I am happy to announce that we are going go hold an international symposium "Tokyo - Moscow 2001: A Roundtable of Russian and Japanese Writers" in Sanjo Conference Hall on the campus of the University of Tokyo (7-3-1 Hongo, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo 113-0033 Japan) with the participation of 6 Russian writers: Akunin, Gandlevsky, Kuritsyn, Pelevin, Sorokin, Tolstaya. The official languages will be Russian and Japanese. All the events to be held within the framework of our symposium are open to the general public. Everybody who is interested is welcome. For inquiry, please contact by e-mail at sakkakaigi@hotmail.com (secretariat), mitsu@l.u-tokyo.ac.jp (Mitsuyoshi Numano) or by fax at +81-3-5841-8967.
October 14, 2001
Mitsuyoshi Numano
(The University of Tokyo, Chairperson of the "Orgkomitet")
Program:
October 26 (Fri.), 2001 Literary Seminars with Russian Wirters
10:00-11:20 Seminar with Vladimir Sorokin.
Chair: T. Mochizuki (Hokkaido Univ.)
11:30-12:50 Seminar with Vyacheslav Kuritsyn. Chair: H.Kaizawa (Waseda
Univ.)
14:00-15:20 Seminar with Tatiana Tolstaya. Chair: Kyoko Numano
(TUFS)
15:30-16:50 Seminar with Victor Pelevin. Chair: Mitsu Numano (The Univ. of
Tokyo)
October 27 (Sat.), 2001
International Symposium: Toward the Literature of the New Millennium
10:30-13:00 Part One: The Contemporary World and the Possibilities of the
Novel
Chair: Ikuo Kameyama (Tokyo Univ. of Foreign Studies)
Panelists: Tatiana Tolstaya, Vladimir Sorokin, Victor Pelevin, Shozo Fujii
(The Univ. of Tokyo), Motoyuki Shibata (The Univ. of Tokyo)
14:00-16:30 Part Two: Literature in the Age of Mass Culture
Chair: Mitsu Numano (The Univ. of Tokyo)
Panelists: Boris Akunin, Sergei Gandlevsky, Vyacheslav Kuritsyn, Masahiko
Shimada, Masashi Miura
The conference, sponsored by the Bakhmeteff Archive of Russian and East European Literature and Culture of Columbia University and supported by the Slavic Division of the New York Public Library, will bring together literary scholars, historians, librarians, archivists and members of the general public to discuss the written and printed legacy of the Slavic heritage in the United States. The conference, which coincides with the 50th anniversary of the founding of the Bakhmeteff Archive, is intended to open a broad discussion on the problem of integrating the history and holdings of Slavic collections into the overall history of the American society as well as into the history of the Russian-American cultural heritage.
There is no fee for attendance, and no formal registration is required. The Friday session will have limited space available. If you wish to come to the Friday session, please call the Slavic and Division at: (212) 930-0714.
For more information see the conference program at:Jared Ingersoll
Slavic Librarian
Columbia University
212-854-4701
---------------------------------------------
Friday, October 12, 2001
A Free and Public Lecture
"Word and Icon in Gogol and Babel"
by Robert Maguire,
Bekhmeteff Professor of Russian Studies,
Columbia University
4:30 pm
Pyle Center, 702 Langdon Street, Room 313
-----------------------------------------------
Saturday, October 13, 2001
1:00 -5:00
Pyle Center, 702 Langdon Street
12:45-1:00 pm Coffee and Tea
1:00-2:45 pm Slavic Poetry and Song
Chair: Viktoria Ivleva, UW-Madison
Secretary: Marty Richards, UW-Madison
Pushkin: The Prophet of Synthesis in Dostoevsky and Platonov, Keith Meyer-Blasing, UW-Madison
Virginity in Tsvetaeva's Ophelia and Phaedra Poems, Erik Brynolfson, UW-Madison
The Confluence of Time in Iosef Brodskii's Dvadtsat' sonetov k Marii Stiuart, David Polet, UW-Madison
Gender and Power in the Balkan Return Song, Margaret Beissinger, UW-Madison
2:45-3:00 pm Coffee and Tea
3:00-4:30 pm 19th- and 20th-Century Russian Prose
Chair: Kat Scollins, UW-Madison
Secretary: David Vernikov, UW-Madison
Anti-Napoleonic Literature as a Source of Russian Messianism, James Class, Georgetown University
Dead Souls: A Narratological Study, Molly Peeney, UW-Madison
Toward an Understanding of Gorod En: Leonid Dobychin, James Joyce, and Problems of Narrative Representation, Matt Walker, UW-Madison
*********************************
David S. Danaher, Assistant Professor
Slavic Languages, 1432 Van Hise
University of Wisconsin-Madison
Madison, WI 53706
dsdanaher@facstaff.wisc.edu
On Thursday, November 15th, from 9AM-12PM in the Tidewater Room of the Hyatt Hotel, the Slavic Librarians from the Bibliography and Documentation Committee will hold a preconference designed to acquaint Slavic scholars with a variety of research resources available on-line. The program and demonstrations will include the basic techniques of preparing your computer to handle special non-Roman character sets, using your browser's features to organize your research, how and where to find information on diverse topics including language and literature, politics and government, etc. and how to make contact with scholars through various avenues of electronic communication. There will be opportunities for questions and answers during the session.
We have available seating for up to 70 attendees, but we request that those planning to attend the presentation contact Allan Urbanic (phone/voicemail: 510 758-9236 or email: aurbanic@library.berkeley.edu) in order to assure we will be able to accommodate all who wish to participate.
