HomeEpidemics and Nation-Building in Interwar East Central Europe

HomeEpidemics and Nation-Building in Interwar East Central Europe

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Published on Tuesday, March 23, 2021

Summary

The outbreak of the Covid-19 pandemic prompted a quest for historical parallels that help us contextualize this traumatic event. The voices of historians, sociologists, and philosophers of science are vital in this debate. The event, consisting of an expert panel and a seminar, focuses on the experience of interwar East Central Europe to explore these historical parallels.

Announcement

The expert panel and webinar Epidemics and Nation-Building in Interwar East Central Europe, organized by Central European University, takes place on April 17, 2021. While the expert panel is open for everyone, the deadline for applications for the webinar is on March 24.

Argument

The outbreak of the Covid-19 pandemic prompted a quest for historical parallels that help us contextualize this traumatic event. The voices of historians, sociologists, and philosophers of science are vital in this debate. The event, consisting of an expert panel and a seminar, focuses on the experience of interwar East Central Europe to explore these historical parallels.

Expert panel (11:00-13:00)

The expert panel brings together scholars working on various contexts and issues connected to biopolitics in East Central Europe: Ana Cergol Paradiž, Calin Cotoi, Friederike Kind-Kovács, Martin Kuhar and Victoria Shmidt. Their presentations will be followed by a discussion, moderated by Professor Jakob Vogel of the Centre Marc Bloch and Humboldt-Universität in Berlin.

Seminar (15:00-17:00)

Main topics

Based on the proposed list of readings, the seminar discussion will explore the following topics:

1. Epidemics and nation-building

After the collapse of the continental empires in the aftermath of the Great War, East Central Europe faced a double challenge of taming epidemics and nation-building. There is an emerging body of literature that discusses the process of post-imperial transitions in East Central Europe and the continuities between the interwar states and the continental empires that preceded them. Through the prism of epidemics control, we will explore whether and how biopolitical issues fit into these narratives. Drawing on the concept of biopolitics, our seminar will thus rethink some aspects of the process of nation-building in the region.

2. Expertise and its credibility

Sociologists and historians of science have long discussed various forms of expertise, and studied the strategies that helped them gain credibility. Drawing on these debates, we will explore the production and uses of biopolitical knowledge in interwar East Central Europe. Who claimed expertise on biopolitical issues, and on what grounds? What audiences they sought to address? Finally, how did they win – or fail to win – trust in polarized societies?

3. Epidemics in the margins

Interwar East Central Europe was a diverse space. Its multi-ethnic and yet nationalizing states pursued policies that sought to render their populace legible. Our seminar, therefore, will discuss what impact these policies had on the internal peripheries of these states. How did they represent the diversity of these spaces, and various racial, gender and class identities? How were these policies negotiated on the ground? Did they interact with other, local forms of knowledge, or did they marginalize it? How did these policies shape the subjectivities in these areas?

4. Global entanglements

Recently, historians in East Central Europe turned towards the global, and started exploring imperial and colonial entanglements of their region. Drawing on this fascinating research, we discuss how the concept of circulation of knowledge complicates the narrative about biopolitics in interwar East Central Europe. What transnational, (post-)imperial, and colonial knowledge about diseases and their control circulated in the region, and how was it appropriated? Who were the key transnational actors that facilitated the move of ideas, practices and people? What role did East Central Europe play in shaping discourses and practices on biopolitics on a global scale?

How to Apply

In order to apply to participate in the seminar discussion, please send us a motivational letter (max. 500 words), as well as your CV. Both of these documents should be submitted to our email address intellectualhistoryece@gmail.com

by March 24th.

We will get back to you about the decision on your participation by March 31th the latest.

The proposals will be evaluated by an organizing committee consisting of Lucija Balikić and Vojtěch Pojar, doctoral students based at the Department of History, Central European University, Budapest/Vienna.

The event is organized by the research network “Intellectual History in East Central Europe,” a collective of advanced doctoral students at Central European University and partner institutions. The network promotes in the ECE area the research on intellectual history that goes beyond national canons.

Contact details

intellectualhistoryece@gmail.com

https://intellectualhistoryece.wordpress.com/

Places

  • Nador utca 9.
    Budapest, Hungary (1031)

Date(s)

  • Wednesday, March 24, 2021

Attached files

Keywords

  • East Central Europe, biopolitics, epidemics, nation-building, interwar Europe

Contact(s)

  • Vojtech Pojar
    courriel : Pojar_Vojtech [at] phd [dot] ceu [dot] edu

Information source

  • Vojtech Pojar
    courriel : Pojar_Vojtech [at] phd [dot] ceu [dot] edu

License

CC0-1.0 This announcement is licensed under the terms of Creative Commons CC0 1.0 Universal.

To cite this announcement

« Epidemics and Nation-Building in Interwar East Central Europe », Seminar, Calenda, Published on Tuesday, March 23, 2021, https://calenda.org/857933

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