Thursday, 21 September 2017
17.00–17.40: Conference Opening
17.40–18.15: Opening of the exhibition “1927 – Violent Solution in Austria”
18.15–20.00: Keynote Lecture: Immanuel Ness (City University of New York): Working Class Spontaneity, Organisation and the Revolutionary Path: Past, Present, Future
20.00–21.00: Welcome Reception
Friday, 22 September 2017
8.30–10.00: Panel I: Labour Encountering the October Revolution, 1917-1920s (Chair and comment: tba)
- Dimitriy Churakov (Moscow State Pedagogical University): Half-Worker, Half-Peasant: The Events in Izhevsk 1917-1918 from the Point of View of the Peculiarities of Modernization in Russia
- Tiina Lintunen (University of Turku): The Networks of the Rebellious Red Women in Finland in 1918
- Marine Dhermy-Mairal (Grenoble Institute of Political Studies): The ILO Enquiry on Bolshevism in the Twenties: Between Fear, Curiosity and Learning
10.00–10.30: Coffee Break
10.30–12.00: Panel II: Communist and Post-Fordist Politics of Labour in the Short 20th Century (Chair and comment: tba)
- Bernhard Bayerlein (Institute for Social Movements, Ruhr-University Bochum): Instructors, Professional Revolutionaries and Comintern Officials: Transnational Leading Groups and Revolution as 'Work‘?
- Jesper Jørgensen (The Workers’ Museum, Copenhagen): Revolution, Radical Anti-Fascism and Transnational Solidarity: The Danish Seamen and Harbour Workers’ Revolutionary Union Opposition (1933-1934)
- Leo Kühberger (Graz): 1917 and 1968: Comparing Revolutions at the „Hidden Abodes of Production”
12.00–13.00: Lunch
13.00–14.15: Special Event: "The Prague Spring, Scientific-Technical Revolution and Socialism". A conversation (with audience participation) with Mikulás Teich (Cambridge), chaired by Susan Zimmermann (Central European University, Budapest)
14.15–14.45: Coffee Break
14.45–16.15: Panel III: Eastern Europe: Labour Regimes and the Logics of Change, 1940s-1990 (Chair and comment: Goran Musić (Centre for Southeast European Studies, University of Graz))
- Katja Praznik (State University of New York at Buffalo): Artistic Labour During Self-Managed Socialism: From Avant-Garde to the Alternative
- Adrian Grama (Central European University, Budapest): Rethinking the Post-War Conjuncture: Labour and the Politics of Productivity in Eastern Europe (1945-1960)
- Renate Hürtgen (Berlin): “Nobody will take away my experience!” Forms of Workers’ Self-Organisation during the Revolutionary Change 1989/90 in the GDR
17.30–18.45: Dinner
19.30–21.30: Public Event at the Chamber of Labour of Upper Austria (Volksgartenstraße 40, A-4020 Linz)
Saturday, 23 September 2017
9.00–10.15: Panel IV: Revolutionizing Labour Relations and World Order, 1790-1848 (Chair and comment: tba)
- Pepijn Brandon (Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam/International Institute of Social History, Amsterdam) & Niklas Frykman (University of Pittsburgh): Revolutionizing the Republic of Wood: Maritime Labour in the late 18th and early 19th Centuries
- Gabriel Di Meglio (University of Buenos Aires/National Scientific and Technical Research Council/CONICET): Plebeians, Politics and Labour Relations in Revolutionary Argentina (1810-1825)
- Wolfgang Häusler (University of Vienna): Dr. Ernst von Violand. Labour as the basis of democracy and the social history of the Revolution 1848 in Austria
10.15–10.30: Coffee Break
10.30–12.30: Panel V: Reordering Labour in Revolutionary Asia (Chair and comment: tba)
- Matthew Galway (University of British Columbia, Vancouver/University of California, Berkeley): Spectres of Dependency: Labour Relations, Unequal Development and the Origins of Cambodian Communism (1955-1965)
- Sepideh Nekomanesh (Stockholm University): Changed Concepts about “Workers” and “Women’s Role as Economic Agents” in the Aftermath of the Iranian Revolution 1979
- David Palmer (University of Melbourne): From Imperial Fascism to the Edge of Labour Revolution: Workers and Japan’s Military-Industrial Complex (1931-1952)
- Felix Wemheuer (University of Cologne): The Impact of the Chinese Cultural Revolution on Labour Relations
12.30–13.30: Lunch
13.30–15.30: Panel VI: Labour, Transnational Interaction and Decolonization, 1940s-1960s (Chair and comment: tba)
- Raquel Varela (Universidade Nova de Lisboa) & João Carlos Louçã (Universidade Nova de Lisboa): Forced Labour and the Portuguese Revolution: A Global Labour History Perspective
- Kerstin Stubenvoll (Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin): Colonial Work, Trade Union Influence and Anti-Colonial Self-Assertion in the Cameroon War of Decolonization
- Christian Chevandier (University of Le Havre): Working in the Railways before, during and after the Algerian Revolution (1950-1970)
- Prerna Agarwal (King’s College London): The Confidence of Labouring: The Potency of the Wartime Experiences of Indian Labour at the Port of Calcutta
15.30–16.00: Coffee Break
16.00–17.00: Concluding Debate (Chair: tba)
Registration: http://www.ith.or.at/konf_e/53_index_e.htm