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International MAG Convention“The Image of the Self”Andrey Sheptytsky CenterUkrainian Catholic UniversityLviv, UkraineJune 27-29, 2018PROGRAMInternational Association for the Humanities (MAG)American Council of Learned SocietiesUkrainian Catholic UniversitySupport for the convention was received from:Foundation to Promote Open SocietyCarnegie Corporation of New YorkInternational Renaissance FoundationAssociation for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies(ASEEES)Lviv City Council1

About MAGThe International Association for the Humanities (MAG) was founded in 2007 byadvisers of the Humanities Program in Belarus, Russia, and Ukraine, which wasorganized by the American Council of Learned Societies with support from theCarnegie Corporation of New York. As a network of networks in Eastern Europeand Eurasia, MAG serves similar functions to those that ASEEES (Associationfor Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies) does in North America. Bothassociations are international, interdisciplinary meeting places for scholars. Inits brief history, MAG has conducted competitions for research and for travelgrants, and has published the Internet magazine, TheBridge-MOCT (thebridgemoct.org).About UCUThe Ukrainian Catholic University is an open academic community and aprivate institution for education and research, living the Eastern Christiantradition and forming leaders to serve with professional excellence in Ukraineand internationally. The University’s priorities are: a well-grounded humanitieseducation, socially-aware orientation of the instructional process, and thespiritual dimension of education.CONVENTION SPONSORSThe International Association for the Humanities (MAG) thanks all of theconvention sponsors whose generous contribution and support help to promotethe continued growth and visibility of our Association during our convention.Sponsors:Foundation to Promote Open SocietyCarnegie Corporation of New YorkInternational Renaissance Foundation (IRF, Міжнародний фонд“Відродження”)Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies (ASEEES)Lviv City Council, Program “Scientific Lviv”Local Host: Special thanks to the Ukrainian Catholic University for hosting theconvention2

MAG Program Committee 2018Andrzej Tymowski, Committee Chair, American Council of Learned Societies andU of WarsawGeorgiy Kasianov, Institute of the History of Ukraine, NASUOlga Bukhina, International Association for the HumanitiesElena Gapova, Western Michigan UTamara Hundorova, Shevchenko Institute of Literature, NASUPadraic Kenney, Indiana UBoris Kolonitskii, European U at St. PetersburgWilliam Rosenberg, U of MichiganOleh Turiy, Ukrainian Catholic UDmytro Sherengovsky, Ukrainian Catholic UMAG Board of DirectorsPresident – Georgiy Kasianov, Institute of the History of Ukraine, NASUElena Gapova, Western Michigan UGelinada Grinchenko, V.N. Karazin Kharkiv National UYaroslav Hrytsak, Ukrainian Catholic UTamara Hundorova, Shevchenko Institute of Literature, NASUBoris Kolonitskii, European U at St. PetersburgWilliam Rosenberg, U of MichiganLyudmila Rychkova, Grodno State UIrina Savelieva, National Research U Higher School of EconomicsTatiana Shchyttsova, European Humanities U, VilniusOleh Turiy, Ukrainian Catholic UAndrzej Tymowski, ACLS and U of WarsawNikolai Vakhtin, European U at St. PetersburgNatalia Yakovenko, National U of “Kyiv-Mohyla Academy”NOTESRegistration Desk: The Registration Desk for both pre-registration and on-siteregistration is located at the 1st Floor Entrance of the Sheptytskyy Center.Wireless Access: Available throughout the convention (UCU-Guests, nopassword)Program updates: Please refer to the “Program Supplement” for last-minutechanges3