What further steps are needed to implement economic and administrative reforms? How healthy is democracy in Ukraine? How has Ukraine's relationship with the EU and NATO developed? What are the implications for regional security? How are Ukraine's relations evolving with its neighbours, including Russia? Has the business climate improved?
The conference will consist of public readings, lectures, and panel discussions on a broad range of topics related to literary translation. Participants include some of the most illustrious translators from around the world, among them Pulitzer Prize-winning poet W.S. Merwin; Edmund Keeley, the translator of the works of two Nobel laureates, George Seferis and Odysseas Elytis, as well as those of the greatest Greek poet of the last two centuries, Constantine Cavafy; Eliot Weinberger, translator of Nobel laureate Octavio Paz's Collected Poems; poet Heather McHugh and literary scholar Nikolai Popov, who have translated the most important poet of the Holocaust, Paul Celan; Chinese poet Bei Dao; and poet Daniel Weissbort, former director of the University of Iowa Translation Program, who has translated a number of modern Russian poets including Nikolai Zabolotskai and Evgenii Vinokurov.
Other participants include John Nathan, who holds the Takashima Chair of Japanese Cultural Studies at UC Santa Barbara and who has translated several novels by Nobel laureate Kezaburo Oe, and writer William Gass, whose most recent book is Reading Rilke: Reflections on the Problems of Translation. They will be joined by Clare Cavanagh, co-translator of Nobel laureate Wislawa Szymborska's Poems New and Collected and of Adam Zagajewski's poetry and prose; Linda Asher, who along with her husband Aaron Asher has translated the Czech novelist Milan Kundera's work; Gran Malmqvist, a member of the Swedish Academy and translator of Chinese literature; and Zvonimir Radeljkovic, professor at the University of Sarajevo and founding member of PEN in Bosnia, who has translated extensively from contemporary American and English literature.
The conference is free and open to the public. Visit our website at: http://www.uiowa.edu/~iwp/AOTintro. For further information or to register, contact Susan Benner at susan-benner@uiowa.edu, (515) 233-1664. Or write to the International Writing Program, 469 EPB, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA 52242-1408.
The University of Paris IV (Sorbonne) and the French Association of Russian Studies (AFR) are pleased to announce a conference on the writer ALEXANDRA MARININA to take place on 19-20 October 2001 in Paris. Alexandra Marinina will also attend the conference. The language of the conference will be Russian. 150-word abstracts for 30-minute papers are invited in any area of investigation: literary, linguistic, sociological or gender-oriented. The deadline for abstracts is 20 September 2001. Unfortunately we shall be unable to offer any financial support.
We intend to publish a volume based on conference presentations. We shall be able to consider solely Russian-language articles for publication; even colleagues who may not be able to attend the conference are encouraged to submit articles. The deadline for submitting articles (on diskette and in hard copy) to be considered for publication is 30 November 2001.
The conference programme and all practical information will be sent to interested colleagues in due course.
Kindly address all further correspondence to Dr Hélène MELAT, Associate Professor of Russian and president of AFR.
Address: 23ter boulevard BERTHIER, 75017 PARIS, FRANCE.
Tel : 00-33-1-42-27-30-33
e-mail : h_melat@club-internet.fr
Representations of clothing are frequent in the art and literature of 1300 - 1600, but contemporary experiences of clothing are little investigated. This interdisciplinary conference aims to explore ways of reconstructing the social practices of the past through investigations of the cultural significance of clothing. Papers are invited from a broad range of theoretical perspectives which relate to the traditional disciplines of art history, textile and costume history, cultural history (social/political/economic), anthropology and literary studies. Areas of investigation into process, experience and representation might include:
Methods of analysis might include:
Synopses of c. 500 words are requested by the end of September 2001. Proposals and other offers of participation will be welcome from scholars at all stages of research. It is intended that this conference will generate a publishable volume.
For further details and correspondence email Catherine Richardson, C.T.Richardson@ukc.ac.uk, or write to:
Dr Catherine Richardson
Canterbury Centre for Medieval & Tudor Studies
University of Kent at Canterbury
Canterbury
Kent
CT2 7NX
UK
History and Structure in Postcolonial Theory and Literature
at the Central NY Conference on Language and Literature, Cortland, NY, October 28-30.
Despite the continuing appeal of post-colonial theory and criticism, many academics have expressed their concerns about the textual turn in post-colonial studies. Nonetheless, the pitfalls of post-colonial theory and criticism can still be corrected once post-coloniality is developed in dialogue with other critical interventions and forms of social mobilization. This panel seeks to examine one path of development namely, reading texts at the intersection of post-colonialism and cultural materialism, or general Marxist approaches to literature. Issues for consideration may include:
Send abstracts by July 15, 2001 to:
Dr. Jamil Khader
Assistant Prof of English
The English Department
Stetson University
421 N. Woodland Blv.
Deland, FL 32720
jkhader@stetson.edu
Saint-Petersburg State University, "Mikhailvoskoye" Museum-Preserve, Cultural - Enlightment Society "Pushkin project" and Humanitarian-cultural center "Piligrim" are pleased to invite you to take part in the International Scientific conference "Pushkin and Shakespeare" which is planned to be held from 24 till the 30 of September, 2001 in Pushkinskie Gory (Pushkin Hills), Russia.
