Stereotypical Representations of Roma and Jews in Photographs

International Workshop

When: 15 October 2018
Where: French Institute in Prague (Štěpánská 35, Prague 1)
Organizers: Prague Forum for Romani Histories (Institute of Contemporary History, Czech Academy of Sciences), Seminar of Romani Studies (Faculty of Arts, Charles University), CEFRES and French Institute in Prague
Language: English (simultaneous translation into Czech will be available)

PROGRAMME

16:30-18:00
HISTORICAL SURVEY
Ilsen About (National Centre for Scientific Research in Paris and member of the Centre Georg Simmel, École des hautes études en sciences sociales, Paris)
Counter-Image and Self-Image
Roma and Sinti in the History of the Photographic Medium

How Roma and Sinti have been represented through the lens of photography interrogates the making of stereotypical iconographies and the functions of such iconography in political processes of stigmatisation, exclusion or repression. It also questions the ambivalence of negotiated and self-constructed images, the professionalization of modelling and of a specialised production of specific photographic motives. Behind the screen made by objectified bodies and faces, individuals and social groups have also used and contributed to make other types of photographic images: some are testifying of social life and territorial implementation, other have played significant roles in emancipation strategies, acting as major shifts in political visibility.

Karolina Szymaniak (Department of Jewish Studies of the University of Wroclaw, and research fellow at the Jewish Historical Institute, Warsaw)
In and Out of the Shtetl
Photography and (De)Constructions  of the Eastern European Jewish Difference

In both Jewish and non-Jewish discourses and visual practices, the shtetl came to epitomize the Eastern European Jewish culture, constructed as radically different from the neighboring cultures. In these constructions, photography played a crucial role. The presentation will look at the history of photographing Jews in Eastern Europe and Jews photographing back, both reproducing and reconstructing stereotypical images. It will discuss different modalities and uses of photography, and their political ramifications. Finally, it will briefly point out to the meanings and uses of the pre-Holocaust photography both in the post-Holocaust era and in the late 20th-century context of the so-called Jewish revival in Eastern Europe.

18:00-18:30
Break with refreshments

18:30-20:00
CURRENT REPRESENTATIONS
Sabin Badžo (Photographer and Artist)
Irene Stehli (Photographer and Artist) – TBC
Comments of Ilsen About and Karolina Szymaniak

Concluding seminar 2017/2018

Program

9:30 Clara Royer: Introduction

10:00 Martin Pjecha: The Táborites in Christian apocalypticism

10:35 Adéla Klinerová: Reception of French Early Modern Architecture within 19th-Century Historicism in the Czech Lands and Central Europe

11:05 Break

11:20 Dan Cîrjan: Regulating Citizenship through Debt in 1920s Romania

12:05 Florence Vychytil-Baudoux: Studying Polonia from a transnational perspective: reconciling unity and diversity

12:40 Lunch break

14:00 Julien Wacquez: The Implementation of Fiction Within Science: the Case Study of the Dyson Sphere

15:35 Yuliya Moskvina: State, Squat, Society: the limits to urban commons

16:10 Aníbal Arregui: Editorial Boar: Animal Amendements on Barcelona Urban Relationality

16:45 Break

17:00 Anna Gnot: Indirect and direct autobiographism in the late work of Ota Filip (2000-2018)

17:35 Thomas Mercier: The Threshold of Europe: Derrida in Prague

Assessing 1968: Intertwining Experiences from Paris, Prague and Berlin

Venue: Maison de l’Europe, Jungmannova 24, 110 00 Prague 1
Time
: 5-8:30 PM
Organizers: CEFRES and IFP
Partners: Centre Marc Bloch, Institut français de Berlin et Université Paris Nanterre, avec le soutien de l’Institut français de Paris
Language: Czech and French (with simultaneous interpretation)

This discussion on the memory of 1968 on the basis of the 2018 commemorations in Berlin, Prague and Nanterre (Paris) will benefit from the testimonies and discussions with film director Olga Sommerová and writer and journalist Eda  Kriseová. Continue reading Assessing 1968: Intertwining Experiences from Paris, Prague and Berlin

Porcine Futures 1: Re-negotiating “Wilderness” in More-than-human Worlds

Workshop

Organized by the team of Bewildering Boar project at CEFRES – Aníbal Arregui, Luděk Brož, Marianna Szczygielska and Virginie Vaté together with Erica von Essen (Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences) kindly supported by the Swedish Hunting Association through the grant “Challenges Facing Swedish Hunting Ethics in Post-Modernity”.
When: 16-17 October 2018
Where: Prague, AV ČR, Národní 18, Prague 1
Language: English

See the call for paper here.