Program OverviewPanel Grid . . . .p. 21Thematic List of Panels . . .p. 9Key to Panel Codes . . . .p. 9The Convention Program . . .p. 21Day 1 June 27, Wed9:00-17:00 Registration Desk13:00-14:45 Session 1 . . .p. 2114:45-15:15 Coffee Break (coffee, tea, pastries)15:15-17:00 Session 2 . .p. 3417:15-18:30 Welcoming Plenary and Keynotes “Between objectivityand belonging: Toward an agenda for the humanities”. .p. 1818:30-20:00 Opening ReceptionDay 2 June 28, Thu9:00-17:00 Registration Desk9:00-10:45 Session 3 . .p. 4810:45-11:15 Coffee Break (coffee, tea, pastries)11:15-13:00 Session 4 .p. 6112:30-14:30 Lunch14:30-16:15 Session 5 .p. 7516:15-16:45 Coffee Break (coffee, tea, pastries)16:45-18:15 MAG General AssemblyDay 3 June 29, Fri9:00-16:00 Registration Desk9:00-10:45 Session 6 . .p. 8610:45-11:15 Coffee Break (coffee, tea, pastries)11:15-13:00 Session 7 .p. 9612:30-14:30 Lunch14:30-16:15 Session 8 .p. 10916:30-18:00 Convention Roundtable “Rethinking the Universityfor the 21st century” . .p. 2018:00-18:30 Transfer to Khutorivka Campus18:30 - 20:00 Closing Reception4

Panel GridSC – Sheptytskyy CenterAB – Academic BuildingRoom 202-SCRoom 203-SCSession 1Day 113:0014:45Pol-1-01 “EU’s Eastness Problem: Expectations and Challenges”(p. 21)HiT-1-02 “NaturalLandscapes of theDnipro Region: HistoricalMemory and Self-identification of Ukrainians”(p. 21)Med-1-03 “GenderPolitics and Beyond:Identity and Self in Polish Cinema” (p. 22)Room 302-SCHiS-1-04 “Soviet “We”and Soviet “I” in the Art,Memoirs, and EverydayPractices of the 1920s-1930s” (p. 23)Session 2Day 115:1517:00Pol-2-01 “Dilemmasof Social Policy: Casesfrom Poland, Armenia,and Ukraine” (p. 34)HiE-2-02 “CossackIdentities” (p. 35)Mem-2-03 “MemoryPolitics in Eastern Europe: 1917 RevolutionCentennial and Media”(p. 36)Nar-2-04 “Reconfiguring National Identity inSoviet and Post-SovietCinema” (p. 36)Session 3Day 29:0010:45Pol-3-01 “Contemporary Politics andShadows of the Past inPost-Habsburg Lands”(p. 48)Idn-3-02 “Jewish Identity in the 20th century:Verdict vs Dilemma”(p. 48)Idn-3-03 “Coexistence Lit-3-04 “Media andor confrontation?politics in contemporaryRethinking Crimea and poetry” (p. 50)its people” (p. 49)Session 4Day 211:1513:00Pol-4-01 “Too CloseHiJ-4-02 “Navigatfor Comfort? Policy Di- ing Jewish Selfhood’’lemmas in Russia’s Near (p. 62)Abroad “ (p. 61)Session 5Day 214:3016:15HiE-5-01 “SlobodaUkraine in the late Eighteenth Century: ImperialIntegration and CulturalChanges” (p. 75)Session 6Day 39:0010:45HiE-6-01 “Self-Images Nar-6-02 “Undertak- Idn-6-03 “Search for Pol-6-04 “Political Lanof Ukrainians in the 20th ing a Rusyn Vision of Self the inner “self” in litera- guage and Belonging”Century: Constructions in Writing” (p. 87)ture and life” (p. 88)(p. 89)of Identity, Myths andStereotypes in HistoricalNarratives and Documents” (p. 86)Session 7Day 311:1513:00HiS-7-01 “ManagingConsumer Demands:Cultural Representationsand Receptions amongthe “Soviet People” after1953” (p. 96)Idn-7-02 “Carpatho-Rusyns: language,folklore, identity”(p. 97)Nar-7-03 “Image ofthe self in the conflictingand reconciling memorynarratives: boundariesof truth, where do theylie?” (p. 98)HiE-7-04 Roundtable:“1978-2018: RevisitingVáclav Havel’s ThePower of the Powerless”(p. 99)Session 8Day 314:1516:00HiS-8-01 “Perestroikain Western Republicsof USSR: Struggle forand against the Union”(p. 109)Lit-8-02 “Images ofIdentity in UkrainianLiterature” (p. 110)Nar-8-03 “Hermeneutical Approach tothe Representation ofthe Image of the Self”(p. 111)Pol-8-04 Roundtable”The ContemporaryGlobal Relevance ofHavel’s The Power of thePowerless” (p. 112)Idn-4-03 “Scenarios of Lit-4-04 “How theTatar Identity” (p. 62)Child Sees Herself in theMirror of ContemporaryChildren’s Literature”(p. 63)Gen-5-02 “ImageHiE-5-03 “Criminalsof the Female Self ator Political Prisoners?”Times of Mass Violence” (p. 76)(p. 76)5Room 303-SCLit-5-04 “Peasants andPoets, Revolutions andContinuities: Self-Representation in UkrainianLiterature from the1890s to the PresentDay” (p. 77)

