New academic announcements from Sunday 7 March

Dear readers, this week on our blog you can find information, among others, about the following new publications: Freimüller, Tobias (2020). Frankfurt und die Juden. Neuanfänge und Fremdheitserfahrungen 1945–1990 explores the life of the Jewish community in Frankfurt after the Second World War. Articles published online as a part of the special issue entitled ‘ContestedContinue reading “New academic announcements from Sunday 7 March”

“Contested Minorities in the ‘New Europe’”: six articles published online

We are delighted to announce the online publication of six articles which will comprise a special issue, entitled ‘Contested Minorities in the ‘New Europe’: National Identities from the Baltics to the Balkans, 1918-1939’, of the journal National Identities. These contributions are based on papers originally presented at the academic conference ‘Contested Minorities in the ‘NewContinue reading ““Contested Minorities in the ‘New Europe’”: six articles published online”

New academic announcements from Sunday 28 February

Dear readers, this week on our blog you can find information, among others, about the following new publications: Dina Danon (2020) The Jews of Ottoman Izmir A Modern History (Stanford University Press) tells the story of a vibrant and substantial Sephardi Jewish community in Izmir, drawing on previously untapped Ladino archival material. Lecture: Shared Soundscapes:Continue reading “New academic announcements from Sunday 28 February”

New academic announcements from Sunday 21 February

Dear readers, this week on our blog you can find information, among others, about the following new publications: Lidia Zessin-Jurek, Katharina Friedla (red.) (2020) Syberiada Żydów polskich: losy uchodźców z zagłady discusses the ambiguous position of the Soviet Union towards Polish Jews during the Second World War. K. Čapková u.a. (Hrsg.) (2020): Zwischen Prag undContinue reading “New academic announcements from Sunday 21 February”

Join us for the Ukrainian Studies Online Colloquium (virtual event)

On Monday 22 February (6-8pm CET) our co-organiser, Dr Olena Palko, will be speaking, and taking questions on the topic Counting souls, ascribing nationality: interpreting imperial and early Soviet nationalities statistics, as part of the Ukrainian Studies Online Colloquium (European University Viadrina/Prisma Ukraina) (Zoom event) If you’re interested in attending, please feel free to get inContinue reading “Join us for the Ukrainian Studies Online Colloquium (virtual event)”

Join us for the book presentation: ‘Yugoslavia in the British Imagination’ (2021)

On Wednesday 24 February (1-2pm GMT) our co-organiser, Dr Samuel Foster, will be speaking, and taking questions on his forthcoming book ‘Yugoslavia in the British Imagination‘ (Bloomsbury Academic, 2021), as part of the University of East Anglia’s Visiting Fellow Seminar Series. If you’re interested in attending, please feel free to get in touch via sgmh.basees@gmail.comContinue reading “Join us for the book presentation: ‘Yugoslavia in the British Imagination’ (2021)”

New academic announcements from Sunday 14 February

Dear readers, this week on our blog you can find information, among others, about the following new publications: Agnieszka Kościańska (2021) Gender, Pleasure, and Violence. The Construction of Expert Knowledge of Sexuality in Poland that traces the study of sexual human behavior as it was developed and professionalized in Poland since the 1960s and exploresContinue reading “New academic announcements from Sunday 14 February”

New academic announcements from Sunday 7 February

Dear readers, this week on our blog you can find information, among others, about the following new publications: M. Dworczyk, R. Kuśnierz (2020). The Holodomor. Poland. Polish Victims 1932-1933 discusses the Polish angle of the famine in Ukraine. Oksana Kis (2021). Survival as Victory. Ukrainian Women in the Gulag offers the first anthropological study of dailyContinue reading “New academic announcements from Sunday 7 February”

New academic announcements from Sunday 31 January

Dear readers, this week on our blog you can find information, among others, about the following new publications: Dorota Litwin-Lewandowska (2020) The Polish Reason of State in Austria. The Poles in the Political Life of Austria in the Period of the Dual Monarchy (1867–1918) describes the history of the Polish diaspora in the Habsburg monarchyContinue reading “New academic announcements from Sunday 31 January”