Date | Time | Location |
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Monday, April 16, 2018 | 10:00AM - 4:00PM | Seminar Room 108N, 1 Devonshire Place |
Interdisciplinary research is discussed more often than it is practiced. Research is becoming increasingly specialized and fragmented across the vast array of disciplines and subfields, and scholars studying similar phenomena rarely speak with one another. This workshop aims to break down such barriers among scholars, bringing together graduate students from various disciplines who work on the dynamics of micro-level political violence in Ukraine, other areas of Eastern Europe, and East Asia. In addition to sharing their research in progress, participants will have the opportunity to compare approaches to studying micro-level political violence, as well as learn from a collection of case studies. What can Ukrainian studies learn from scholars who examine political violence in different contexts? What can others learn from Ukrainian studies? What are the benefits and pitfalls of interdisciplinary engagement, and how can we engage in it constructively moving forward? This gathering, in a working group setting, will provide a rare opportunity for discussion of the benefits, challenges, pitfalls, and avenues for future collaborative research.
Session I
10:00am-12:30pm
Moderator: Daniel Fedorowycz, Jacyk Program, CERES
Seeing is Believing: Public Display and the Threat of Micro-sized Groups in Indonesia
Jessica Soedigo, University of Toronto
Crimean Tatar Non-Violent National Movement in the Age of Collapse
Mariia Shynkarenko, The New School University
Dynamics of politicide in Central Java and Yogyakarta during the 1965-66 Indonesian Anti-communist campaign
Mark Winward, University of Toronto
Secrets and Silences in the Archives. Narratives of Violence in Holodomor, the Ukrainian Famine of 1932-33
Karolina Koziura, The New School University
Remembering Violence: Survivor Interpretations of the 1932-33 Famine (Holodomor) in Ukraine
John Vsetecka, Michigan State University
Session II
1:30pm-4:00pm
Moderator: Daniel Fedorowycz, Jacyk Program, CERES
Occupation as an Enabler of Local Conflict: Belarusian-Polish Relations in Belarus, 1941-1944
Aleksandra Pomiecko, University of Toronto
‘Repatriation’: The Resettlement, Exchange and Expulsion of the Polish Civilian Population from the Soviet Drohobycz Region of Ukraine to Poland, 1944 – 1946
Michal Mlynarz, University of Toronto
Fifty Shades of Blue: The Polinische Polizei and the Holocaust in the Subcarpathian Region of District Krakow
Tomasz Frydel, University of Toronto
Crimes of Retreat: The Final Days of Occupation in Rostov-on-Don (22 January-7 February 1943)
Maris Rowe-McCulloch, University of Toronto
The Political Economy of Famine: the Ukrainian Famine of 1933
Natalya Naumenko, Northwestern University
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