Room 002-SC(0 flour)Idn-1-05 “Belarusian HiE-1-06 “StrugglingMem-1-08 “Theidentity in 16 – 20for a healthy nation:Strategies of Asking thecentury: formation,from legislation toPast in Searching forcompetition of various hygienic movementsSelf-image (Belarusian,projects, crises, probin the Russian EmpireRussian and Ukrainianlems of preserving and and Austria-Hungary”Experience of the Laststrengthening” (p. 25)(p. 26)Decades)” (p. 28)HiI-2-05 “The Self inHeb-2-06 “Self-Iden- Nar-2-07 Roundtable: Lit-2-08 Roundtable:the Russian Empire”tity, Risk and Health“Ukrainian Studies in“Poetry in transition:(p. 37)perception amongNorth America: Past and Russian-language Poetryadolescents” (p. 38)Present” (p. 39)and New Configurationof Post-Soviet CulturalLandscape after 2014”(p. 39)Nar-3-05 “TroubledHiE-3-06 “The public Pol-3-07 RoundNar-3-08 RoundtaTimes, Troubled Writside of private life:table: “Political risksble: “The Vision of theers” (p. 51)self-representation ofand consequences forSelf: Ukraine’s auto–the family in writtenInternational Business. perception in Arts andsources of early modern Analyzing the Post-sovi- Sciences Narrativestime” (p. 51)et Space” (p. 52)(XIX – XXI centuries)”(p. 53)Idn-4-05 “IdentitiesHiS-4-06 “ConIdn-4-07 FulbrightRel-4-08 “Believers inUnder Duress” (p. 64)sumption as a way ofRoundtable: “NationalWestern Ukraine in theself-representationand Social Identitiessecond half of twentiethin Soviet society:in Post-Soviet Ukraine:century. Self-Imagebetween male, female The Case of Lviv andunder oppression”and humor discourses” Donetsk” (p. 66)(p. 66)(p. 64)Lit-5-05 “New Formats HiS-5-06 “’FromPol-5-07 FulbrightIdn-5-08 Roundtable:of Contemporary Poet- Outskirts to the Centre”: Roundtable: “Perspec“Reconsidering culturalry” (p. 78)Reframing Professional tives on Diversity: Apolitics of emotion inand Institutional Identi- Dialogue on Rights,“post-soviet” Easternties During Khrushchev’s Identities, Law, andEurope: the topicalThaw’’ (p. 79)Culture” (p. 80)political contexts andemotional identities”(p. 80)HiE-6-05 “TheIdn-6-06 “Borderline Mem-6-07 “Women“Confessionalisation”Subjectivities and World and war: (her)stories of-Paradigm for Describing Travellers” (p. 90)occupation” (p. 91)the Building of Institutions by the Uniate(Greek-Catholic) Church-from Beginnings up toSoviet Era” (p. 89)HiE-7-05 “Identifica- Pol-7-06 “IdentitiesIdn-7-07 Roundtable: Lit-7-08 Roundtable:tion in “Strange” Surand perceptions at the “Agency in Belarusian“Elizaveta Mnatsakanoroundings by the Uniate western borderlands of Society” (p. 102)va’s Lyric” (p. 102)(Greek-Catholic) Church Ukraine” (p. 101)- from Beginnings up tothe Soviet Era” (p. 100)Mem-8-06 RoundtaHiE-8-08 “Newble: “Politics of NationalPerspectives on JewishDignity: Social RootsHistory and Holocaustof Contemporary PolStudies in Easternish-Ukrainian Conflict ofEurope” (p. 114)Memory” (p. 113)Room 402-SCSession 1Day 113:0014:45Session 2Day 115:1517:00Session 3Day 29:0010:45Session 4Day 211:1513:00Session 5Day 214:3016:15Session 6Day 39:0010:45Session 7Day 311:1513:00Session 8Day 314:1516:00Room 403-SC6Room 127-SC(Park Room)Nar-1-07 Roundtable:“In Search of Authenticity or How Does CulturalCritique Recognize andModel the Image of theSelf” (p. 27)

