Ends of War. Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Past and New Polish Regions after 1944. International Conference in Warsaw from 18.- 20. November 2015

Dorothea Warneck Announcement
Location
Poland
Subject Fields
Area Studies, Eastern Europe History / Studies, Law and Legal History, Linguistics, Sociology

The projected conference deviates from the common practice to set a specific year or even day for the end of wars. Taking the example of Poland and its neighbors after the Second World War, it examines the end of war as a complex, long-lasting process with considerable regional differences, as well as variation in the experiences of individuals.  Starting from the assumption that there is a significant transitional period, we want to connect the analysis of lives after World War II to the war experience. This process requires looking backwards and forwards at the same time.  One focus lies on the reconfiguration of society in past and new Polish regions against the background of war, occupation, compulsory labor, genocide and forced migrations. A second theme addresses imaginations and concepts of law and justice after the traumatic experience of the deprivation of rights. Another section will look at efforts to physically reconstruct a heavily destroyed country, provide mental support to people, and establish a new social order. Finally we will enter the large field of emotions and uncontrollable actions, such as vigilantism and mass panic, linked to the war experience.  None of these fields is the domain of a single discipline. We therefore include contributions from history, linguistics, literature studies, law, sociology, anthropology as well as museology. 

Projected Panels: 

1. Demographic upheaval - The re-invention of regional societies 

2. Past injustice - Imaginations and concepts of law and justice 

3. Material and mental breakdown - Efforts of reconstruction 

4. War is dead, long live the war! - Emotions and uncontrollable actions 

A preliminary programme can be found here.

The conference is conceptualized in cooperation with the German Historical Institute, Warsaw. 

Concept: Yvonne Kleinmann, Achim Rabus, Miloš Řezník, Ruth Leiserowitz, Paulina Gulińska-Jurgiel, Dorothea Warneck  Venue: German Historical Institute, Warsaw

 

Contact Information

Paulina Gulińska-Jurgiel
Aleksander-Brückner-Zentrum für Polenstudien
Institut für Geschichte
Martin-Luther-Universität Halle
06099 Halle
Fon: +49 (0) 345 / 55- 24328
 

Contact Email
paulina.gulinska-jurgiel@geschichte.uni-halle.de