Date: 11th to 12th of May 2012
Location: Central European University, Budapest, Hungary
Coorganized by Pasts Inc., Center for Historical Studies located at the Central European University in Budapest (http://pasts.ceu.hu/) and Imre Kertész Kolleg Jena (http://www.imre-kertesz-kolleg.uni-jena.de/), East Central Europe in the 20th Century. Roundtable on the State of the Art of Historical Studies is meant to serve two interrelated purposes. First, it is called to foster reflection and dialogue on the state of the art and potential future direction of historical research dealing with East Central Europe in the 20th century. Therefore, a select cohort of mostly young experts are invited to share their scholarly insights and personal experiences and leading historians of the middle generation are kindly asked to serve as commentators.
Second, the roundtable is organized to acquaint German and internationally oriented East Central European scholars (who often work, next to their mother tongues, primarily in English) with each other. Based on the perception that these two scholarly communities exist in parallel with too little interaction between them, the roundtable is supposed to serve as the starting point for more sustained engagement, provide a forum where a new kind of network can be established and joint projects might be launched.
Specific subjects shall be discussed in individual panels ranging from alternative approaches to the study of the region and the variety of the regional problématique as it is conceived in various localities through diverging and conflicting national interpretations to the study of dictatorships and their rememberance to the challenge of integrating major non-national actors and themes into mainstream historiography (please see below). Individual presentations shall last no longer than fifteen to twenty minutes and will be followed by comments and discussions.
Our roundtable shall draw on in-depth studies of recent historiography published in volumes such as Narratives Unbound: Historical Studies in Post-Communist Eastern Europe edited by Sorin Antohi, Balázs Trencsényi, Péter Apor and (Re)Writing History: Historiography in Southeast Europe after Socialism edited by Ulf Brunnbauer as well as on all-European projects on modern historiography such as the volumes in the Writing the Nation series edited by Stefan Berger, Christoph Conrad and Guy P. Marchal.
Accommodation costs, diner on the 11th of May and catering during the event will be covered by the organizers. While travel expenses could partially be covered as well, participants are encouraged to seek refunds for their travel expenses to and from Budapest at their home institutions.
List of Invited Speakers:
Péter Apor, Błażej Brzostek, Holly Case, Roumen Daskalov, Maria Falina, Margit Feischmidt, Andrea Feldman, Sabina Ferhadbegović, Andrej Findor, Paul Gradvohl, Bogdan Iacob, Constantin Iordachi, Ines Koeltzsch, Pavel Kolář, Michal Kopeček, René Küpper, Ferenc Laczó, James Mark, Ovidiu Pecican, Vladimir Petrović, Joachim von Puttkamer, Balázs Trencsényi, Martin Zückert
List of Invited Commentators:
Włodzimierz Borodziej, Ulf Brunnbauer, Peter Haslinger, László Kontler, Diana Mishkova, Martin Schulze Wessel
Structure of the event
11th of May 2012
13:00 Introductory Words. Balázs Trencsényi and Ferenc Laczó
13:15 Panel One. Comparative, Transnational and Entangled Approaches to East Central Europe in the 20th Century
Commentator: Peter Haslinger
Joachim von Puttkamer / East Central Europe in the 20th Century in Comparative Perspective
Holly Case / Transnational Approaches to East Central Europein the 20th Century
Balázs Trencsényi / The Challenge of Studying the Political Thought of EastCentral Europe: Between European Embeddedness and National Autarcy
Discussion
15:15 Break
15:30 Panel Two and Three. The Regional Problématique in Various National Contexts
Commentators: Diana Mishkova and Martin Schulze Wessel
Pavel Kolář / On Czech regional conceptualizations
Błażej Brzostek / On Polish regional conceptualizations
Péter Apor / On Hungarian regional conceptualizations
Andrej Findor / On Slovakian regional conceptualizations
17:00 -17:15 Break
Roumen Daskalov / On Bulgarian regional conceptualizations
Petr Gradvohl / On French regional conceptualizations
Andrea Feldman / On regional conceptualization in the post-Yugoslav space
Till 18:45, Diner at 19:30
12th of May 2012
10:00-12:00 Panel Four. Dealing with Conflicting National Interpretations
Commentator: Włodzimierz Borodziej
René Küpper and Michal Kopeček / Czech-German
Vladimir Petrović and Sabina Ferhadbegović / Serbian-Croatian-Bosnian
Ovidiu Pecican / Hungarian-Romanian
Discussion
12:00-13:30 Lunch Break
13:30-15:30 Panel Five. The Dual Dictatorial Legacy of the 20th Century: Current Uses and the Challenge of Historicization
Commentator: Ulf Brunnbauer
Bogdan Iacob / New Trends in the Study of Communism
James Mark / Studying the Memory of Communism
Constantin Iordachi / New Trends in the Study of Fascism
Margit Feischmidt / Studying Contemporary Right-Wing Extremism
Discussion
16:00-17:00 Panel Five. Integrating Non-National Phenomena and Non-Mainstream Historical Actors
Commentator: László Kontler
Maria Falina and Martin Zückert on the Historical Study of Religion
Ines Koeltzsch and Ferenc Laczó on Jewish History
(Potentially additional presentations on Gender, Migration, Muslims and/or the Roma)
17:00-17:30 Final Discussion and Closing Remarks