Room 205-ABRoom 206-ABRoom 208-ABRoom 305-ABSession 1Day 113:0014:45HiI-1-09 “Self-presentation in historians’academic and personalwriting of 19th to early20th century” (p. 29)Lit-1-10 “Literary Images of Self” (p. 30)Soc-1-11 “Problemsof DecommunizationBefore and After theMaidan” (p. 30)Nar-1-12 “Landscapesof Memory: Loci,Monuments, People.The Most Recent Developments in Ukraine andMoldova” (p. 47)Session 2Day 115:1517:00Rel-2-09 “Churchin the Early-ModernUkraine: the image ofthe self and own missionin society” (p. 41)Lit-2-10 “The Poetand Public Spaces:modes and strategiesof self-presentation”(p. 42)Session 3Day 29:0010:45Session 4Day 211:1513:00Nar-4-09 “Political andPhilosophical Perspectives: Personalities andIdeas” (p. 68)HiS-3-10 “Imaginingand Managing Deathand the Dead across theSoviet Period” (p. 54)Urb-3-11 “TheCrossed Identities of theModern City in Russianand Austro-HungarianEmpire” (p. 104)HiE-3-12 “Identity andpractice of relations between soldiers & societyin the period of transition to the professionalarmy in Polish-Lithuanian Commonwelth”(p. 55)HiS-4-10 “The Artistic-Literary Discoursesand Practices ofPresenting CommunistEveryday Life in theSocialist Camp Countriesin the 20th Century”(p. 68)HiI-4-11 “Historiographical reflections: between the Grand Duchyof Lithuania, Poland, andUkraine” (p. 70)Nar-4-12 “Inclusionand Nation-Building inPost-Colonial Space:Relevance for Ukraine“(p. 70)Nar-5-11 “LiteraryTravels through LateImperial Identities”(p. 82)Nar-5-12 “UkrainianWar Stories” (p. 83)Session 5 Soc-5-09 “Music,Mem-5-10 “SocialDay 2Dance, and Art as Identi- Memories of the Soviet14:30ty” (p. 81)Past” (p. 82)16:15Nar-6-10 “MakingIdentities “At Home’”(p. 92)Session 6Day 39:0010:45Session 7Day 311:1513:00Med-7-09 “New andOld Media in the Framing of Social Values”(p. 103)Idn-2-12 “Finding(un)Friendly Places”(p. 44)HiE-6-11 “«Our» inEarly modern periodin contemporaryUkrainian and Russiahistoriography”(p. 92)Urb-7-10 “TheSelf-image of LvivCitizens, 16th- 18thCenturies” (p. 104)Session 8 Ant-8-09 “PracticesDay 3of Subsidiarity: Personal14:15Freedom” (p. 115)16:00HiI-7-12 “Self-presentation of ethnic andreligious minorities inthe Ukrainian lands ofthe Russian Empire”(p. 105)HiE-8-11 “The Fall ofEmpire and “Rise of Nationality” in Eastern andSoutheastern Europe,1917-1938” (p. 116)7HiI-8-12 “(Re)Discovering oneself in times ofrevolutions and wars: apolitician, a refugee, anartist in Ukraine (19001920s)” (p. 117)

