The Slavic World Goes Global
Commission Internationale des Études Historiques Slaves (CIEHS)
Institute for East and Southeast European Studies, IOS (Regensburg)
Centre for the History and Culture of East Central Europe, GWZO (Leipzig)
Regensburg
08.12.2016 - 09.12.2016
Ansprechpartner
Workshop der Commission Internationale des Études Historiques Slaves (CIEHS) im Rahmen der Projektkommission Globalisierungs- und De-Globalisierungsprozesse im östlichen Europa (19.-21. Jh.) Regensburg, 8.-9.12.2016
Organizers:
Institute for East and Southeast European Studies, IOS (Regensburg)
Centre for the History and Culture of East Central Europe, GWZO (Leipzig)
Conveners:
Programme
Venue:
Institute for East and Southeast European Studies
Landshuter Str. 4, 93047 Regensburg, room 017
Thursday, December 8
15.00 Opening
15.10‐17.45 Panel I: Patterns of Migration
Chair: Dušan KOVAČ (Slovak Academy of Sciences, Bratislava)
Elisabeth JANIK (University of Vienna)
Emigration from the Habsburg Empire to the Americas
Michael ESCH (GWZO, Leipzig)
Ruptures, continuities, transitions: migration patterns in and out of Europe in the interwar Period
Ulf BRUNNBAUER (IOS, Regensburg)
Steamships and the State: official and unofficial ways to go to America from Southeastern Europe
Comment: Frank HADLER (GWZO Leipzig)
Friday, December 9
9.30‐12.30 Panel II: Port Cities
Chair: Sabine RUTAR (IOS, Regensburg)
Giulia LAMI (University of Milano)
Odessa: the Russian portal to the Black Sea in the prerevolutionary period
Marco DOGO (University of Trieste)
The Slavonic dimension of Trieste as an imperial port city, 1751–1914
Marcin SZERLE (University of Gdańsk)
The maritime city of Gdynia as the Polish gate to the world in the 20th century
Tomasz BLUSIEWICZ (Harvard University)
The second economy of the Soviet Baltic port cities:a fragile Cold War lifeline
Comment: Luminiţa GĂTEJEL (IOS Regensburg)
14.00‐17.00 Panel III: Translations
Chair: Krzysztof MAKOWSKI (Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznań)
Monika SACZYNSKA (Institute of Archeology and Ethnology PAN, Warsaw)
Between West and West: a translation of cultural patterns. Some examples from the Polish Kingdom and the Great Duchy of Lithuania
Anna BAUMGARTNER (Graduate School for East and Southeast European Studies, LMU Munich)
Józef Brandt's Cossacks go global ‐ from Polish national imaginary to the international art market
Michał MRUGALSKI (University of Tübingen)
Slavic Translation Theory and the Translation of Slavic Theory to (American) French Theory
Comment: Marek NEKULA (Graduate School for East and Southeast European Studies, University of Regensburg)