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Historia polskich więźniów politycznych na przełomie lat 1880-1950. Warsztaty historyczne zorganizowane przez Universytet Illinois w Chicago (Wydział Języków Słowiańskich i Wydział Historii)
09 kwietnia, 2013
W dniach 9-11 kwietnia 2013 roku odbędą się w Chicago warsztaty historyczne zorganizowane przez Universytet Illinois w Chicago (Wydział Języków Słowiańskich i Wydział Historii), przy współpracy z Funduszem Rodziny Hejna i Teatrem Chopina.
Warsztaty otworzy wyklad Prof. Padraic Kenney z Universytetu w Indianie na temat "Historia polskich więźniów politycznych na przełomie lat 1880-1950".
Wykład ten jest otwarty dla publiczności i odbędzie się 9 kwietnia br. o godz. 19:00. Wszystkie wykłady i dyskusje odbędą się w Teatrze Chopina w Chicago.
PROGRAM
Midwest Historians of East Central Europe Workshop: April 9-11, 2013
Presented by University of Illinois at Chicago (Department of Slavic Languages and the Faculty of History), in cooperation with the Hejna Family Fund and Chopin Theatre
DAY 1
Tuesday April 9
7:00 pm
Keynote Lecture: Padraic Kenney, Indiana University
“A Polish Cell, a Global Narrative: Political Incarceration in the 20th Century”
Reception - Cocktails and dinner
DAY 2
Wednesday April 10
9:00-10:00
Breakfast at Chopin Theatre, lower level
10:00-10:30
Welcome and introductions
10:30-12:15
Session One: Ideas and People Crossing Borders
Moderator: Brian Porter, University of Michigan
Tara Zahra, University of Chicago, “Travel Agents on Trial: Policing Mobility in East-Central Europe, 1889-1989”
Jan Musekamp, Washington University, “How the Royal Prussian Eastern Railroad Connected Paris to St. Petersburg and Kovno to New York”
Keely Stauter-Halsted, UIC, “Purity and Danger: East European Eugenics in Comparative Context”
12:15-1:15
Catered Lunch at Chopin Theatre for all workshop participants
1:15-3:00
Session Two: The Great War and the Home Front in Central Europe
Moderator: Tara Zahra, University of Chicago
Jesse Kauffman, Eastern Michigan University, “’Polska tak, ale jaka?’ Local Antagonisms, Political Institutions, and the German Occupation of Lodz, 1915-1918”
Ke-chin Hsia, University of Chicago, “The Emperor Has No Clothes: Imperial Austria’s Failed Social Offensive on the Home Front, 1918”
Drew Burks, University of Kansas, “The Triumph of Consumer Culture in Krakow, 1911-1921: Advertising in Glos Narodu and Czas”
3:00-3:30
Coffee break
3:30-5:15
Session Three:
Image, Culture and Politics in the Cold War Moderator: Padraic Kenney, Indiana University
Robert Brier, German Historical Institute Warsaw, “Solidarity in an ‘Age of Fracture\': Lech Walesa as a Contested Icon of Cold War Human Rights Activism”
Rachel Applebaum, Lafayette College, “Empire of Friends: The Personalization of Czechoslovak-Soviet Relations in the 1950s and 1960s”
David Tompkins, Carleton College, “The East is Red? Images of China in East Germany and Poland through the Sino-Soviet split”
5:15
Cocktails
6:00
Dinner/music for workshop participants, Chopin Theatre
DAY 3
Thursday April 11
8:30-9:30
Breakfast at Chopin Theatre
9:30-11:15
Session Four: East and West? New Perspectives on Cultural Exchange in Postwar Europe
Brian Porter, University of Michigan, “Globalizing Poland’s Communist Modernity”
Mikołaj Kunicki, Notre Dame University, “Pioneers, Settlers, and Gunslingers: ‘Reclaiming’ the Western Territories in the Polish Popular Cinema of the 1960s”
Ilana Miller, Indiana University, “Co-opting Tevye: Fiddler on the Roof Productions in Communist Czechoslovakia, 1968-1970”
11:15-11:30
Coffee break
11:30-1:00
Round Table: The State of the Field of East-Central European Studies
1:00-3:00
Lunch at Chopin Theatre for workshop participants
CHOPIN THEATRE
1543 West Division, Chicago, IL 60642
tel: 773-278-1500 • cell: 773-396-2875
info@chopintheatre.com
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