Wednesday, 13 March 2019
14.45
Sarah Panter (Mainz), Johannes Paulmann (Mainz), and Lyndal Roper (Oxford) – Welcome and Introduction
15.30
Irene Vicente Martin (EUI Florence) – Salvador da Bahia, a Bounded City with Blurred Walls: A Re-Examination of a Brazilian Town in Hispanic Monarchy Times
16.15
Louis Morris (Oxford) – Borderlands and Fatherlands: ‘Foreign’ Soldiery in the Holy Roman Empire 1576–1618
17.00
Annika Bärwald (Bremen) – Black Hamburg: Trafficked People of Color in an Early Modern European Port City
Thursday, 14 March 2019
9.30
Sasha Rasmussen (Oxford) – Femininity in the Early Twentieth Century, Paris and St. Petersburg
10.15
Lotte Houwink ten Cate (Columbia University) – The Dark Side of Intimacy: Familial Violence in Modern Europe, 1970–1997
11:30
Philipp Krauer (ETH Zurich) – Money for Mercenaries: Relocating the Dutch Colonial Empire in Swiss Archives, 1848–1914
12:15
Anastasiia Strakhova (Emory) – Imagining Emigration: Crossing the Borders of Russian Jewry during the Era of Mass Migration, 1881–1917
14:30
Riley Linebaugh (Giessen) – Stolen Archives: The Struggle between Kenya and Britain over the Records of Empire
15:15
Thom Loyd (Georgetown) – Black in the USSR: African Students, Soviet Empire, and the Global Politics of Education during the Cold War, 1956–1976
16:30
Rachel Kupferman (Bar Ilan) – The Representation of Dutch Jews of the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries in Visual Culture
17:15
Nebiha Guiga (Heidelberg/EHESS) – Being Wounded in Combat and Healed in Napoleonic Europe, 1805–1813
Friday, 15 March 2019
9:00
Valentina Mann (Cambridge) – Theories of the Mind and the Disciplining of Anthropology, c. 1880–1912
9:45
Marjan Wardaki (UCLA) – Knowledge-Seekers between Afghanistan and Germany: The Exchange and Production of Technical and Scientific Ideas, 1919–1945
11:00
Gabriele Marcon (EUI Florence) – Labour Mobility and Innovation in Early Modern Europe: The Case of German–speaking Miners and Metalworkers in the Duchy of Florence (1540s–1560s)
11:45
Jean-Philippe Stone (Oxford) – La Grève s’étend: Strikes and Discontent in Post-WW2 French Empire 1947–48
12:30
Matthew Myers (Oxford) – Left-wing Imaginaries and the Unmaking of the Working Class as Political Subject in Britain, France, and Italy during the long 1970s