XClose

UCL School of Slavonic and East European Studies (SSEES)

Home
Menu

Polish studies: today and tomorrow

05 September 2024–06 September 2024, 10:15 am–12:00 pm

Polish studies conference poster with a map of Poland

6th annual conference of the UCL SSEES Polish Studies Research Group and British Association for Slavonic and East European Studies Polish Studies Group

This event is free.

Event Information

Open to

All

Availability

Yes

Cost

Free

Organiser

Prof Anne White

Like previous Polish studies events at SSEES, this event has a workshop format. Speakers will present work in progress. They look forward to receiving friendly and detailed feedback from colleagues united by a common interest in Poland, including Polish migration, but representing different academic disciplines and combinations of disciplines. The BASEES Polish Studies Group is an international group which ‘aims to enhance discussion on critical perspectives emerging in the field of Polish studies. The group seeks to foster research collaboration and enhance exchanges of ideas and expertise.’ Looking towards the future, one of our main aims is to support dialogue between researchers at different stages of their academic careers.  

This year’s conference will be held online on Zoom. If you would like to register and receive a Zoom link, email Anne White, Professor of Polish Studies, SSEES, at anne.white@ucl.ac.uk by 2 September 2024. We welcome attendees who are not affiliated to any university; however, please let Anne know why you’d like to come to the event. The conference will not be recorded, since the papers present work in progress.

Abstracts

Programme

Thursday 5 September: History and its contemporary resonances

10.15-10.30

Anne White

Welcome and introduction

Panel I: Dispossession in World War II and Its Consequences for Contemporary Poland

 

 

10.30-11.15

Magdalena Waligórska

Intimate Dispossession: Plundered Jewish Clothing and Its Afterlife in Postwar Poland

11.15-12.00

Marta Duch-Dyngosz

Social Transactions Involving Jewish Property in former Polish Shtetls

Panel 2: Dispossession (continued)

 

 

12.45-1.30

Katarzyna Maniak and Anna Kurpiel

Adopted Objects: Mediating Role of Objects in Post-Migration Areas after World War II

1.30-2.15

Monika Stępień

Books and Sheepskin Coats: The Possessions of the March 1968 Emigrants

Panel 3: Historical (re-)interpretations

 

 

2.45-3.30

Oliver Zajac

A Tale of Two Emigrations: Comparative Analysis of the Polish Great Emigration in

France and the United Kingdom

3.30-4.15

Helena Hammond

Dance as yizker bukh? Concepts of doikayt; landkentenish, and co-territoritorializing the interwar Polish shtetl in Jerome Robbins’s ‘Dances at a Gathering’

4.15-5.00

Jannick Piskorski

Poland and Russia: Ewa Thompson and her critics

 

Friday 6 September: Contemporary Poland

Panel 4:  Migration and identities

 

 

9.30-10.15

Kelsey Weber-Lawson

Roots of Place and Kin: Muslim Polish Tatar identities

10.15-11.00

Izabela Grabowska

Migration Skill Corridors to Warsaw from Eastern Europe and Asia

11.00-11.45

Anne White

Small Towns in Poland and Migration from Former USSR and Asia: the case of Dobrodzień/Guttentag