The program of the conference will include the lectures and reports on the
next topics:
1. A history in the literature
2. Dramatic art: a problem of genres
3. Lyrics and dramatic art
4. A phenomenon of entry of the writer in the world literature
5. " Russian Shakespeare ", " English Pushkin ": problems of translation and
reception
6. Problems of studying and teaching of classics
7. A masscult as the form of "commenting" of classical work of literature
8. Pushkin and Shakespeare: theatrical interpretations
The working language of the Conference is Russian.
The coordinates of the organizing committee:
Russia, 197022, St. Petersburg, Prof. Popova str., 25
Society "Pushkin project"
Tel./fax: 7-812-2349352, 7-812-2340722
e-mail: piligrim@infopro.spb.su
An interdisciplinary conference sponsored by The Association for the Psychoanalysis of Culture & Society, and The Center for the Critical Analysis of Contemporary Culture
PSYCHOANALYSIS ACROSS THE DISCIPLINESHow does psychoanalytic work inform the ways we think about, use, and conflict with other bodies of knowledge and kinds of practice? We are looking for papers exploring, performing, proposing, or critiquing actual or possible practical, historical, theoretical, methodological, cultural, or institutional encounters and intersections of psychoanalysis with other disciplines, theories, and practices, within and without the academy.
Keynote SpeakersProfessor Judith Butler, University of California, Berkeley "Ethical Violence"
Professor Jacqueline Rose, Queen Mary and Westfield College, University of London To Be Announced
Dr. Mark Solms, The Anna Freud Center "What is Neuro-Psychoanalysis?"
Possible topics include (but are not limited to) the following:
Whither Psychoanalysis: New Programs and Pedagogies
Disciplinary Disruptions, Amplifications, Revisions
Psychoanalysis and the University
Clinical vs. Academic aspects of psychoanalsysis
Clinical Practice and Social Issues
Psychoanalysis and the Sciences
Psychoanalysis and/in the Public Sphere
Media Terminable and Interminable
Psychoanalysis as Critique of Critique
Psychoanalysis and Politics
Social Implications of Psychoanalytic Criticism
APCS is dedicated to promoting the social benefits of psychoanalysis.
We
encourage participants to address this dimension in their presentations.
Proposals for individual papers (15-20 minutes) and panels (3 or 4
papers)
are invited. Send one-page abstracts (no papers) to Marcia Ian by June
1, 2001. Include email addresses, postal addresses,
professional/institutional affiliation if any, and phone numbers for all
individuals involved in the proposal. Email submissions are preferred.
Marcia Ian Gnudle@bellatlantic.net Gnudle@yahoo.com (if the above fails) Department of English, Murray Hall Rutgers University 510 George Street New Brunswick, NJ 08901-1167
Section Topics:
Systematic-Functional and Communicative Orientation of the
description of Russian
Problems and Perspectives in Textual Analysis
General and Specific Problems in Contemporary Methods of Teaching
Russian As a Foreign Language
Culturology and Linguoculturology in the System of Teaching Russian
as a Foreign Language
Registration fee for scholars from Russia, CIS, Baltic States, Central Europe = 200 rubles; for scholars from all other countries $75 (USD). Conference participants are responsible for all other costs for transportation, lodging and meals.
Abstracts are invited up to 2 pages in length with contact information for the author (name, degree, title, affiliation, contact information by e-mail, fax, telephone, airmail address). Deadline for abstracts is September 5 2001; they must be received by e-mail at konfd01@philol.msu.ru. Abstracts must be in Word for Windows 6.0, 95, 97 in Times New Roman, 1.5 line interval, 2.5 cm margins, right justified margins, notes after the text.
For more information, call (095) 939-53-29, 939-15-05 or fax at (095) 939-26-22, 939-55-96.
Abstracts (100 words) are invited for 20-minute papers in LITERATURE, ART, MUSIC, FILM AND MEDIA STUDIES, CULTURAL STUDIES (including GENDER AND WOMEN'S STUDIES) to be given at the annual convention of the British Association of Slavonic and East European Studies at Fitzwilliam College, Cambridge University (UK), between 6-8 April 2002. Please send abstracts to PETER I. BARTA by e-mail (p.barta@surrey.ac.uk) by 15 October 2001.
Peter I. BartaA conference on "Building a Vital U.S. - Ukraine Partnership" will take place on the campus of the University of Kansas in Lawrence on 26-28 April 2001, sponsored by the U.S. and Kansas National Guards and co-sponsored by the University of Kansas Center for Russian and East European Studies and the U.S. Foreign Military Studies Office at Fort Leavenworth.
The purpose of this conference is to:
1. explore the function of the military-civilian interface;
2. evaluate the success of the State Partnership Program and the Partnership for Peace to date
(Lessons Learned);
3. provide an interactive forum for dialogue among civilian, military, government, and
academic constituencies from both the U.S. and Ukraine;
4. develop effective and collaborative strategies that will enhance
security (in the broadest sense) and stability.
Speakers will include Gen. Joseph W. Ralston (Supreme Allied Commander, Europe), Ambassador Steven Pifer, Roman Solchanyk (RAND), William Gleason (Woodrow Wilson Center for Scholars), Sergei Konoplyov (Harvard Ukrainian National Security Program), Viktor Bondarenko (National Institute of Strategic Studies, Kyiv), Orest Subtelny (York University, Toronto), Jacob Kipp (U.S. Foreign Military Studies Office), Anatolii Grytsenko (Centre for Economic and Political Studies, Kyiv), and other leading scholars and representatives of Ukrainian studies.
