All posts by Claire Madl

Vasyl Derevinskyi – Research & CV

The voice of the unconquered.
An alternative opinion of publications of the Ukrainian Helsinki Union in Soviet Ukraine (1988–1989)
 

CEFRES Research Area: Displacements, “dépaysements”, discrepancies

Contact: vasyldr[@]ukr.net

Vasyl Derevinskyi is doctor of history, professor of the Department of Political Sciences and Law of the Kyiv National University of Construction and Architecture. Researcher of the history of the struggle of Ukrainians for personal and national freedom in the 20th century, as well as national politics and biography. 

He published a number of books about Vyacheslav Chornovol, a well-known Ukrainian public-politician and statesman, editor of underground publications, leader of the largest Ukrainian National Democratic Party in the 1990s, political prisoner of the Russian-communist regime in the 1960s-80s.   Continue reading Vasyl Derevinskyi – Research & CV

Oleksii Ankhym – Research & CV

Transnational Literature: Conceptualization, Research Methodology, Poetics (Based on Modern German Language Literature by Authors of Ukrainian Origin)

CEFRES Research Area 3: Everyday experiences of spaces

Contact: ankhimoleksii[@]gmail.com

Oleksii Ankhym is an associate professor at the Department of Germanic Philology and Foreign Literature (Zhytomyr Ivan Franko State University, Ukraine). He received his PhD in Philology in 2019 with his doctoral project titled “Literary Creative Work as a Dialogue and Interpretation (Based on Helmut Baierl’s Drama)”. Since 2022 he is the Head of scientific and research laboratory “Brecht Centre” at Zhytomyr Ivan Franko State University, which specializes in research, translation and popularization of B. Brecht’s works.  Continue reading Oleksii Ankhym – Research & CV

Vadym Adadurov – Research & CV

Cultural integration strategies and the intellectual network of a Ukrainian émigré:
The non-statistical case of Élie Borschak
 

Research Area 1. Displacements, “Dépaysements” and Discrepancies

Contact : vad[@]ucu.edu.ua

Vadym Adadurov received his candidate of sciences degree from Lviv State University in 1997. From 2002 studied at the interdisciplinary doctoral program at the École Pratique des Hautes Études, Paris. In 2004 received a French interdisciplinary degree in Religion and Sciences of Society (directeur d’études Claude Langlois, consultant membre de l’Institut Jean Tulard). DEA: The Religious Policy of Napoleon in the Duchy of Warsaw (1806–1813). After return to Ukraine, has been working in various positions (lecturer, associate professor, professor, head of the department) at the Faculty of Humanities of the Ukrainian Catholic University in Lviv. In 2008 received his degree of the Doctor of Historical Sciences (HDR) from the Institute of Ukrainian Studies of the Ukrainian Academy of Sciences (advisor Prof. Yaroslav Hrytsak). Dissertation: Napoléonide in the East of Europe: Perceptions, Projects, and Actions of the French Government towards the South-Western Borderlands of the Russian Empire at the dawn of the 19th Century. Vadym Adadurov he was fellowships and taught at the scholarly institutions France, Austria, Germany, Poland, USA, and the Vatican, and published more than hundred works in seven languages, including ten monographs and anthologies of historical sources.   Continue reading Vadym Adadurov – Research & CV

A Subaltern That Sings

A Subaltern That Sings:
From Sound Resistance to Musical Diplomacy in Wartime Ukraine

A project developed within CU-CNRS Tandem Program supported by Charles University, CNRS and CEFRES

Project principal investigators: Valeria Korablyova, Louisa Martin-Chevalier

The joint TANDEM project “A Subaltern That Sings: From Sound Resistance to Musical Diplomacy in Wartime Ukraine” by Dr Valeria Korablyova and Dr Louisa Martin-Chevalier is dedicated to the musical dimension of Ukrainian resistance as a vehicle for escaping the subaltern position of a double periphery in the blind spot between the EU and Russia. The overlap between musical production and political resistance has always been indicative of the Ukrainian public scene: from the musical underground in late Soviet times to the iconic songs codifying the core meanings behind the mass protests. By co-imagining future-oriented sovereign imaginaries in unison and making them audible, people manifest themselves as sovereign citizens and create affective ties among themselves and with others across national borders who sympathize with their cause. Importantly, by the same token, they prefigure and bring about a new political reality. Continue reading A Subaltern That Sings

Valeria Korablyova – Research & CV

A Subaltern That Sings:
From Sound Resistance to Musical Diplomacy in Wartime Ukraine

CEFRES Research Area 1: Displacements, “dépaysements” & discrepancies

Contact: valeriya.korablyova[@]fsv.cuni.cz

Dr Valeria Korablyova is a sociologist and political theorist working on post-Soviet transformations in Ukraine and the region, with the research focus on performative politics and entangled imperial/colonial legacies. She is an Assistant Professor at the Department of Russian and East European Studies and the Leader of the Research Centre “Ukraine in a Changing Europe” at the Institute of International Studies, Faculty of Social Sciences, Charles University. Dr Korablyova received her habilitation (D. of Sc. degree) in 2015 from Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv, with the book Social Meanings of Ideology (Kyiv University, 2014) that covers transformations of the European modernity, where the ethos of solidarity underpinning the Maidan uprising stands as a specific case in point. She has held fellowships and visiting professorships at Stanford University, the Institute for Human Sciences (IWM) in Vienna, the University of Basel, Justus Liebig University Giessen, and other institutions. Most recently, she has presented on broader implications of the Russian war of aggression for European political imaginary and structures of knowledge production. Her latest publications on the matter include: “Fighting Russia’s ‘Dark Power’: The ‘Bright Power’ of Enacted Values” in Putin’s Europe. Russian Influence in European Democracy (European Liberal Forum, 2023); ‘Why Is Ukraine Important? Challenging the colonial and Cold War legacies in European social sciences’ in Soziologie (vol. 52, no. 3, 2023); ‘Russia vs. Ukraine: A Subaltern Empire Against The “Populism of Hope”’ in Acta Universitatis Carolinae – Studia Territorialia (# 2 2022); and editing the special Topos issue “Transformations of Society and Academia in the Wake of the Russian War in Ukraine: Urgent Notes” (#2 2022). 

Continue reading Valeria Korablyova – Research & CV

Louisa Martin-Chevalier – Research & CV

A Subaltern That Sings:
From Sound Resistance to Musical Diplomacy in Wartime Ukraine

Research Area 1: Displacements, “dépaysements” and discrepancies

Contact: louisa.martin-chevalier(@)sorbonne-universite.fr

Louisa Martin-Chevalier is associate professor at Sorbonne University (Musicology Department), where she teaches music history and the analysis of twentieth-century works, as well as thematic courses such as “music and politics” and “musical creation in Eastern Europe”. Her current research extends the work she began on her doctoral thesis on the Soviet avant-garde composer Nikolay Roslavets. It provides keys to understanding contemporary artistic creation in Eastern Europe. She co-created the “Building Relationships in a Changing World – European Musicological Seminar” and the innovative action-research seminar “Forming a collective without a leader”. She is co-director of the ‘Institutional and Social Frameworks’ research team at IReMus and coeditor of the journal Filigrane. Musique, esthétique, science, société. She is initiating a wideranging research programme to examine the impact of exile on women’s artistic creation.  Continue reading Louisa Martin-Chevalier – Research & CV