Public History Summer School

Veranstalter
Historical Institute, University of Wrocław
Veranstaltungsort
Ort
Wrocław
Land
Poland
Vom - Bis
01.07.2019 - 05.07.2019
Von
Dorota Wiśniewska

THE HISTORICAL INSTITUTE OF THE UNIVERSITY OF WROCLAW, POLAND, THE INTERNATIONAL FEDERATION FOR PUBLIC HISTORY, AND ZAJEZDNIA (DEPOT) HISTORY CENTRE INVITE STUDENTS, PHD CANDIDATES AND PRACTITIONERS TO ATTEND THE SECOND PUBLIC HISTORY SUMMER SCHOOL TO BE HELD IN WROCŁAW, 1-5 JULY 2019.

Programm

MONDAY, 1 JULY
14:00—15:00 REGISTRATION
15:00—15:30 OPENING
15:30—17:00 KEYNOTE LECTURE
Catherine Brice (Paris-Est Créteil Val de Marne University), Introduction to Public History
17:00—17:30 COFFEE BREAK
17:30—19:00 NEW WAYS OF DOING HISTORY
Alexandra Zaremba (American University), Crowd-Sourcing Jasenovac: Wikipedia as Memory and the Production of the Past
Tihana Kušter (University of Zagreb), The Popularisation of Recent Historiography through a Website and Social Media
Jakub Šindelář (Charles University in Prague), Historical Narratives and Representations in the Medium of Video Games and their Reception in ‘Let's Play Videos’
19:00
DINNER

TUESDAY, 2 JULY
9:00—9:10 OPENING
9:10—10:50 ROUND TABLE
Public History training
Chair: Thomas Cauvin
Catherine Brice (Paris-Est Créteil Val de Marne University)
Małgorzata Rymsza-Pawłowska (American University)
Joanna Wojdon (University of Wrocław)
Christine Szkiet (University of Teacher Education Lucerne)
10:50—11:10 COFFEE BREAK
11:10—12:40 MUSEUMS AND THEIR MISSION
Iuliia Patsiukova (University of Manchester), Corporate Museums Revisited:
The Public and ‘Counter-publics’
Anna Toledano (Stanford University), Material Traces of Faraway Places: Specimens from Colonial New Spain in Madrid’s National Museum of Natural Sciences
Olga Konkka (Bordeaux Montaigne University), History School Museums in Russia: Between Soviet Legacy and Post-Soviet Memory Policies
12:40—13:00 COFFEE BREAK
13:00—14:30
WHO OWNS HISTORY?
Caitlin White (Trinity College, Dublin), ‘A Heady Mixture of Big Business,
the State, and the Local’: Irish Public History in Dublin and Nenagh after the Civil War
Naum Trajanovski (Institute of Philosophy and Sociology of the Polish Academy of Sciences), Skopje 2014 Reconsidered: Politicising, Debating and Institutionalising History in the North Macedonian Capital
Dorota Choińska (University of Wrocław), Shaping the Past, Shaping the Present: Commemoration of the Post-war Resistance and its Impact on Ethnic Conflict in North-Eastern Poland
14:30—15:15 LUNCH
15:15 VISITING ZAJEZDNIA (DEPOT) HISTORY CENTRE
18:00 HISTORICAL BOARD GAMES: KOLEJKA
9:30—11:00 BE AN ORAL HISTORIAN
Sugandha Agarwal (Simon Fraser University), Re-writing History: Oral History
as a Feminist Methodology
Anesa Colakovic (Ohio University), Mapping Narratives of Young Citizens in Mitrovica: Place Attachment and Feeling at Home in a Divided City
Carol Gray (University of Connecticut), The Politics of Oral History: Lessons from Egypt
11:00—11:30 COFFEE BREAK
11:30—14:00 WORKSHOP
Oral history for beginners (1)
Instructor: Marta Kurkowska-Budzan (Jagiellonian University)
14:00—15:00 LUNCH
15:00—16:00 ORAL HISTORY TESTIMONIES
Karolina Bukovska (Free University Berlin), Once a Witness, Always a Witness: How the Holocaust Oral History Interviews Changed in 60 Years
Olga Morozowa (Petro Mohyla Black Sea State University), Savings Memory about ‘Revolution of Dignity’ in Ukraine
16:00—16:20 COFFEE BREAK
16:20 WORKSHOP
(Historical) writing for the public
Instructor: Ian Macqueen (University of Pretoria)

THURSDAY, 4 JULY
9:30—11:00
PUBLIC HISTORY PROJECTS
Kresno Brahmantyo (Center for Research on Society and Culture, Faculty of Humanities Universitas Indonesia), Digital history of Towns and Cities
Francesco Gelati (University of Limerick), Death and Burial Data: Ireland 1864-1922
Tabea Hochstrasser (KU Leuven), Academic Historians in the News: Flemish Expressions of Professional Expertise and Values
11:00—11:30 COFFEE BREAK
11:30—14:00 WORKSHOP
Oral history for beginners (2)
Instructor: Marta Kurkowska-Budzan (Jagiellonian University)
14:00—15:00 LUNCH
15:00—17:00 PAST & PRESENT IN ASIA
Marcin Damek (Nanjing University), Forerunners of the Chinese Revolution: What Does Public History of the Taiping Rebellion Tell about Modern China and More
Mateusz Nowikiewicz (University of Wrocław), ‘Battle for memory’ – How Chinese Began to Remember Sun Yat-sen as ‘Father of Modern China’
Iga Hetnar (Nanjing Normal University, University of Wrocław), ‘I Will Show You My Scars’: Remembering Nanjing Massacre in Mainland China
Tomasz Waśkiel (University of Wrocław), Ambiguous Narratives: The Politics of Memory in the Central Asian States Regarding the Soviet Rule
17:30—18:00 VISITING PANORAMA RACŁAWICKA
Address: Jana Ewangelisty Purkyniego 11, 50-155 Wrocław

FRIDAY, 5 JULY
10:00—11:30 FORGOTTEN PAST (RE)DISCOVERED
Hannah Viney (Monash University), Criminals versus the Criminally Forgotten: The Neglected Stories of Prison Officers at the Old Melbourne Gaol Tourist Site in Australia
James Worner (University of Technology Sydney), Masculinity as Public History:
New Insights into Virility, Sexuality and Mental Health among German Internees at Trial Bay during World War One
Lauren Fedewa (Leibniz University Hannover), Orphans of Memory: Post-war Remembrance of the Volkswagen and Velpke Children’s Homes
11:30—12:00 COFFEE BREAK
12:00—13:45 DISCUSSION
Modern & innovative museums
The case of POLIN
Chair: Przemysław Wiszewski
Renata Piątkowska (POLIN)
Marcin Wodziński (University of Wrocław)

Kontakt

Dorota Wiśniewska
pl. Uniwersytecki 1
668250379

dorota.wisniewska@uwr.edu.pl

https://publichistorysummerschool.wordpress.com/
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Sprach(en) der Veranstaltung
Englisch
Sprache der Ankündigung