The conference is free, but registration is required because of limited seating. Please contact:
Dr. Maria Carlson
Director, Center for Russian and East European Studies
University of Kansas, 106 Lippincott Hall
1410 Jayhawk Boulevard,
Lawrence, KS 66045-7515
PH 785-864-4236
FX 785-864-5242 crees@ukans.edu
The conference program is available at www.ukans.edu/~crees/partnership.html
FIRST CALL FOR PAPERS
The SOCIETY FOR CENTRAL EURASIAN STUDIES in conjunction with the Department of Languages and Cultures of Asia, the Central Asian Studies Program, and the Center for Russia, East Europe, and Central Asia at the University of Wisconsin-Madison is pleased to announce the convening of the second annual meeting of the Central Eurasian Studies Society. This annual conference of the Central Eurasian Studies Society replaces the earlier annual Workshop on Central Asian Studies.
We would like to request submission of paper proposals, and proposals for pre-organized panels, that concern Central Asian and Central Eurasian studies. These include: history, languages, cultures, and modern states and societies of the Turkic, Mongolian, Iranian, Caucasian, Tibetan and other peoples of the Black Sea region, the Crimea, the Caucasus, the Middle Volga region, Central and Inner Asia and Siberia, and teaching and research about these topics and areas.
SUBMISSION OF ABSTRACTS
Participants wishing to present a paper are asked to submit an abstract of 150-250 words, and conference registration by May 15, 2001, using the form and response information below. Pre-organized panels sponsored by scholarly organizations related to any part of Central Eurasia are welcome. Confirmation of paper or panel acceptance will be available by July 1, 2001. We will do our best to accommodate proposals for papers after that date, but we do wish to encourage early submissions.
PARTICIPANT INFORMATION
[Note: On-line conference registration is available at: http://www.wisc.edu/creeca/]
1. Name
2. Address
3. Telephone & fax
4. Email
5. Educational background (highest degree, year, institution, major)
6. Current institutional affiliation
7. Title of Presentation
8. Abstract (150-250 words)
FOR SUBMISSION OF ABSTRACTS/ON-LINE REGISTRATION:
Center for Russia, East Europe, and Central Asia
University of Wisconsin
210 Ingraham Hall
1155 Observatory Drive
Madison, WI 53706-1397 U.S.A.
tel.: 1-608-262-3379; fax 1-608-265-3062
E-mail: creeca@intl-institute.wisc.edu
Website: http://www.wisc.edu/creeca/
Abstracts for the 2000 CESS Annual Conference are available on-line at the CESS website: http://www.fas.harvard.edu/cess
Abstracts for the 2001 CESS Annual Conference are available on-line at the the CESS website: http://www.fas.harvard.edu/cess and/or CREECA website: http://www.wisc.edu/creeca/
CESS CONFERENCE COMMITTEE:
The CESS Conference Committee consists of John Colarusso (McMaster U.), Justin Rudelson (U. Maryland), Steven Sabol (U. North Carolina-Charlotte, co-chair), and Uli Schamiloglu (U. Wisconsin-Madison, co-chair). For further information on submission of abstracts or other aspects of the CESS Annual Conference contact:
Steven Sabol (co-chair)
Assistant Professor
Department of History
University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Charlotte, NC 28223
tel: 1-704-687-4632
fax: 1-704-687-3218
email: sosabol@newmail.uncc.edu
OR
Uli Schamiloglu (co-chair)
Professor
Department of Languages and Cultures of Asia
1254 Van Hise, 1220 Linden Drive
Madison, WI 53706 USA
tel: 1-608-262-7141 (office), 1-608-262-3012 (department)
fax: 608-265-3538
email: uschamil@facstaff.wisc.edu
CONFERENCE INFORMATION
Arrival is Thursday, October 11 afternoon/evening and departure is Sunday, October 14 at noon. The keynote speaker(s), the registration fee, and additional details concerning the program will be announced at a later date. (There is usually an informal gathering on Thursday evening and the program begins on Friday.) Registration/meetings will take place at the Lowell Center at the University of Wisconsin, Madison. Some meetings will also take place on campus near by. Hotel registration information is available at the end of this message.
The goal of the annual Workshop on Central Asian Studies (established in 1996) was to offer an opportunity for scholars, institutions, and organizations interested in the Central Asian field to meet annually to discuss how we research, teach, and coordinate efforts in the Central Asian field. One result of this series of annual meetings was an effort during the fourth annual workshop in 1999 to establish a new scholarly society known as the Central Eurasian Studies Society. This new society held its first annual meeting in conjunction with the fifth annual workshop in 2000, and held its first elections soon after. Information on the CESS follows.
THE CENTRAL EURASIAN STUDIES SOCIETY
The Central Eurasian Studies Society (CESS) is a private, non-political, non-profit, U.S.-based organization of scholars who are interested in the study of Central Eurasia, and its history, languages, cultures, and modern states and societies. We define the Central Eurasian region broadly to include Turkic, Mongolian, Iranian, Caucasian, Tibetan and other peoples. Geographically, Central Eurasia extends from of the Black Sea region, the Crimea, and the Caucasus in the west, through the Middle Volga region, Afghanistan, Central and Inner Asia, and on to and southeastern Siberia, Mongolia and Tibet in the east.
