Memory at War
The Memory at War project is holding a postgraduate conference on Memory Studies in Eastern Europe on 11-12 March 2011 at the University of Cambridge.
The conference will be the first of a series of three to be held annually between the University of Cambridge, the University of Oxford, and the UCL School of Slavonic and East European Studies, London.
In Western Europe and North America, Memory Studies have proliferated in the last decade, causing a ‘memory boom’ in the humanities and social sciences. Yet these methodologies have been slow to address the cultural dynamics of memory in Eastern Europe. This series of conferences seeks to address this gap.
The conference series is designed to provide a
forum for the rapidly expanding number of
postgraduate students pursuing research on East
European memory. The conferences offer
postgraduate students the opportunity to share
their research in progress and to discover what
research is being conducted beyond the confines of
their home university. This is also a unique
opportunity to receive additional feedback from
more senior scholars, including international
experts in the field, who will be acting as
discussants on the panels. All in all, we see the
conference series as an important step in the
process of building up a vibrant and friendly East
European Memory Studies research community.
The March 2011 conference is open to postgraduate
students with an interest in any aspect of Memory
Studies that relates to Eastern Europe. We
encourage students of history, cultural studies,
literature, media studies, cinema and the social
sciences to apply. Undergraduates with an interest
in going on to postgraduate research in the field
are also more than welcome to attend.
Some funding will be available to cover travel for presenters within the UK and overnight accommodation in Cambridge.
DEADLINE: Please send an abstract of your paper,
of no more than 300 words
by 31 January 2011.
ORGANISING COMMITTEE
- Alexander Etkind, Uilleam Blacker & Julie Fedor (Cambridge)
- Polly Jones (SSEES, UCL)
- Muireann Maguire & Josie von Zitzewitz (Oxford)
