Veranstaltungen

Wir streben an, den Universitätsverbund Halle-Jena-Leipzig zu einem international sichtbaren Zentrum der Polenforschung auszubauen. Dies soll insbesondere durch interdisziplinär angelegte Veranstaltungen, aber auch durch fachspezifische Diskussionen erreicht werden. Darüber hinaus richtet sich ein Teil unserer Aktivitäten an die interessierte Öffentlichkeit, der wir polnische Geschichte, Sprache, Gesellschaft und Kultur näher bringen möchten.

Zu den wissenschaftlichen Veranstaltungen zählen regelmäßig stattfindende Kolloquien, Konferenzen, Workshops und Vortragsreihen, langfristig auch Sommerschulen. Für Studierende bieten wir neben Blockseminaren, die integraler Bestandteil des Studiengangs Interdisziplinäre Polenstudien sind, auch Exkursionen nach Polen an.

In die breitere Öffentlichkeit wirkt eine polnische Filmreihe in Kooperation mit dem Polnischen Institut Leipzig, dem Imre Kertész Kolleg Jena, dem Puschkino in Halle, der Deutsch-Polnischen Gesellschaft Sachsen-Anhalt und der Landeszentrale für politische Bildung Sachsen-Anhalt. Die Filme dieser Reihen ebenso wie künftige Lesungen polnischer Literatur stehen in thematischem Bezug zu den Forschungsfeldern des Zentrums.


Kolloquien

(c) privat

Joanna Konieczna-Sałamatin (Warsaw): Ukrainians' identity struggle in light of the Soviet past and the present war

1/12, 18:00 (s.t.), in presence at FSU Jena

The lecture will present how the identity-related divisions in Ukrainian society evolved in time, what were the most important factors that kept them vivid over almost 30 years and what were the main milestones of the change. The divisions used to be deep enough to talk about “unexpected nation”, as Andrew Wilson in 2000 or about “two Ukraines” as Mykola Riabchuk in 2002. These were a manifestation of at least two competing identities within Ukrainian nation, which existed and developed parallelly and resulted with different ideas about the past of Ukraine and its future place in Europe. The widespread awareness of the existence of a national community with its own interests, as well as the state, ready to defend those interests, actually appeared only around 2014.

In the lecture I will show this process referring to the sociological data about the images of the past and changes in values that became especially apparent after the annexation of Crimea by Russia and the attacks on the eastern part of Ukraine in 2014.

Venue of lecture: Institut für Slawistik und Kaukasusstudien, Ernst-Abbe-Platz 8, Raum 301 (3. OG), 07743 Jena


Ringvorlesung

(c) privat

Joanna Konieczna-Sałamatin (Warsaw): Ukrainians' identity struggle in light of the Soviet past and the present war

1/12, 18:00 (s.t.), in presence at FSU Jena

The lecture will present how the identity-related divisions in Ukrainian society evolved in time, what were the most important factors that kept them vivid over almost 30 years and what were the main milestones of the change. The divisions used to be deep enough to talk about “unexpected nation”, as Andrew Wilson in 2000 or about “two Ukraines” as Mykola Riabchuk in 2002. These were a manifestation of at least two competing identities within Ukrainian nation, which existed and developed parallelly and resulted with different ideas about the past of Ukraine and its future place in Europe. The widespread awareness of the existence of a national community with its own interests, as well as the state, ready to defend those interests, actually appeared only around 2014.

In the lecture I will show this process referring to the sociological data about the images of the past and changes in values that became especially apparent after the annexation of Crimea by Russia and the attacks on the eastern part of Ukraine in 2014.

Venue of lecture: Institut für Slawistik und Kaukasusstudien, Ernst-Abbe-Platz 8, Raum 301 (3. OG), 07743 Jena


Vorträge

(c) privat

Joanna Konieczna-Sałamatin (Warsaw): Ukrainians' identity struggle in light of the Soviet past and the present war

1/12, 18:00 (s.t.), in presence at FSU Jena

The lecture will present how the identity-related divisions in Ukrainian society evolved in time, what were the most important factors that kept them vivid over almost 30 years and what were the main milestones of the change. The divisions used to be deep enough to talk about “unexpected nation”, as Andrew Wilson in 2000 or about “two Ukraines” as Mykola Riabchuk in 2002. These were a manifestation of at least two competing identities within Ukrainian nation, which existed and developed parallelly and resulted with different ideas about the past of Ukraine and its future place in Europe. The widespread awareness of the existence of a national community with its own interests, as well as the state, ready to defend those interests, actually appeared only around 2014.