The Central Eurasian Studies Society's purpose is to promote high standards of research and teaching, and to foster communication among scholars through meetings and publications. The Society works to facilitate interaction among senior, established scholars, junior scholars, graduate students, and unaffiliated scholars in North America and throughout the world. We hold an Annual Conference, and coordinate panels at various conferences relevant to Central Eurasian studies. The Society also works to promote the publication of peer-reviewed scholarship and other information essential to the building the field. As soon as practicable, we plan to begin publishing, twice annually, a bulletin that focuses on research reports, book reviews, information on the current state of the field worldwide, and related topics.
We invite anyone who shares these interests to become a member and participate in our activities.
To learn more about CESS:
1. Come to the Information Meeting on CESS at the ASN Convention. 2. Contact CESS President, John Schoeberlein, by e-mail at: CESS@fas.harvard.edu, or write to: John Schoeberlein/CESS, Harvard Forum for Central Asian Studies, 1737 Cambridge St., Cambridge, MA 02138 USA. 3. Attend the Second CESS Annual Conference in Madison, Wisconsin, 11-14 October, 2001. For further information about the Annual Conference, contact Steve Sabol sosabol@newmail.uncc.edu or Uli Schamiloglu uschamil@facstaff.wisc.edu.
To become a member, fill in the on-line registration form. Dues are $30 for full members; $15 for student and retired members; and free for some members depending on which countries they come from: http://www.fas.harvard.edu/~cess.
CESS BOARD
The CESS Board elected in 2000 consists of the following people:
John Schoeberlein (ex officio, President),
Marianne Kamp (ex officio, "Past-President")
John Colarusso
Alisher Ilkhamov
Wang Jianping
Virginia Martin
Steven Sabol
Uli Schamiloglu
HOTEL RESERVATION INFORMATION
Please make reservations at:
Wisconsin Center Guest House
Lowell Hall
610 Langdon Street
University of Wisconsin
Madison, Wisconsin 53703
tel. 1-608-256-2621; fax 1-608-262-5445
lowell@ecc.uwex.edu
October 2001 room rates are $62/night single; $72/night double (includes parking & complimentary breakfast).
Are you:
Concerned about corruption?
Currently a college student?
Would you like to:
Learn what you can do to fight corruption?
Network with more than 1500 anti-corruption professionals from all over the
world?
Visit Prague, one of the most beautiful cities in Europe?
Improve your CV?
Have fun?
Then we invite you to participate in the Students' Forum of the 10th International Anti-Corruption Conference. The Conference, whose theme is "Together Against Corruption: Designing Strategies, Assessing Impact, Reforming Corrupt Institutions," is making its East Central European debut from 7-11 October 2001 in Prague, Czech Republic.
The Conference is the premier global forum for the networking and cross-fertilization that is indispensable to effective international and national advocacy and action against corruption and to progress in this area. Through workshops based on real-life case studies, the Conference aims to identify global anti-corruption priorities, develop national and international strategies, exchange experiences in anti-corruption efforts and further develop international co-operation. It will be attended by more than 1500 delegates, including representatives from government, civil society, the private sector, academia, the media. For the first time, the program will include a Students' Forum, in which fifty college students, the leaders of tomorrow's anti-corruption fight, will gain valuable insight into the practical side of anti-corruption efforts.
To be considered for the Forum, students must submit proposal for an original paper. Participants will be chosen competitively based on their paper proposals and recommendations of their academic advisors. Once chosen, the students will turn their proposals into papers, and the best papers will be chosen for presentation in special student workshops guided by graduate student mentors.
Conference Structure: The Conference will start on Monday, 8 October and run through Thursday, 11 October. Morning plenary session will be followed by workshops at the Prague Conference Centre. Students will attend the plenary sessions and the regular workshops in the morning, and the Students' Forum workshops in the afternoon.
Students' Forum Workshops: The workshops will feature presentation of two papers on panels chaired by graduate students. Papers will be followed by discussion on the panel theme. Participants will be expected to attend all student panels and to take part in their discussion.
Topics: Papers may be submitted on the following areas, which may be broadly interpreted.
Potential topics: the role of public institutions, privatization, the role of civil society and NGOs, the mediaMain program workshops include: "Addressing problems of companies in transition economies," "Containing & correcting corruption in privatisation"
Potential topics: organized crime, corruption in the judiciary, human rights, money launderingMain program workshops include: "Preventing perversions of justice: corruption in the judiciary," "Training incorruptible police officers," "Countering the corruption influence of organised crime"
Potential topics: impacts of globalization, the role of civil society, multilateral institutionsMain program workshops include: "Setting ethics standards for the development aid business," "Evaluating conditionality in aid and debt relief"
Potential topics: health, sports, education, corruption in schoolsMain program workshops include: "Attacking corruption in education," "Countering private sector corruption: the role of business schools," "Building ethics in the young," "Blowing the whistle on corruption in sport"
We welcome papers on other topics such as gender and human rights, especially ones that tie these topics into those listed above.
As the main program evolves, further information as well as resources and links regarding these topics will be available in the Students' Forum section of our website at http://www.10iacc.org. Please check our site in March. We encourage proposals from a wide range of disciplinary backgrounds.
Benefits: Students will receive a fee waiver for the conference, which normally costs 760 USD, and will be able to attend the plenary sessions and the morning workshops. The organizers will cover accommodation and travel expenses.
Students are, however, strongly encouraged to make use of any institutional funds that may be available to them.
Proposals: Proposals should be no more than one page single-spaced page, and should include the title of the proposed paper and the name of the author. The proposal should clearly state the paper's theme, argument, and sources of information. In keeping with the approach of the Conference, the papers should be based on a case study or students' personal experiences. We encourage innovative approaches to the format of the paper. Students are encouraged to seek advice on their proposals from their academic advisor. Proposals are due 15 May.