Programme

TUESDAY 16 OCTOBER 2018

(joint programme with Anthropology of Hunting & Conservation Network)

9.00 – 9.10 Welcome address (T. Petrasova, J. Woitsch)

9.10 – 9.20 Introduction (A. Arregui, L. Broz, M. Szczygielska, V. Vaté & E. von Essen) 

9.20 – 10.35 Session 1 (chair: E. von Essen)

9.20 – 9.45  Engaging with Hunting: Mosaic Pieces of Larger Pictures
Garry Marvin (University of Roehampton, London)

9.45 – 10.10 Hunters and Wild Boars: the (inter)corporeality of a relationship
Thorsten Gieser (University of Koblenz-Landau)

10.10 – 10.35 Wild boar hunting in the French Alps: between “objectivation” and “subjectivation” of animals
Coralie Mounet (University of Grenoble)

Coffee break

10.55 – 12.35 Session 2 (chair: A. Arregui)

10.55 – 11.20 Ça c’est pas d’la chasse ! – That’s not hunting!” Perspectives on wild boar hunting in Southern Champagne and Northern Burgundy
Virginie Vaté (CNRS, CEFRES)

11.20 – 11.45 Wild boar hunting and population control in France. An analysis of public policies and their consequences for the relationship between hunters and wildlife
Alain Gigounoux  (Departmental Federation of hunters of Lot and Garonne)

11.45 – 12.10 Transgressing the ‘wild’:  duck trapping machines and wild boar spaces in the Netherlands
Eugenie van Heijgen (Wageningen University)

12.10 – 12.35 Hunting of wild boar in Uruguay: global discourses and local conflicts
Juan Martin Dabezies (Universidad de la Républica, Montevido)

Lunch

13.45 – 15.00 Session 3 (chair: P. Du Plessis)

13.45 – 14.10 How Wild Boar Hunting is Becoming a Battleground
Erica von Essen (Swedish Biodiversity Center, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Uppsala

14.10 – 14.35 Animal Welfare Evaluation of Wild Boar (Sus scrofa) Trapping
Åsa Fahlman (Johan Lindsjö, Therese Arvén Norling, Odd Höglund, Petter Kjellander, Erik O. Ågren, Mats Stridsberg, and Ulrika A. Bergvall

14.35 – 15.00 Adapting Hunting and its Conservation
KAVBH Avi (Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology and the School of Anthropology and Conservation, University of Kent)

Coffee break

15.30 – 17.00 Discussion 1 (chair: L. Broz)

(coffee available, stretching pauses will be made ad hoc)

19.30 The evening programme

WEDNESDAY 17 OCTOBER 2018

9.15 – 10.45 Session 4 (chair: M. Szczygielska)

9.15 – 9.40 Climatic effects on wild boar population dynamics
Sebastian G. Vetter (University of Veterinary Medicine, Vienna), Thomas Ruf, Claudia Bieber, Walter Arnold

9.40 – 10.05 Editorial Boar. Animal Amendements on Barcelona Urban Relationality
Anibal G. Arregui (CEFRES-Charles University)

10.05 – 10.30 Urban Wild Boar Conflict in Barcelona
López-Olvera Jorge R. (Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Departament de Medicina i Cirurgia Animal), Castillo-Contreras Raquel, Mentaberre Gregorio, González-Crespo Carlos, Conejero Carles, Fernández-Aguilar Xavier, Colom-Cadena Andreu, Lavín Santiago

Coffee break

10.50 – 12.30 Session 5 (chair: KAVBH Avi)  

10.50 – 11.15 A Tale of Two Boars: Ungulate Management in Italy and Germany
Michael Gibbert (University of Lugano), Stefano Giacomelli, Roberto Viganò

11.15 – 11.40 Mess, Risk and Enchantment: disturbing place with reintroduced wild boar
Kieran O’Mahony (Cardiff University)

11.40 – 12.05 Boar(der) Control. Governing Mobile Wild Boars in the European Border Regime
Larissa Fleischmann (Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg)

12.05 – 12.30 Fences of “Self-Devouring Growth”: Infrastructures of Containment and their Unintended Effects
Pierre Du Plessis (Aarhus University)

LunchLunchtime address (J. Heurtaux) 

14.00 – 15.15 Session 6 (chair: L. Fleischmann) 

14.00 – 14.25 Wild Thing: Lessons from Wild Boars Featured in Polish and Czechoslovak Cinema
Marianna Szczygielska (Max Planck Institute for the History of Science, Berlin)

14.25 – 14.50 Of past and present pig slaughters: changing consumption trajectories and reconfiguring the future in a Romanian mountainous commune
Teodora Goea (University of Manchester)

14.50 – 15.15 Facing the Pig Multiple: Knowledge Drift Towards Porcine Futures
Ludek Broz (Institute of Ethnology, Czech Academy of Sciences, CEFRES)

Coffee break

15.45 – 18.00 Discussion 2 (chair: V. Vaté)

(coffee available, stretching pauses will be made ad hoc)

19.00 Dinner

Cycle May 68 – Berlin/Prague: 1968, Which Expectations?

