[Gesth-l] Hösök és hösnők- konferencia meghivó

Pető Andrea Dr. petoand at t-online.hu
2010. Okt. 19., K, 17:33:18 CEST


PROGRAMME

 

CULT OF HEROES FROM THE 1880s TO WORLD WAR II 

PRACTICES AND REPRESENTATIONS

 

Friday, 12 November 2010 

9:00: Welcome Notes.

Katalin Farkas, Associate Professor, Department of Philosophy, Central European University.

François Laquieze, director of the French Institute of Budapest.

A word from Eszter Balázs and Clara Royer.

09:30-11:00 - CANONIZING HEROES 1.

Chair: Andrea Pető, associate professor at the Department of Gender Studies, CEU.

Adela KOBELSKA (Warsaw): Romantic Poet as a Hero in Modern Polish Literary Studies.

Peter MACHO (Bratislava): Matúą Čák/Csák Máté from Trenčin As a Slovak National Hero.

Eszter BALÁZS (Budapest): Dual, Manhood and Heroism: the case of Hungarian writers (1890-1914).

11:00 - COFFEE BREAK

11:30-13:00 - CANONIZING HEROES 2. 

Chair: Contantin Iordachi, Head of the Department of History, CEU, and co-director of Pasts, Inc. Center for Historical Studies.

Michel MASLOWSKI (Paris): Joseph Piłsudski, a Hero from Poland.

Étienne BOISSERIE (Paris): Celebrating the Liberators: Interwar Buildings of a Czechoslovak Pantheon.

Luka Lisjak GABRIJELČIČ (Budapest and Sofia): Martyrs and Heroes among Slovenes and Italians in the Northern Adriatic Borderlands: Two National Projects between Mutual Opposition and Mimetic Competition.

 

13:00 - LUNCH AT THE CEU.

14:30-16:30 - WHEN HEROES BECAME TOOLS. 

Chair: Catherine Horel, research director at the CNRS (IRICE, Paris I University).

Tímea JABLONCZAY (Budapest): Ilona Zrínyi, the "Mother of the Nation". A specific Conservative Female Identity Construction in the Hungarian Interwar Period.

Michal K©IŇAN (Bratislava/Prague): ©tefánik´s Death and (Czecho)Slovak Identity.

Gerben ZAAGSMA (London): Naftali Botwin - a Jewish Communist Hero in Interwar Poland.

Andrea PETŐ (Budapest): Unlikely Heroines of the Extreme Right Movements: Gender and Movement.

 

20:00 - DINNER for the conference participants.



Saturday, 13 November 2010

09:30-11:00 - SUBVERSIVE OR SUBVERTED? 1.

Chair: Gábor Klaniczay, Permanent Fellow of Collegium Budapest, Professor at the Department of Medieval Studies at the Central European University.

Petra JAMES (Paris): The Marginal Figure: A Hero of Turn-of-Century Czech Literature? 

Weronika PARFIANOWICZ (Warsaw): Heroes and Anti-heroes of the Central-European Modern Novel  (Musil, Schulz, Kafka, Haąek).

Xavier GALMICHE (Paris): Homo-Erotism, Homo-Heroism (in Austrian and Czech Literatures).

11:00-11:30 - COFFEE BREAK

11:30-12:45 - SUBVERSIVE OR SUBVERTED? 2.

Chair: Clara Royer, Associate Professor at Paris-Sorbonne University and member of the Interdisciplinary Research Centre on Central Europe (CIRCE).

Joanna TEGNEROWICZ (Wrocław): The Blood-Soaked Spectre or the Avenger-Hero: On Popular and Literary Images of Jakub Szela.

Mateusz CHMURSKI (Paris/Warsaw): Antihero / Self-Heroicization: Karol Irzykowski & Ladislav Klíma's "Crusades Against the Principle of Identity".

12 :30 - LUNCH AT THE CEU.

14:00-15:45 - QUESTIONNING HEROES. 

Chair: Balázs Trencsényi, Assistant Professor, Department of History, CEU.

Katarzyna PABIJANEK (Warsaw): Making of a Hero. Problematic Heroism of Emilia Plater and Berek Joselewicz.

Balázs SIPOS (Budapest): Heroes or victims? New woman and modernity in Hungary in the interwar period.

Paweł RODAK (Warsaw): "What and how to fight for?" Figures of Hero and the Problem of Heroic Attitudes of the Polish War Generation.

