Conference: Call for Papers

The 1989 Revolutions in Central and Eastern Europe: Twenty Years On

10-12 September 2009 , Sheffield Hallam University


Organisers: Dr Kevin McDermott and Dr Matthew Stibbe, both in the Department of History, Sheffield Hallam University

Keynote Speakers: Robin Okey (University of Warwick)
Pavel Seifter (Former Czech ambassador to London)

The aim of this conference is to take a fresh look at the 1989 revolutions in Central and Eastern Europe to mark the occasion of the twentieth anniversary in the autumn of 2009. The approach is broadly historical, but we would welcome proposals from a range of different disciplines, such as Cultural and Gender/Women’s Studies, Sociology, Modern Languages and of course History. By bringing together scholars working on the 1989 revolutions in national and transnational contexts, we hope to make a distinctive and worthwhile contribution to this area.
Key themes considered could include:

We invite contributions from scholars working on all Soviet-bloc Eastern European countries which saw the overthrow of communist rule in 1989/90, including the GDR, Poland, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Romania and Bulgaria. We are also looking for contributions on the role and significance of external players, particularly Gorbachev’s Soviet Union and the leading western nations (USA, Britain, West Germany, France).

A key element of this conference is the planned publication of a selection of papers in an edited volume (projected publication date 2011). The organisers have published two previous collections of essays on post-1945 Eastern Europe: Revolution and Resistance in Eastern Europe: Challenges to Communist Rule (Oxford: Berg, 2006); and Stalinist Terror in Eastern Europe: Elite Purges and Mass Repression (Manchester: Manchester University Press, forthcoming in 2009).

Contributors should seek funding from their own institution in the first instance, but it is anticipated that some support might become available through potential sponsors.

Please send us proposals, including working title and brief description of your paper (max. 350 words), by 31 July 2008.