Jan Surman, -, Masaryk Institute and Archives of the Czech Academy of Sciences
Thursday, March 30
15:30-16:00 Registration and Introduction
16:00-19:00 Session I
Chair: Galina Babak
Oksana Blashkiv: Slavic Studies and/or “minority science”: the case of Dmytro Čyževsky
Ekaterina Shashlova: Migrants and new knowledge. Franco-German cultural transfer between the world wars
Maria Silina: Museum practitioners in exile and the creation of Russian-centred narratives in the Soviet Union
Patrick Flack: Roman Jakobson: between Russian Emigration and International Science
Friday, March 31
9:00-12:00 Session II
Chair: Tomáš Gecko
Natalia Aleksiun: Jewish Physicians and Minority Medicine in the Second Polish Republic
Lara Bonneau: “general Science of art” (die allgemeine Kunstwissenschaft), Emil Utitz, a German-speaking Czech philosopher (1883-1956)
Florian Ruttner: “Religious affiliation: Dissident”. Josef Doppler and the Margins of Academia
Laurens Schlicht: Franziska Baumgarten on Gender Identity, the Values of Science, and the Social Role of Psychology, ca. 1920–1950
13:30-15:00 Session III
Chair: Joris Vandendriessche
Maria Pirogovskaya: Multiple Minority and the Metropolitan Science: One Controversy about Tibetan Studies under Stalin
Filip Herza: Researching Ruthenia: Science on the Margins – Marginals in Science
Michael Wedekind: Interwar Minority Scholarship in South Tyrol
15:30-17:30 Session IV
Chair: Jan Surman
Kai Johann Willms: Polish-Jewish Sociologists in Interwar Poland and in American Exile
Friedrich Pollack: Empowerment and suppression. Sorbian historiography and the institutionalisation of Sorbian Studies in the GDR
Göktuğ İpek: Being a Leftist Academician in New “Democratic” Turkey After The WWII
Saturday, April 1
9:00-12:00 Session V
Chair: Michaela Šmidrkalová
Slava Gerovitch: Playing the System: Soviet Mathematicians’ Strategies of Circumvention
Irina Antoshchuk: Russian-speaking computer scientists in the UK as immigrant minority: revealing unexpected advantages and disadvantages
Elisa Satjukow: At the Margins of History: The German Sonderweg of East and Southeast European Studies after the End of the Cold War
Tina Magazzini: Romani studies between academic power relations and EU funding: methodological field notes