PECOB Portal on Central Eastern
and Balkan Europe
by IECOB & AIS
Università di Bologna  
 
Tuesday May 07, 2024
 
Testata per la stampa
up-to-date alerts

This area offers a wide range of continuously updated news regarding both academic and cultural events together with academic calls and study programs

 
 
East, rivista internazionale di geopolitica
 
European Regional Master's Degree in Democracy and Human Rights in South East Europe
Feed RSS with the latest information on conferences published on PECOB
 

Making Sense of Catastrophe: Postcolonial Approaches to Postsocialist Experiences

Venue: Cambridge (UK)
Period: Feb. 23- 26, 2012

Program

Moving from adolescence to adulthood, the postsocialist world is undergoing multidirectional transformations that would have seemed unbelievable twenty years ago. Bustling economic development combines with corruption, violence, and cynicism, which reign over the postsocialist space. Three causal schemes compete to explain this large-scale process. One derives the postsocialist present from the legacies of the Soviet past. Another ascribes responsibility to the global crisis of the traditional West. A third episteme draws on analogies and contrasts between postsocialist and postcolonial transformations, both of which have shaped the 21st century as we experience it.

Writing in 2001 from different hemispheres, David Chioni Moore called upon a “Global Postcolonial Critique” of the postsocialist world, while Alexander Etkind speculated about “internal colonization” in Russia’s past and present. Independently, the last decade has seen a booming development of Memory Studies, which has transferred its focus from its original subject of the aftermath of the Holocaust to broad conceptions of “cosmopolitan” (Daniel Levy, Nathan Sznaider) and “multi-directional” memory and “post-memory” (Marianne Hirsch), concepts that have been applied globally from Latin America to the Pacific. 
 
The central questions to be considered at the conference are as follows: Is the terror in places like Katyn or Kolyma, as in Auschwitz, unrepresentable, or have art and history learned how to represent these events? How do we need to revise postcolonial categories such as orientalism, hegemony, or the subaltern when referring to places such as Belarus or Kazakhstan? How are people across the postsocialist world making sense of its serial catastrophes? What does the memory of the past teach us about power and culture in the present and in the future?


 

Participants

The keynote address will be delivered by Michael Rothberg from the University of Illinios.

How to participate to the Workshop

Interested scholars should submit a full proposal. Proposals shall consist of an abstract of 300-500 words and a short CV. Please send your applications to Jill Gather by 1 October 2011. See the full call here on PECOB.

Organizer and Partners

Information & contacts

Jill Gather
University of Cambridge
e-mail:jg611@cam.ac.uk 
 

Mirees

Find content by geopolitical unit

Sponsors