Informacje dla pracowników dostępne po zalogowaniu

Nie pamiętasz hasła?

Program konferencji „Agency of Concepts in Interface Regions: Asymmetries, Asynchronities, and Discontinuations”

Program konferencji „Agency of Concepts in Interface Regions: Asymmetries, Asynchronities, and Discontinuations”

THE 24TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON THE HISTORY OF CONCEPTS

Agency of Concepts in Interface Regions: Asymmetries, Asynchronities, and Discontinuations

 

Program

Czwartek, 28 września


9:00–10:30
Aula 0.410

Conference opening and lecture by Yaroslav Hrytsak

 

10:30–12:30
Uniwersytet Warszawski, ul. Dobra 55, 00-312 Warszawa

Sesja I

Power Bids Over Space (sala 2.014)

Elżbieta Kwiecińska, Polish scheme of Rus’ history”. The idea of continuing Rus’ in Polish 19th-century historiography

Galina Durinova van der Hallen, Contesting the concepts of space in Eurasian region: M. Czaplicka’s “Siberian peoprle’s land” vs Siberian terra nullius in Russian Imperial Ethnography

Adam Dargiewicz, Mapping “Bulwark(s) of Europe”: Polish, German and British Visions of Imagined Borderlands (1815–1871)

Yury Kagarlitskiy, Audacity, vice or virtue: Human behavior in danger and the marking of imperial territory

 

Concepts in Science Studies (sala 3.017)

Jeroen Hopster, Conceptual Gaps, Overlaps, and Misalignments: New Concepts for Analyzing Conceptual Change

Sylwia Borowska-Kazimiruk, From Wundt’s Blickfeld to Heinrich’s stereoscopy. The concept of visual perception in experimental psychology at the turn of the 20th century

Nicola Bertoldi, Eugenics across time and space: a conceptual-historical sketch

Tomáš W. Pavlíček, Asymmetries in Circulation of Knowledge after 1945. Oral History Analysis of Mathematical Concepts

 

Concepts in Art and Education (sala 3.018)

Hugo Merlo, Lack, excess and the centrality of the other: historical imagination in Brazilian avant-gardist modernism

Jorge Omar Mora Rodríguez, From Instruction to Education. Political Projects and Conceptual Displacements in 19th Century Mexico

Elina Hakoniemi, Education for the society – education by the society: The conceptual history of “the society” within the Finnish social democratic educational reform policies in 1930s–1960s

Klara Müller, Unravelling a Quality Dissonance: Tracing Research Quality in Policy Discussions on the Humanities

 

Two Brothers: Progress and Crisis (sala 3.019)

Walderez Ramalho, “Crisis” as a historicizing concept

Ahmed Nuri, The Concept of the Tragic and its Uses in Relation to That of Crisis in Turkish Literary and Intellectual History

Karolina Kluczewska, Visualising peshraft: what development means in post-Soviet Tajikistan

Weronika Adamska, The concept of the state of emergency in France (2001–2022): Discursive success, conceptual inflation and reflexivity

 

12:30–13:30 przerwa obiadowa


13:30–15:30
Uniwersytet Warszawski, ul. Dobra 55, 00-312 Warszawa

Sesja II

Politics and Poetics of Regions (sala 2.014)

Alesson Rota, The Senses of America in the First Decades of the 20th Century: A Case Study Based on Digital Methods and Collections

Aleksandra Tobiasz, From geopolitics and regional identity to geopoetics and self-identificati on – a trajectory of conceptualization of Central Europe?

Monika Orechova, That Other Europe: the concept of Central and Eastern Europe in international education scholarship from 1990 to 2000

Liudmyla Pidkuimukha, The Role of History and Language in Realizing the Kremlin’s Colonial Ambitions

 

Parliaments as communicative spaces in 20th century conceptual history (sala 3.017)

Kristoffer Klammer, Fundamental changes in the semantics of ‚Autorität’ (‚authority’) in the the 20th century parliamentary debates

Olga Sabelfeld, Functions of Comparing through Spatial Relations in Parliamentary Welfare State Debates in West Germany and Britain in the 1940s–50s

Stefan Scholl, Adjectives ‘Undemocratic’, ‘Antidemocratic’ and ‘Not Democratic’ in 20th century German Parliamentary Debates