 

 

 

      Friday 12 November 2010
     
      09:00-09:30
     Welcome Notes

      .         Katalin Farkas, Associate Professor, Department of Philosophy, Central European University.

      .         François Laquieze, director of the French Institute of Budapest.

      .         A word by Eszter Balázs and Clara Royer.
     
      09:30-11:00 
     CANONIZING HEROES 1.
     
      Adela KOBELSKA 
     Institute of Polish Culture, University of Warsaw.

      Romantic Poet as a Hero in Modern Polish Literary Studies.
     
      Peter MACHO 
     History Institute of the Slovak Academy of Sciences, Bratislava.

      Matúą Čák/Csák Máté from Trenčin As a Slovak National Hero.
     
      Eszter BALÁZS 
     János Kodolányi University College, Department of Media and Communication, Budapest.

      Dual, Manhood and Heroism: the case of Hungarian writers (1890-1914).
     
      11:30-13:00 
     CANONIZING HEROES 2.
     
      Michel MASLOWSKI 
     Paris-Sorbonne University - CIRCE, Paris.

      Joseph Piłsudski, a Hero from Poland.
     
      Étienne BOISSERIE 
     INALCO - CREE, Paris.

      Celebrating the Liberators: the Creation of a Czech and Slovak  Philatelic Pantheon 1918-1945.
     
      Luka Lisjak GABRIJELČIČ
     Department of History, CEU, Budapest & Centre of Advanced Studies (CAS), Sofia.

      Martyrs and Heroes among Slovenes and Italians in the Northern Adriatic Borderlands: Two National Projects between Mutual Opposition and Mimetic Competition.
     
      14:30-16:30
     WHEN HEROES BECAME TOOLS.
     
      Tímea JABLONCZAY 
     King Sigismund University College, Department of Media and Communication, Budapest.

      Ilona Zrínyi, the "Mother of the Nation". A specific Conservative Female Identity Construction in the Hungarian Interwar Period.
     
      Michal K©IŇAN 
     History Institute of the Slovak Academy of Sciences, Bratislava & CEFRES, Prague.

      ©tefánik´s Death and (Czecho)Slovak Identity.
     
      Gerben ZAAGSMA 
     Department of Hebrew and Jewish Studies - University College London.

      Naftali Botwin - a Jewish Communist Hero in Interwar Poland.
     
      Andrea PETŐ 
     Department of Gender Studies, CEU

      Unlikely Heroines of the Extreme Right Movements: Gender and Movement.
     
      Saturday, 13 November 2010 
     
      09:30-11:00 
     SUBVERSIVE OR SUBVERTED? 1.
     
      Petra JAMES 
     Paris-Sorbonne University - CIRCE - Paris.

      The Marginal Figure: A Hero of Turn-of-Century Czech Literature?
     
      Weronika PARFIANOWICZ

       
     Institute of Polish Culture, University of Warsaw.

      Heroes and Anti-heroes of the Central-European Modern Novel  (Musil, Schulz, Kafka, Haąek).
     
      Xavier GALMICHE 
     Paris-Sorbonne University - CIRCE - Paris.

      Homo-Erotism, Homo-Heroism (in Austrian and Czech Literatures).
     
      11:30-12:45 
     SUBVERSIVE OR SUBVERTED? 2.
     
      Joanna TEGNEROWICZ 
     Department of Urban and Rural Sociology, Institute of Sociology - University of Wrocław.

      The Blood-Soaked Spectre or the Avenger-Hero: On Popular and Literary Images of Jakub Szela.
     
      Mateusz CHMURSKI 
     Paris-Sorbonne University - CIRCE - Paris & Department of Modern Literature of the University of Warsaw. 

      Antihero / Self-Heroicization: Karol Irzykowski & Ladislav Klíma's "Crusades Against the Principle of Identity".
     
      14:00-16:00
     QUESTIONNING HEROES.
     
      Katarzyna PABIJANEK 
     Warsaw School for Social Science and Humanities (SWPS)

      Making of a Hero. Problematic Heroism of Emilia Plater and Berek Joselewicz.
     
       Balázs SIPOS
     Eötvös Loránd University (ELTE), Budapest

      Heroes or victims? New woman and modernity in Hungary in the interwar period.
     
      Paweł RODAK 
     Institute of Polish Culture, University of Warsaw

      "What and how to fight for?" Figures of Hero and the Problem of Heroic Attitudes of the Polish War Generation.
     
       

 

 
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