Session 1Day 113:0014:45Session 2Day 115:1517:00Session 3Day 29:00-10:45Session 4Day 211:1513:00Session 5Day 214:3016:15Room 306-ABIdn-1-13 “Personal identities andtheir narratives”(p. 32)Room 307-ABNar-1-14 “Ukrainian Writersin Revolution andUkrainian Revolution in Writers:Biographies, Texts,and Contexts”(p. 32)Mem-2-13 “Indi- Idn-2-14 “Imagevidual and Institu- of the nation; imagetional Constructions of the migrant: beof Memory in Mu- tween Poland andseums and Dreams” Ukraine” (p. 45)(p. 44)Idn-3-13 Nar-3-14 “Self-Identifications “Visual and Verbaland the Law”Representation(p. 57)of the EuropeanMiddle Ages (on theexample of KievanRus)” (p. 57)HiE-4-13 “Local HiT-4-14 “ReliCollaborators in the gious Self-Images:Face of Postwarthe Middle Ages toJustice” (p. 72)the 20th Century’’(p. 73)Urb-5-13 “Urban Rel-5-14 “TheLandscapes andReligious self-idenTransformation”tification in the(p. 83)Early-Modern societies” (p. 84)Session 6 Lan-6-13 “LanNar-6-14 “ControDay 3guage, Community, versial Narratives in9:00-10:45 Identity” (p. 93)Historical Perspective” (p. 94)Session 7Day 311:1513:00Nar-7-14 “Ukraine’s TroubledSelf: Reconciling ThePast, IntegratingDiversity” (p. 106)Session 8 Lit-8-13 “LiteraryDay 3Theory, Literary14:15Practice” (p. 119)16:00Med-8-14 “Cleansing thePast: Imagination,Nostalgia, and theDestruction of Monuments” (p. 119)Room 308-ABRoom 309-ABLan-2-15 “Creative Texts: Identity and Conflict”(p. 45)Nar-2-16 “(Re)Defining Selfhood inFood, Photography,and Momentsof Happiness”(p. 46)HiT-3-15 “Science Lan-3-16 “Affectavs. Service: A His- tions in Linguistics:torical Perspective” Orthography, Gen(p. 59)der, and the Roleof the Classroom”(p. 59)Nar-4-15 “Humanitariantechnologies andinformational dimension” (p. 73)Soc-5-15 “Teaching: Concepts,Methods, Problems” (p. 85)Urb-2-17 “UrbanIdentity: How WePerceive, Live andUnderstand theCity” (p. 31)Mem-3-17 “Ukrainian minorityin Poland: past,temporary, context”(p. 60)Nar-4-17 “Culture andCounterculture inpost-Soviet Russia’”(p. 74)Nar-5-16 “TheSoc-5-17 Overt and Covert “Cross-nationalLanguage Aggres- comparativesion during the Own research as meansIdentity Manifesta- of understandingtion” (p. 85)oneself” (p. 43)Idn-6-15 “SacredHiE-6-17 “Imagesand Profane asand self-preMarkers of Identity”sentations of a(p. 94)revolutionary at theend of the XIXth– the first quarterof the XXth cent.”(p. 95)HiT-7-15 “Reflec- Nar-7-16 “Nation- HiE-7-17 “Threetions on Ukrainian al Images: Georgia Cases of Self-Conhistory” (p. 107)and Bulgaria”struction in the 19th(p. 108)century: VolhynianGentry, ImperialTraveler and FemalePupil from Kyiv”(p. 108)HiT-8-16 “Kazakhstan: HistoricalMoments” (p. 120)8Gen-4-16 “UnderstandingGender Subjectivity” (p. 74)Room 405-ABIdn-1-17 “TheSelf: Deconstructionand materialisticinterpretation”(p. 33)

