerPaul Chaisty, Roy Allison, Gwendolyn Sasse, Timothy Garton Ash
Series: Conferences and Workshops
10am on Friday, 18 November 2022 to 2pm on Saturday, 19 November 2022
Nissan Institute Lecture Theatre, St. Antony's College
Chair: Katherine Younger (Institute for Human Sciences, Vienna); Paul Chaisty (OSGA, St Antony's); Roy Allison (REES, St Antony's); Gwendolyn Sasse (ZOiS, Berlin); Timothy Garton Ash (St Antony's).
Convenors: REES, OSGA; ESC & RESC, St Antony's; Institute for Human Sciences, Vienna; Centre for East European and International Studies, Berlin.
Read more
|
Speakers: Katherine YoungerPaul Chaisty, Roy Allison, Gwendolyn Sasse, Timothy Garton Ash
Series: Conferences and Workshops
10am on Friday, 18 November 2022 to 2pm on Saturday, 19 November 2022
Nissan Institute Lecture Theatre, St. Antony's College
Chair: Katherine Younger (Institute for Human Sciences, Vienna); Paul Chaisty (OSGA, St Antony's); Roy Allison (REES, St Antony's); Gwendolyn Sasse (ZOiS, Berlin); Timothy Garton Ash (St Antony's).
Convenors: REES, OSGA; ESC & RESC, St Antony's; Institute for Human Sciences, Vienna; Centre for East European and International Studies, Berlin.
Read more
|
|
Junior Visiting Fellows’ Conference Winter 2021
|
|
Conferences and Workshops
|
Ayşe ÇağlarFilip MilačićFrantiška SchormováGeoffrey AungGiorgia DonàJeremy AdelmanKatherine YoungerMallika LeuzingerOksana KlymenkoPavel HorákRuzha SmilovaSebastian HaugTeresa BaronVictoria FominaDoğuş ŞimşekStefan Segi, Julian Strube
|
|
Series: Conferences and Workshops
|
Series: Conferences and Workshops
|
|
Ukraine and the Future of Europe
|
|
Conferences and Workshops
|
Ivan VejvodaKatherine YoungerTimothy Garton Ash
|
|
Series: Conferences and Workshops
|
Series: Conferences and Workshops
|
|
Junior Visiting Fellows’ Conference Summer 2021
|
|
Conferences and Workshops
|
Ayşe ÇağlarEzgican ÖzdemirIryna SklokinaJan VanaJul TirlerKatherine YoungerLudger HagedornMarci ShoreMariia HupaloMykhailo MartynenkoGabriela VicanovaKrystof DolezalRosario Forlenza, Dagmar Fink, Oley Kindiy, Costas Constantinou, Sina Farzin
|
|
Series: Conferences and Workshops
|
Series: Conferences and Workshops
|
|
Bearing Witness to War
|
|
Exhibition
|
Katherine YoungerTimothy SnyderVolodymyr Yermolenko
|
|
Series: Exhibition
|
Series: Exhibition
|
|
Years that Changed the Face of Europe: 1989 and 2022
|
|
Exhibition
|
Dariusz StolaKatherine YoungerLudger HagedornTimothy Garton Ash
|
|
Series: Exhibition
|
Series: Exhibition
|
|
Exhibition Soft Opening: Bearing Witness to War
|
|
Exhibition
|
Katherine YoungerKseniya Kharchenko
|
|
Series: Exhibition
|
Series: Exhibition
|
|
From Victory to Invasion: The Dialectic of Soviet and Post-Soviet War Commemoration
|
|
Lecture
|
Katherine YoungerMischa Gabowitsch
|
|
Series: Lecture
|
Series: Lecture
|
|
Limits and Divisions of Human Histories
|
|
Lecture
|
Andrzej NowakKatherine YoungerLudger Hagedorn
|
|
Series: Lecture
The theory of history, as presented by Reinhart Koselleck (1923-2006), offers an intellectually tempting structure of three anthropological distinctions that prescribe figures of all possible histories (individual and collective): sooner or later, inside and outside, above and below. The first one signifies the span between being born and having to die, which makes every life unique and at the same time part of a particular generational experience. It could also be rendered as “old” and “new”. Uses of the second pair might be analysed as a contrast between public and private, or as a contemporary fear stemming from the contrast between “home” and “intruders”. The third pair Andrzej Nowak will try to “translate” not just in “master” and “slave” categories, but rather as “pupil” and “teacher”, or even “therapist” and “patient”. Nowak will try to read Koselleck’s structure in a perspective offered by spatial/temporal concepts of contemporary “Europe in progress” (or “Europe in crisis”), as well as in another, non-political perspective of esthetic renditions of the three above mentioned Koselleck’s abstract pairs ¬ in Andrzej Wajda’s “Birchwood” movie, the last scene of Richard Strauss’s “Rosenkavalier”, and in Philip Larkin’s poem: “An Arundel Tomb”. The question is whether love can be included into these conflicting pairs as a possible factor transcending their structures?
Read more
|
Series: Lecture
The theory of history, as presented by Reinhart Koselleck (1923-2006), offers an intellectually tempting structure of three anthropological distinctions that prescribe figures of all possible histories (individual and collective): sooner or later, inside and outside, above and below. The first one signifies the span between being born and having to die, which makes every life unique and at the same time part of a particular generational experience. It could also be rendered as “old” and “new”. Uses of the second pair might be analysed as a contrast between public and private, or as a contemporary fear stemming from the contrast between “home” and “intruders”. The third pair Andrzej Nowak will try to “translate” not just in “master” and “slave” categories, but rather as “pupil” and “teacher”, or even “therapist” and “patient”. Nowak will try to read Koselleck’s structure in a perspective offered by spatial/temporal concepts of contemporary “Europe in progress” (or “Europe in crisis”), as well as in another, non-political perspective of esthetic renditions of the three above mentioned Koselleck’s abstract pairs ¬ in Andrzej Wajda’s “Birchwood” movie, the last scene of Richard Strauss’s “Rosenkavalier”, and in Philip Larkin’s poem: “An Arundel Tomb”. The question is whether love can be included into these conflicting pairs as a possible factor transcending their structures?
Read more
|