Papers: Once the student has been accepted for the Forum, papers should be typed, double-spaced, and should not exceed 2,000 words. Students are encouraged to seek advice on their papers from their teachers or their academic advisor. Papers are due 1 September.
Language: English will be the working language of the conference, and proposals will be accepted in English only.
More about the IACC: The conference will be hosted by the Government of the Czech Republic and Transparency International Czech Republic a member of the international non-governmental anti-corruption movement of the same name. The conference series is overseen by the IACC Council, for which Transparency International serves as Secretariat. You can find more information about the upcoming conference at http://www.10iacc.org, and further information regarding past conferences at http://www.transparency.de/iacc.
To apply: Please sent the completed application form and the paper proposal
to
Saska Gerasimova. The nomination form should be filled in by the academic
advisor or teacher and directly sent to the organizers.
Proposals and forms may be sent via email or post to the following
addresses:
gerasimova@transparency.cz
Saska Gerasimova
Transparency International
Czech Republic
Klimentska 30
110 15 Praha Czech Republic
Final Call for Papers
----------------------
(Please distribute locally)
20-minute presentations dedicated to formal aspects of the grammars of Slavic languages, including phonology, syntax, semantics, and their interfaces, are invited. Please submit an abstract (maximum two pages) with identifying information to Jindrich Toman, 3040 MLB, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109-2175 no later than by March 14, 2001. Electronic or fax submissions will be accepted.
Notes on changes:
-----------------
a) Abstract: The second call for papers mistakenly asked for a ONE-page abstract, while the original posting mentioned a TWO-page abstract. Please feel free to send a two-page abstract, if necessary, as originally posted.
b) Electronic and fax submissions will be accepted.
c) Deadline extension: The deadline for abstracts has been extended--the new deadline is Wednesday, March 14.
d) Website: A FASL 10 website will appear in our departmental website very soon: http://www.lsa.umich.edu/slavic/
Please accept our apologies for the changes.
JT
----------------------------------------------
jindrich toman
department of slavic languages and literatures
3040 MLB,
university of michigan
ann arbor, MI 48109-1275
phone: (734) 764 5355, fax: (734) 647 2127
The History of Architecture and Urbanism Program of the College of Architecture, Art and Planning at Cornell University will host a two- day conference in March of 2001 focusing on identity and memory in South Slavic architecture. The conference of invited speakers will bring together leading scholars on the subject from both the United States and the former Yugoslavia.
The two-day conference will begin with a keynote address by Yale University Professor Ivo Banac, one of the most prolific and respected historians of Central and Eastern Europe. The other thirteen speakers will be organized into three sessions. The first session will be devoted to understanding the region's broader cultural framework because of its complexities and the competing influences on its architecture. The second session will address the creation of modern civic identities in Yugoslavia's four national capitals: Ljubljana, Zagreb, Sarajevo and Belgrade. The third session will examine specific examples of layered memory in Federal Yugoslavia and its successor states.
www.architecture.cornell.edu/slavic.htm
---------------TUESDAY, MARCH 27, 2001 (location TBA)
4:30
Slavoj Zizek: Yugoslavia: The Burden of Being the Stuff
Others' Dreams are Made of
FRIDAY, MARCH 30, 2001 (A.D. White House)
2:30
Dean Porus Olpadwala: Welcome
Tanja Damljanovic and Emily Gunzburger: Introduction
2:45
Ivo Banac: The Building of Architectural Skadar: Edifices and
Ideology among the South Slavs
3:30
Session I: The Central/South/Eastern European Cultural Framework
(Moderator: Ivo Banac)
Steven Mansbach: Modernist Frameworks and Aesthetic Climates in Southeastern Europe
Jeremy Howard: Styles, Tastes and Values: the European context of Southern Slavic art and architecture c.1900
Amir Pasic: The Transition from Islamic to European Architectural Models
Andrew Wachtel: When & Why did "Yugoslav Culture" Make Sense
SATURDAY, MARCH 31, 2001 (A.D. White House)
10:00
SESSION II: Construction of Civic Architectural Identities (Moderator:
Christian F. Otto)
Christopher Long: Joze Plecnik in Ljubljana: The Search for National Identity
Karin Serman: Zagreb and the Practice of Transcoding: Critical Reception of Cominant Cultural Paradigms
Tanja Damljanovic: Belgrade Modernism Between the Eternal Return and Utopia
Carel Bertram: Sarajevo's Identity: A Moving Target (paper co- written with Dijana Alic)
12:30 Lunch Break
2:00
Session III: Architecture as Memory/Architecture as Target
(Moderator: Michael Tomlan)
Slobodan Curcic: Balkan Belfries: Destruction, Memory, and Historiography---------------
Emily Gunzburger: The Old Bridge: Icon, Symbol, Metaphor, and Memory
Svetlana Popovic: Kosovo Monuments: Cultural Identities and Historical Contexts
Sultan Barakat: The Challenges of Reconstructing Cultural Heritage Damaged by War
For additional information, please contact:
Emily Gunzburger
PhD Candidate, History of Architecture & Urbanism
Department of Architecture
143 E Sibley Hall
Cornell University
Ithaca, NY 14853, U.S.A.