Simon Specht, The Concept of ‘Fortschritt’ (‘progress’) in Debates of the Reichstag and Bundestag

 

Discussions on democracy, common good, and social cohesion in the 1930s Baltic Sea region (sala 3.018)

Topi Houni, Economic council in interwar Finland. Interests, expertise, democracy, and the public interest

Kārlis Sils, Integrating the Working Class into the Nation: Conceptualisations of the Nationalist Worker in Authoritarian Latvia, 1934–1940

Liisi Veski, In search of a third way: “social solidarity” in 1930s authoritarian Estonia and its various ideological functions

Discussant: Jussi Kurunmäki

 

Liberalism and Democracy (sala 3.019)

Mattias Warg, „Liberal” ideas early 19th century Sweden: A conceptual perspective

Krystof Dolezal, Transmission and Diffusion of Christian Democratic Ideology in Postwar Czechoslovakia (1945–1948): The Concept of Christian Europeanism

Hugo Bonin, A ‘crisis of confidence that strikes all liberal democracies’: British and French MPs and ‘liberal democracy’, 1990–2010s

Tomasz Zarycki, Changing meanings of liberalism in Poland

 


15:45–17:30
Uniwersytet Warszawski, ul. Dobra 55, 00-312 Warszawa

Sesja III

Looking at History: Sattlezeit, Distance and the Modern Worldview (sala 2.014)

Bowen Ran, Historical Distance as Narrative Emplotment and Its Political Implication

Todd Weir, Culture Wars and Modern Worldviews: A Transnational Conceptual History

Rodrigo Bonaldo, Machine Sattelzeit: Ai’s Semantics and the Global Communities of a More-Than-Human Planetary History

 

Conceptual histories of Prefixes and Suffixes (sala 3.017)

Jussi Kurunmäki, Jani Marjanen, Ideology, Isms and Democracy

Radoslaw Szymanski, Self-love and political economy: from Swiss moral theory to a project of political reform for Poland-Lithuania

Juhan Saharov, From self-regulation to self-management: Towards comparative history of self concepts in the European space

 

Big Key Concepts (sala 3.018)

Hossein Naeim-Abadi, From Innate Knowledge (al-Ma’rifat al-Iḍṭirārīyah) To Acquired Knowledge; Historical Agency Of A Conceptual Change

Christian Jacobs, Feminist, Postmigrant, and Radical Right Concepts of Culture in France and Beyond, 1968-1984

 

Economy and Globalization (sala 3.019)

Heikki Mikkonen, Conceptualizing Economic Growth in Early 20th Century Finland

Zizhu Wang, The Missing Conceptual History of “International”: Under a Legal-Political Context during Late-Modern Europe

Sean Irving, Kenneth Minogue, the Concept of Competitiveness and the Anglosphere

 


18:00–19:30
Niemiecki Instytut Historyczny, Pałac Karnickich, Aleje Ujazdowskie 39, 00-540 Warszawa

BEYOND ‘HELLENES’ AND ‘BARBARIANS’ Asymmetrical Concepts in European Discourse

Kirill Postoutenko, Michael Freeden, Magdalena Nowicka-Franczak, Falko Schmieder,

chair: Wiktor Marzec
book launch for a new volume in the Berghahn European Conceptual Histories series

19:30 Bankiet


Piątek, 29 września

 

9:00–10:30
Uniwersytet Warszawski, ul. Dobra 55, 00-312 Warszawa
Aula 0.410

John Tresch, wykład: A Genealogy of “Cosmopolitics”; Arrangements of Nature, Science, Society

10:30–12:30
Uniwersytet Warszawski, ul. Dobra 55, 00-312 Warszawa

Sesja IV

Minorities and Diversity Accomodation (sala 2.014)

Wael Abu-’Uksa, Three Concepts of Tolerance in 19th Century Arabic

Rangga Eka Saputra, Enjoyed life in the host lands: Rethinking the concept of minority diaspora in the history of Hadrami communities in Southeast Asia, c. 19th–20th centuries

Lidia Zessin-Jurek, Refugees to Eastern Europe: a lost concept? (the Polish case)
Francesca Freeman, Manipulating the Righteous: Uses and Abuses of the Concept of the ‘Altruistic Rescuer’

 

Parliaments and representation in postimperial Eastern Europe and Eurasia (sala 3.017)