In the lecture I will show this process referring to the sociological data about the images of the past and changes in values that became especially apparent after the annexation of Crimea by Russia and the attacks on the eastern part of Ukraine in 2014.

Venue of lecture: Institut für Slawistik und Kaukasusstudien, Ernst-Abbe-Platz 8, Raum 301 (3. OG), 07743 Jena


Polenstudien

(c) privat

Joanna Konieczna-Sałamatin (Warsaw): Ukrainians' identity struggle in light of the Soviet past and the present war

1/12, 18:00 (s.t.), in presence at FSU Jena

The lecture will present how the identity-related divisions in Ukrainian society evolved in time, what were the most important factors that kept them vivid over almost 30 years and what were the main milestones of the change. The divisions used to be deep enough to talk about “unexpected nation”, as Andrew Wilson in 2000 or about “two Ukraines” as Mykola Riabchuk in 2002. These were a manifestation of at least two competing identities within Ukrainian nation, which existed and developed parallelly and resulted with different ideas about the past of Ukraine and its future place in Europe. The widespread awareness of the existence of a national community with its own interests, as well as the state, ready to defend those interests, actually appeared only around 2014.

In the lecture I will show this process referring to the sociological data about the images of the past and changes in values that became especially apparent after the annexation of Crimea by Russia and the attacks on the eastern part of Ukraine in 2014.

Venue of lecture: Institut für Slawistik und Kaukasusstudien, Ernst-Abbe-Platz 8, Raum 301 (3. OG), 07743 Jena


Konferenzen & Workshops

(c) privat

Joanna Konieczna-Sałamatin (Warsaw): Ukrainians' identity struggle in light of the Soviet past and the present war

1/12, 18:00 (s.t.), in presence at FSU Jena

The lecture will present how the identity-related divisions in Ukrainian society evolved in time, what were the most important factors that kept them vivid over almost 30 years and what were the main milestones of the change. The divisions used to be deep enough to talk about “unexpected nation”, as Andrew Wilson in 2000 or about “two Ukraines” as Mykola Riabchuk in 2002. These were a manifestation of at least two competing identities within Ukrainian nation, which existed and developed parallelly and resulted with different ideas about the past of Ukraine and its future place in Europe. The widespread awareness of the existence of a national community with its own interests, as well as the state, ready to defend those interests, actually appeared only around 2014.

In the lecture I will show this process referring to the sociological data about the images of the past and changes in values that became especially apparent after the annexation of Crimea by Russia and the attacks on the eastern part of Ukraine in 2014.

Venue of lecture: Institut für Slawistik und Kaukasusstudien, Ernst-Abbe-Platz 8, Raum 301 (3. OG), 07743 Jena


Filmreihen & Lesungen

(c) privat

Joanna Konieczna-Sałamatin (Warsaw): Ukrainians' identity struggle in light of the Soviet past and the present war

1/12, 18:00 (s.t.), in presence at FSU Jena

The lecture will present how the identity-related divisions in Ukrainian society evolved in time, what were the most important factors that kept them vivid over almost 30 years and what were the main milestones of the change. The divisions used to be deep enough to talk about “unexpected nation”, as Andrew Wilson in 2000 or about “two Ukraines” as Mykola Riabchuk in 2002. These were a manifestation of at least two competing identities within Ukrainian nation, which existed and developed parallelly and resulted with different ideas about the past of Ukraine and its future place in Europe. The widespread awareness of the existence of a national community with its own interests, as well as the state, ready to defend those interests, actually appeared only around 2014.

In the lecture I will show this process referring to the sociological data about the images of the past and changes in values that became especially apparent after the annexation of Crimea by Russia and the attacks on the eastern part of Ukraine in 2014.

Venue of lecture: Institut für Slawistik und Kaukasusstudien, Ernst-Abbe-Platz 8, Raum 301 (3. OG), 07743 Jena