COOKIES: By using this website you agree that we can place Google Analytics Cookies on your device for performance monitoring. |
Warsaw Rising MuseumAdd to your list(s) Download to your calendar using vCal
If you have a question about this talk, please contact slavonic. Please register at https://www.eventbrite.com/o/cambridge-polish-studies-7892179226 Deputy Director of the Warsaw Rising Museum, Dr Paweł Ukielski, will discuss his involvement with the Museum from its establishment in 2004 to the present, while also commenting on larger trends in Polish perceptions of the nation’s past in the years since 1989. This talk is the first in a series of events sponsored by the Cambridge Committee for Russian and East European Studies (CamCREES) exploring the different ways in which historical events are being portrayed in Central and Eastern Europe today, with a particular focus on efforts to infuse technology and trends in popular culture into narratives of past events so as to appeal to younger generations. Dr Paweł Ukielski is a political scientist, historian, and the current Deputy Director of the Warsaw Rising Museum (2004-2014, and since 2016). He is also a senior fellow at the Institute of Political Studies at the Polish Academy of Sciences and a lecturer at the Collegium Civitas University. From 2014-16 he was vice president of the Institute of National Remembrance, and from 2011-17 he served on the Executive Board of the Platform of European Remembrance and Conscience. He has conducted research and taught courses on the Central-East European post-communist transition, regional cooperation in East-Central Europe, the break-up of Czechoslovakia, Czech-Slovak relations, and the politics of remembrance. He is the author of Aksamitny rozwód. Rola elit politycznych w procesie podziału Czechosłowacji (‘The velvet divorce. The role of political elites in the division of Czechoslovakia’), published in 2007, and the co-author of 1989 – Jesień Narodów (‘1989 – The Autumn of Nations’), the Polish edition of which was published in 2009. He has written for several Polish and European academic journals and is the author of a report published in 2016 entitled Mapa Trójmorza. Przegląd punktów wspólnych i rozbieżności w polityce 12 państw regionu (‘A map of the three seas. An overview of common points and discrepancies in the policies of the 12 countries in the region’). This talk is part of the Slavonic Studies series. This talk is included in these lists:
Note that ex-directory lists are not shown. |
Other listshealth economics Art Cell Gallery Three-dimensional cell culture: Innovations in tissue scaffolds and biomimetic systemsOther talksWelcome and Introduction REAL Centre PhD Student Seminar Can you live to see a better day? Lifestyle engagement predicts healthy cognitive development in old age (a Cam-CAN study) Books: Publishing your Research Effectively (For PhD Students in Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences) Linguistics and education: a case of mutual dependency? 'Friends or Foes? Helminth-microbiota interactions in the equine gastrointestinal tract |