Round table

Venue and time: French Institute in Berlin, Boris Vian room (Kurfürstendamm 211, Berlin), at 7 pm
Partners: Marc Bloch Center (CMB), French Institute in Berlin (IFB), CEFRES and Nanterre University, with the support of the French Institute in Paris
Organizers: Catherine Gousseff (CMB), Sylvie Robic (Nanterre), Clara Royer (CEFRES), Dominique Treilhou (IFB)
Languages: French, German (with simultaneous translation)

This round table is part of the Cycle Mai 68, a cycle with screenings, debates, workshops and exhibitions around the 50th anniversary of the events of 1968.

With the participation of witnesses of the European events of 1968 :

  • Libuše Černá (Czech Republic)
  • Jan Gross (Poland)
  • Jean-Yves Potel (France)
  • Peter Schneider (Germany)

Moderator: Thomas Wieder (Le Monde)


For more information on Cycle Mai 68, see here

See the other events of Cycle Mai 68: the international conference West Winds, East Winds and a concluding conference in June in Prague.

See the whole program of May 68 Cycle here

Voltaire Between the Rhine and the Danube (18th-19th Centuries)

Voltaire Days

Partners: CELLF, CEFRES, Voltaire Foundation (Oxford), Balassi Institute in Paris, Université d’Amiens Picardie
Venue: Amphithéâtre Michelet, 1 rue Victor Cousin, Paris
Dates: 22-23 juin 2018
Organizer: Guillaume MÉTAYER (CELLF)
Language: French

Program

Friday 22 June

9:00
Christophe MARTIN (director of CELLF) and Guillaume MÉTAYER (CELLF): Welcome

Panel I: Voltaire and the German Lands
Chair: Sylvain MENANT (CELLF)

9:15
Gérard LAUDIN (Sorbonne Université) : Les Annales de l’Empire

9:45
Myrtille MÉRICAM-BOURDET (Université Lyon II): Voltaire historien de l’Empire : sur quelques aspects de la question religieuse

10:15
Renaud BRET-VITOZ (Université de Toulouse Jean-Jaurès): L’expérience théâtrale de Voltaire à Berlin et Potsdam entre 1750 et 1753, autour du Duc d’Alençon ou les frères ennemis

10:45 Break

Panel II: Round table on the Manuscripts of Frederic II
Chair: Natalia SPERANSKAYA (Saint Petersburg)
  • Natalia SPERANSKAYA (Bibliothèque nationale de Russie, Saint Petersburg): Un manuscrit de La Poloniade de Frédéric II dans la bibliothèque de Voltaire
  • Vanessa de SENARCLENS (Alfried Krupp Wissenschaftskolleg, Greifswald): L’Art de la guerre de Frédéric annoté par Voltaire
  • Gillian PINK (Voltaire Foundation, Oxford): Les Œuvres du philosophe de Sans Souci annotées par Voltaire

12:00 Break

Panel III: Presence and Circulation of Voltaire’s Work in the Empires
Chair: Gérard LAUDIN

12:15
Daniele MAIRA (Université de Göttingen): La Henriade en Allemagne: traductions et réception XVIIIe-XIXe siècles

14:30
Jean BOUTAN (Sorbonne Université, Paris) : De La Pucelle à La Guerre des Femmes, la “Jungfrau in Waffen” dans la culture tchèque

15:00
Emese EGYED (Université de Cluj-Napoca) : Le double message du comte János Fekete: La Pucelle en hongrois (1799)

15:30
Olga PENKE (Université de Szeged) : L’écho hongrois des contes et des dialogues philosophiques de Voltaire

16:00 Break

Panel IV: Spreading and Publishing Voltaire’s Works
Chair: Nicholas CRONK

16:30
Linda GIL (Université de Montpellier III): Imprimer et diffuser Voltaire en Allemagne : l’édition Kehl des Œuvres complètes de Voltaire par la Société Littéraire Typographique

17:00
Claire MADL (CEFRES, Prague): Voltaire produit de librairie dans la monarchie des Habsbourg

7 pm : Lectures à haute voix par la Sorbonne sonore (Félix Libris)
Saturday 23 June
Panel V: Debating and Rewriting Voltaire
Chair: Ludolf PELIZEUS (Université de Picardie Amiens, CERCLL)

9:30
Nicholas CRONK (Voltaire Foundation, Oxford): Autour des Lettres philosophiques : la réponse de Johann Gustav Reinbeck à la lettre sur Locke

10:00
Sylvie LE MOËL (Sorbonne Université): Fécondité et apories du tropisme voltairien chez Friedrich Heinrich Jacobi

10:30 Break

11:00
Ritchie ROBERTSON (Université d’Oxford) : Wieland, the German Voltaire

11:30
András KÁNYÁDI (INALCO, Paris): Casanova et Fréderic le Grand dans les lettres hongroises inconnues de Voltaire

12:00 — Final Conclusions by Christiane MERVAUD (Honorary President of the SEV)