Thematic Listing of PanelsKey to Panel CodesAnt AnthropologyGen Gender StudiesHeB Health and the BodyHiE History: East-Central EuropeHiI Imperial Era HistoryHiJ History: Jewish StudiesHiS Soviet Era HistoryHiT History: General ThemesIdn Identity StudiesLan Language and LinguisticsLit LiteratureMed Media StudiesMem Social MemoryNar Narrative, Discourse & RepresentationPol Politics and Political ScienceRel Studies of ReligionSoc Sociology and SocietyUrb Urban StudiesHistoryHistory: General ThemesHiT-1-02 “Natural Landscapes of the Dnipro Region: Historical Memoryand Self-identification of Ukrainians” (p. 21)HiT-3-15 “Science vs. Service: A Historical Perspective” (p. 59)HiT-4-14 “Religious Self-Images: the Middle Ages to the 20th Century’’(p. 73)HiT-7-15 “Reflections on Ukrainian history” (p. 107)HiT-8-16 “Kazakhstan: Historical Moments” (p. 120)History: East-Central EuropeHiE-1-06 “Struggling for a healthy nation: from legislation to hygienicmovements in the Russian Empire and Austria-Hungary”(p. 26)HiE-2-02 “Cossack Identities” (p. 35)HiE-3-06 “The public side of private life: self-representation of the familyin written sources of early modern time” (p. 51)HiE-3-12 “Identity and practice of relations between soldiers & societyin the period of transition to the professional army in PolishLithuanian Commonwelth” (p. 55)HiE-4-13 “Local Collaborators in the Face of Postwar Justice” (p. 72)9

HiE-5-01 “Sloboda Ukraine in the late Eighteenth Century: ImperialIntegration and Cultural Changes” (p. 75)HiE-5-03 “Criminals or Political Prisoners?” (p. 76)HiE-6-01 “Self-Images of Ukrainians in the 20th Century: Constructionsof Identity, Myths and Stereotypes in Historical Narratives andDocuments” (p. 86)HiE-6-05 “The “Confessionalisation”-Paradigm for Describing theBuilding of Institutions by the Uniate (Greek-Catholic) Church-from Beginnings up to Soviet Era” (p. 89)HiE-6-11 “«Our» in Early modern period in contemporary Ukrainian andRussia historiography” (p. 92)HiE-6-17 “Images and self-presentations of a revolutionary at the endof the XIXth – the first quarter of the XXth cent.” (p. 95)HiE-7-04 Roundtable: “1978-2018: Revisiting Václav Havel’s The Power ofthe Powerless” (p. 99)HiE-7-05 “Identification in “Strange” Surroundings by the Uniate (GreekCatholic) Church - from Beginnings up to the Soviet Era”(p. 100)HiE-7-17 “Three Cases of Self-Construction in the 19th century:Volhynian Gentry, Imperial Traveler and Female Pupil fromKyiv” (p. 108)HiE-8-08 “New Perspectives on Jewish History and Holocaust Studies inEastern Europe” (p. 114)HiE-8-11 “The Fall of Empire and “Rise of Nationality” in Eastern andSoutheastern Europe, 1917-1938” (p. 116)Imperial Era HistoryHiI-1-09 “Self-presentation in historians’ academic and personal writingof 19th to early 20th century” (p. 29)HiI-2-05 “The Self in the Russian Empire” (p. 37)HiI-4-11 “Historiographical reflections: between the Grand Duchy ofLithuania, Poland, and Ukraine” (p. 70)10 pag

western borderlands of Ukraine” (p. 101) Idn-7-07 Roundtable: “Agency in Belarusian Society” (p. 102) Lit-7-08 Roundtable: “Elizaveta Mnatsakano-va’s Lyric” (p. 102) Session 8 Day 3 14:15-16:00 Mem-8-06 Roundta-ble: “Politics of National Dignity: Social Roots of Contempora

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