Phone: 607-257-7742
email: eag26@cornell.edu
emilygunzburger@hotmail.com
We seek twenty-minute presentations on the theme of "inventing the individual" (broadly understood.) We anticipate that the conference will cover a wide variety of topics (whose primary historical focus is Romanticism) from a spectrum of disciplinary, interdisciplinary, and cross-disciplinary viewpoints including, but not limited to, literature, criticism, comparative literature, political and social history, philosophy, sociology, psychology, material culture, European and American studies, music history, art history, architectural history, and religion. Papers addressing the theme of individualism with reference to feminist theory, queer theory, and post-colonial theory as well as papers addressing Romanticism from traditionally less represented geographical areas, are particularly welcome. Presenters are encouraged to examine topics in comparison with or contrast to other periods prior to, contemporary with, or succeeding Romanticism up to the present.
Given the developing interest in the use of technology to support scholarship in Romanticism, presentations demonstrating applications of technology to research are also welcome.
In support of the interdisciplinary thrust of the conference, on Saturday evening November 10, the Performing Arts Series at Miami University will feature a performance of Franz Schubert's Winterreise, sung by Ulrich Schutte, accompanied by Gary Holt.
Half-page abstracts should be submitted electronically via the Miami Conference website (http://sasnt-class.eas.muohio.edu/ACRConf) by March 15, 2001. Other inquiries can be directed to Michael Bachem (e-mail: bachemm@muohio.edu) or to G. Todd Davis (e-mail: davisgt@muohio.edu)
The South Atlantic MLA Special Session on Slavic Studies is now accepting proposals for the 2001 conference. This year's special topic is Central and East European (including Russian) film. Please send a brief abstract to Kim Jastremski (kjastrem@email.unc.edu) or Kathleen Ahern (k_ahern@uncg.edu) by March 31. Graduate students are encouraged to participate.
The SAMLA conference will be held November 9-11 in Atlanta, Georgia. All panelists must join SAMLA by July 1, 2001 in order to receive pre-registration materials for the conference. Further information can be found at www.samla.org.
Sponsored by the Institute of English Studies, University of Warsaw
INVITED SPEAKERS:
Jerzy RUBACH, University of Warsaw and University of Iowa
Tobias SCHEER, University of Nice
The primary aim of GLiP meetings is to bring together (i) Polish generative linguists, (ii) generative linguists working in Poland, as well as (iii) generative linguists working on Polish.
We invite abstracts on any aspect of generative phonology and morphophonology in any generative approach (Government Phonology, Lexical Phonology, Optimality Theory). Talks will be organized around major phonological topics, depending on the content of the submissions.
The format of the conference is 20 min for presentation + 10 min question time. Languages of the conference are English and Polish.
GLiP-3 is the first meeting in this conference series devoted to phonology and morphophonology, the previous meetings being primarily syntactic in nature. GLiP-3 marks the beginning of what we intend to become a rule: (morpho)syntactic meetings in the autumn and (morpho)phonological meetings in the spring.
We are planning to publish a volume of conference proceedings (see our web pages for information on the proceedings of the previous meetings.)
ORGANIZING COMMITTEE:
Piotr Banski, University of Warsaw
Beata Lukaszewicz, University of Warsaw
Adam Przepiorkowski, Polish Academy of Sciences
ABSTRACT COMMITTEE:
Piotr Banski, University of Warsaw
Edmund Gussmann, University of Gdansk
Beata Lukaszewicz, University of Warsaw
Grazyna Rowicka, HIL / Leiden University
Jerzy Rubach, University of Warsaw / University of Iowa
Tobias Scheer, University of Nice
ACCOMMODATION:
Accommodation will be provided at the university hotel. Details are
available from the GLiP web page (see below).
CONFERENCE FEES:
Regular: 80 PLN
Student: 40 PLN
DATES:
DEADLINE for receipt of abstracts: 11 February 2001
Notification of acceptance: 5 March 2001
Meeting: 7-8 April 2001
ABSTRACTS:
Should be *anonymous* (i.e., they should contain no personal data or
explicit self-references) and consist of up to 700 words, together
with examples and references.
Because abstract forwarding to referees will be done by e-mail
exclusively, the following are the possible formats of attachments, in
*descending* order of preference:
(Plain Text) > Postscript > PDF > (La)TeX > Word for Windows '97
In cases when there is no need to use special phonetic symbols or phonological representations/rules, we strongly encourage PLAIN TEXT submissions.
We regret to say that other formats will not be accepted.
Should the electronic version of the abstract need special phonetic fonts apart from the SIL IPA fonts (http://www.sil.org/), please attach them as well. (We strongly discourage this practice though, and reserve the right to ask for a resubmission in a different format.)
Those who submit abstracts in (*self-contained*!) (La)TeX should best use the tipa.sty package. See http://venus.ci.uw.edu.pl/~glip/links/ for pointers to the sites which offer this package for download.
Only one submission per person and one joint submission will be considered. Abstracts should be written in English or Polish.
Please note: do NOT send abstracts on diskettes. We will accept *e-mail* submissions *exclusively*.
IMPORTANT: In the plain text part of your email, please supply the
following information:
- name, title,
- title of the paper,
- affiliation,
- email address,
- snail mail address.
ADDRESSES:
PLEASE NOTE: ONLY *E-MAIL* SUBMISSIONS WILL BE CONSIDERED
Send your abstracts to: GLiP-3 Organizing Committee glip@venus.ci.uw.edu.pl
Please be so kind as to use zip, gzip, bzip2 or some other compression utility to COMPRESS the attachment.