Wiktor Marzec, Patchwork Parliament in a Post-Imperial State: Legislative Imaginations and Constitutional Practice in the Second Polish Republic

Jure Gašparič, Constitutional Debate in the Yugoslav Kingdom and its European Context, 1920–1921

Adéla Gjuričová, Repairing Czechoslovak Parliamentarism: A Few Remarks on Some Invisible Continuities

Ivan Sablin, Reluctant Parliamentarism: Conceptual Debates around the Perestroika Legislature in the USSR, 1988–1991

 

Rebellious Ideas at the turn of the 20th century– Origins and Impacts (sala 3.018)

Bartłomiej Błesznowski, Experimental Utopia. Fraternity as a Core Concept in Edward Abramowski’s “Applied Social Science”

Barbara Brzezicka, “Swoboda” – a forgotten concept of freedom and its philosophical potential in Edward Abramowski’s writings

Dieter Haselbach, Ecological thought in sociology’s formation period: Ferdinand Tönnies as an example

Cezary Rudnicki, Peripheral Perspectives on Ethics of Work. Lafargue and Abramowski on Right to be Lazy

 

Theory of Conceptual History (sala 3.019)

Jani Marjanen, Antti Kanner, What are concepts in conceptual history? Revisiting Koselleck through theories of semantic relations

Timo Pankakoski, Can Conceptual History be Extended to Metaphors?

Zoltán Boldizsár Simon, Connective Concepts

Jaakko Heiskanen, Signatures of Concepts: Koselleck meets Agamben and Derrida

 

12:30–13:30 przerwa obiadowa

 


13:30–15:30
Uniwersytet Warszawski, ul. Dobra 55, 00-312 Warszawa

Sesja V

State, Self-Determination, and ‘Gypsiness’: Multiscalar Conceptual Histories of Modern Habsburg and Post-Habsburg Central Europe (sala 2.014)

Cody James Inglis, What Was ‘the State’ in Habsburg and post-Habsburg Central Europe? On the Varieties of the Concept, 1848–1948

Anna Adorjáni, Self-Determination. Everyday and Official Interpretations in Hungary During the Dissolution of the Dual Monarchy

Vita Zalar, Gypsiness in Habsburg and Post-Habsburg Governmentalities: A Materialist Reading

 

The Politics of Inter- and Supranational Parliamentary Institutions: Conceptual Historical Perspectives (sala 3.017)

Pasi Ihalainen, The Inter-Parliamentary Union as the transnational nexus for discourses on ‘the crisis of parliamentarism’ and ‘parliamentary’ and ‘representative democracy’, 1925–1937

Anna Kronlund, Parliamentary dimension in international affairs: the case study of the United Nations member countries

Kari Palonen, “The European Parliament”: On the politics of naming

Discussant: Anna Björk

 

Political Cleavages (sala 3.018)

Hugo Drochon, Centre/Extremes as an Asymmetric Counter-Concept

Lucila Svampa, How to remember the Nazi past? On the discussion between Reinhart Koselleck and Gabriel Motzkin

Juan Salazar Rebolledo, Rethinking the 1960s Latin American New Left through the Lens of Cultural Resistance

Laura Álvarez Garro, Fascism and totalitarism as expressions of the moralization of politics

 

What About the Planetary Climate Apocalypse? (sala 3.019)

Mats Andren, World responsibility in Europe: considerations on the atomic threat in the 1950s

Erik Isberg, Timing the planet: Multiple temporalities in the making of the Earth System concept

Patricia Aranha, Amazonia in the context of the geographical conceptualization of the Ibero-American World

Jakub Kowalewski, The Concept(s) of Climate Apocalypse: Time, Space, and Politics

 


16:00–16:20
Instytut Historii im. Tadeusza Manteuffla Polskiej Akademii Nauk, Rynek Starego Miasta 29/31, 00-272 Warszawa
(Sala im. Joachima Lelewela)

Adam Kożuchowski, wykład: History of the socio-political concepts in Poland: state of the art and prospects

 

16:20–17:15

Podium Discussion: Modern Humanities and the Question of Scientific Prejudices

Grażyna Szwat-Gyłybow, Ewa Domańska, Ewelina Drzewiecka, Raymond Detrez

 

