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2015 SYMPOSIUM: "The Future(s) of Post-Socialism" April 17 & 18, 2015

    • Friday, April 17, 1:00 pm - 6:00 pm.  Humanities 1006
    • Saturday, April 18, 9:00 am - 3: 00 pm.  Hilton Garden Hotel (Stony Brook campus)

Description: It has been 25 years since the fall of the Berlin Wall, and in Post­-Socialist spaces, cultural and socio­political shifts are changing the landscape quickly. Intellectually, “Post­Socialism" has become a prominent scholarly paradigm in in the past two decades in a range of fields, from the humanities to the social sciences. Stony Brook University is hosting a two day Colloquium, “The Future(s) of Post­-Socialism”, April 17-­18, 2015, that will bring together scholars in anthropology, sociology, literary studies, cultural and cinema studies, economics, political science and history, to engage in a series of conversations on the future(s) of Post-­Socialist societies and of Post-­Socialism as a paradigm of scholarly inquiry. The symposium will look at recent cultural and political shifts in Post-­Socialist spaces in a comparative and interdisciplinary light in order to discuss what future(s) we can envision for Post­Socialism, particularly in its cultural, economic and political spheres.

To view Symposium program, click here

Invited speakers:

  • Heather DeHaan ​(Dept. of History, Binghamton University) "Baku’s Spatial Imaginaries: The Many Futures of a Contested Past"
  • Zsuzsa Gille ​(Dept. of Sociology, University of Illinois) "What is the 'Post' in Postsocialism?" 
  • Georgiy Kasianov ​(Institute of History, Ukrainian Academy of Sciences, Kyiv, Ukraine) "Total Recall: Identity Building and Politics of Memory in Ukraine at the Turn of the Millennium"
  • David Kotz ​(Dept. of Economics, University of Massachusetts) "Socialist Future in Light of Socialist Past and Capitalist Present"
  • Maša Kolanović ​(Dept. of Croatian Language and Literatures, University of Zagreb) "NO FUTURE? Politics of memory on Yugoslav Socialism in Postsocialist Literature and Culture"
  • David Ost ​(Dept. of Political Science, William & Hobart Smith) "Back to the Semi-Periphery: Constraints and Opportunities"
  • Robert Saunders ​(Dept. of History and Political Science, SUNY Farmingdale) "'Brand' New States: Post-Socialist Europe/Eurasia, Country Branding, and the Challenges of National Differentiation"
  • Olga Shevchenko ​(Dept. of Anthropology and Sociology, Williams College) "Putting the public into the public goods: Notes on self-help and collective imagination in Russia today"
  • Iveta Silova ​(College of Education, Lehigh University) "Imagining (post)socialist childhoods: Socialist legacies and neoliberal absences in early literacy textbooks"

Organizing committee:

  • John F. Bailyn ​(Dept. of Linguistics, Stony Brook University)
  • Dijana Jelača ​(Dept. of Rhetoric, Communication and Theater, St. John’s University)
  • Izabela Kalinowska ​(Dept. of Cultural Analysis and Theory, Stony Brook University)
  • Danijela Lugarić ​(Dept. of E. Slavic Languages and Literature, University of Zagreb)
  • Gary Marker ​(Dept. of History, Stony Brook University)

Official Hotel: Hilton Garden Inn Stony Brook, 1 Circle Road, Stony Brook, New York, 11794, USA

To view the poster for this event, click here

Sponsored by:

  • The College of Arts and Sciences, Dean’s Fund for Excellence
  • Department of History
  • Department of Cultural Analysis and Theory
  • Department of European Languages, Literatures and Cultures
  • Department of Linguistics
  • Humanities Institute at Stony Brook University