European History across Boundaries

European History across Boundaries

Veranstalter
Sarah Panter (Leibniz Institute of European History, Mainz), Johannes Paulmann (Leibniz Institute of European History, Mainz) and Lyndal Roper (University of Oxford)
Veranstaltungsort
University of Oxford, Faculty of History
Ort
Oxford
Land
United Kingdom
Vom - Bis
13.03.2019 - 15.03.2019
Website
Von
Sarah Panter

At this international graduate workshop, researchers working on European history across boundaries between the 16th and the 20th century discuss pre-circulated chapters of their Ph.D. projects and reflect on the transcultural and transnational scope of their findings in a stimulating environment. The topics included aim to cross boundaries and borders and employ a variety of methodical approaches such as comparative studies, the study of transfer processes and entanglements, or the histoire croisée.

Programm

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

Kontakt

Dr. Sarah Panter

Leibniz Institute of European History (IEG)
Alte Universitätsstraße 19,
55116 Mainz,
Germany

panter@ieg-mainz.de


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