17:30–19:00

Podium Discussion: Conceptual Change in Interface Regions

Maciej Janowski, Maria Falina, Jana Tsoneva, Felipe Zotti Narita,

chair: Piotr Kuligowski

 


Sobota, 30 września

9:00–11:00
Uniwersytet Warszawski, ul. Dobra 55, 00-312 Warszawa

Sesja VI

Alpine Exceptionalism? Studying the conceptual history of direct democratic instruments through the French, German and Swiss lenses (sala 2.014)

François Robinet, ‘An “helvetic moment” : direct democracy and populism in France, United States of America and Spain by the End of the 19th Century’

Irène Herrmann, ‘Believing to be a role model: the impact of the external view on direct democracy in Switzerland’

Zoé Kergomard (presenting), Hugo Bonin, and Pasi Ihalainen: ‘Exportable or exceptional?: Swiss direct democracy in parliamentary debates in France and Germany, 2000–2019

Commentator: Willibald Steinmetz

 

Temporality Vectors (sala 3.017)

Piotr Kuligowski, How does time flow after a failed revolution? Novel concepts of time and their transfer from French socialists to Polish positivists

Risto Turunen, On Past Futures: Mining Political Temporalities from the Finnish Parliament, 1980–2023

Marcos Reguera, From Philosophy of History to Geopolitics: The paradigm shift on the Concept of Manifest Destiny

Michael Götzelmann, Time and Space upside down – Spatiality and Temporality in Futures Past

 

Nationalism (sala 3.018)

Claudia Snochowska-Gonzalez, Nationalizing relay. Polish women, National Democracy and feeding the body of the nation

Artur Kula, “Polish” treason in the 19th century. A case study of spatial factor of concepts’ agency

Milan Hanyš, ”Ethical Nationalism” between T. G. Masaryk and Prague Zionists

Nina Paulovicova, The Pitfalls of “Transitology.” The Explorations of Far Right Emergence and Circulation in Postcommunist Slovakia

 

Justification of Neoliberalism (sala 3.019)

Ilkka Kärrylä, Conceptual history of ‘neoliberalism’ in the Nordic countries

Juan Serey, What do we talk about when we talk about “Chilean neoliberalism”?

Johan Strang, Neoliberalisation of Nordic democracy?

Iwona Młoźniak, Discourses on ageing in Poland – neoliberal concepts and policies at work

 


11:30–13:30
Uniwersytet Warszawski, ul. Dobra 55, 00-312 Warszawa

Sesja VII

Rethinking Early Socialism, Marxism and Religion in the Ottoman Empire (sala 2.014)

Banu Turnaoğlu, Early Socialism and the impact of the Paris Commune on the Ottoman political imagination in the nineteenth century

Y. Doğan Çetinkaya, The Making of Socialist Thought and Movements among Muslims/Turks in the Ottoman Empire and the Knowledge of Marxism (1905–1919)

Emre Erol, Absorbing Socialism: Islam as the “the real and the first Socialism” in writings of M.H. Kidwai

 

Imposed Epistemologies (sala 3.017)

Michał Pospiszyl, The Eighteenth Century Revolutions and the Birth of the Plebs in the Political Discourse of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth

Adonis Elumbre, Conceptualizing the native: Ethnoracial classifications in the European ethnological imaginaries of late 19th century Philippines

Isabella Consolati, Political Representation Without Concepts: Bruno Latour and The Politics of Technology
Blake Ewing, The spatial-temporal politics of landscape conservation

 

Forms of Groupness (sala 3.018)

NS Gundur, Kayaka and Kaya in Medieval South Indian Imagination: The Concept of Body in Allama Prabhu

Ivan Dimitrijevic, Clan: an attempt in conceptual history

Mikołaj Ratajczak, Is there a common history of the rainbow flag?

Jakub Wolak, Beyond „classical republican tradition”. Polish nobles’ Rzeczpospolita and the early modern resemantization of res publica

 

Conceptual Reverbarations in Political History (sala 3.019)

Tibor Bodnár-Király, Enlightenment Temporalized: Perfectionism and Social Progress in Eighteenth-Century Habsburg Central Europe

Adam Kozuchowski, An Unfinished Transfer or the Discreet Curse of the Polish Bourgeoisie

Luis Ignacio Viana, National Periods

 

Więcej informacji: https://www.historyofconcepts.net/24th-international-conference-2023/programme/