For MORE INFORMATION see: http://venus.ci.uw.edu.pl/~glip/
PRELIMINARY REGISTRATION (IMPORTANT!):
If you are (tentatively) interested in taking part in this conference,
please, send your email address to GLiP-3 Organizing Committee
glip@venus.ci.uw.edu.pl. Most future announcements, changes, etc.,
will be mailed only to registered prospective participants (and not to
general linguistic lists).
Dear Slavists,
Please note the following calls for papers for the 2001 MLA National Convention to be held next December in New Orleans. We hope to have an especially large and lively Slavic presence at MLA this year and urge you all to join in!
Rewriting Texts
Examines revisions of cultural texts in any genre (verbal, visual,
behavioral), by individuals or groups, in any geographical area, for any
purpose. Focus on motivation for, nature or consequences of revision.
Abstracts to Helena Goscilo at goscilo+@pitt.edu. (Panel sponsored by the
Division on Slavic and East European Literatures)
Diasporic Desires
Interventions into the current discursive explosion around the concept of
diasporas, focusing on the articulations of experiences of displacement,
desire and (dis)identification, particularly by authors of Slavic/East
European backgrounds. Abstracts by March 15. All abstracts and inquiries
to Vitaly Chernetsky at vac10@columbia.edu; fax (212) 854-5009. (Panel
sponsored by the Division on Slavic and East European Literatures)
Impostors and Pretenders
How have impostors and pretenders been represented and represented
themselves and their legitimating claims in history, culture, and
literature? Interdisciplinary, comparative approaches and innovative
presentation formats welcome. Send 1-2 page abstracts by March 15. George
Gutsche, at gutscheg@u.arizona.edu.. (Panel sponsored by the American
Association of Teachers of Slavic and East European Languages)
The Icon
Theoretical implications of the "icon"- religious, cultural,
representational, or aesthetic. Papers considering the convergence or
divergence of understandings of the icon between Slavic and non-Slavic
cultures particularly welcome.. Abstracts by March 15 to Catharine
Nepomnyashchy at cn29@columbia.edu. (Panel sponsored by the American
Association of Teachers of Slavic and East European Languages)
CALL FOR PAPERS:
The Midwest Slavic Conference is requesting applications for panels and papers in all areas of Slavic and Central/Eastern European studies. The conference will feature:
FOR INFORMATION AND PROPOSALS
Please direct all inquires, as well as paper and panel proposals (with
abstracts for each paper no more than one page) to:
Professor George Kalbouss, Exec. Dir., Midwest Slavic Conference
Department of Slavic & East European Languages & Literatures
Ohio State University
232 Cunz Hall
1841 Milikin Road
Columbus, Ohio 43210-1215
Tel: 614-292-2535
Fax: 614-688-3107
e-mail: Kalbouss.1@osu.edu
Please include your name and complete contact information (postal address, telephone number, and e-mail address) when submitting proposals. Proposals will be accepted by mail, via fax, and in electronic format (attachments preferred).
DEADLINE FOR RECEIPT of proposals is Thursday, February 15, 2001.
Saint-Petersburg State University, Russian State Humanitarian University, Moskow State University of a name of M.V. Lomonosov, Anna Ahmatovoj's museum in the Gushing house, Cultural-Enlightment Society "Pushkin project", Center "Piligrim" are pleased to invite you to take part in the International Scientific Conference "Saint Petersburg and problems of 'open culture'" which is planned to be held from the 21th till the 25th of June, 2001 in Saint-Petersburg and Great Novgorod, Russia.
The program of the conference will include the lectures and reports on the next topics:
1. St.Petersburg as a theme of the Russian literature of the XVIIIth - XX
centuries;
2. St.Petersburg and culture of Silver Age (A. Ahmatova. Creativity and
the biography);
3. Role of St.Petersburg and the Petersburg theme in democratization of the
Russian literature;
4. Petersburg culture in the light of gender theory;
5. Psychology of the citizen of St.Petersburg as a research problem;
6. Novgorod as St. Petersburg of the Russian Middle Ages. To a problem "a
window to Europe";
7. St.Petersburg today: problems of study.
The working language of the Conference is Russian.
The coordinates of the organizing committee:
Russia, 197022, St.Petersburg, Prof. Popova str., 25
Society "Pushkin project"
Tel./fax: 7-812-2349352, 7-812-2343527, 7-812-2340722
e-mail: piligrim@infopro.spb.su
CALL FOR PAPERS
The Institute of Musicology at the Masaryk University Brno (Czech Republic) will host the annual musicological colloquium, that will examine the rather dubious term socialist realism in its relationship to music. On this occasion, a rather broad scope of topics should be addressed: the origins of socialist realism in the context of art and literature, the doctrine of socialist realism in the aesthetics of music and its developments in various countries, the mechanisms by which the doctrine was transmitted, and its native sources and ingredients, socialist realism and the left avant-garde, socialist realism and various anti-modernisms in 20th century music (Third Reich era, Hollywood aesthetics etc.), musical style and socialist realism, the institutional background of socialist realism in musical life.
Both interdisciplinary approaches (especially literary criticism, history of art and social sciences) and papers in various branches of musicology (history, sociology, aesthetics, semiotics, analysis etc.) are welcome. Comparative approaches to this topic are especially welcome.
All prospective participants should submit by May 30, 2001 a 300-word abstract, a brief curriculum vitae, and their postal and e-mail addresses.
The presentation of a paper should not exceed 30 minutes. Papers are accepted in English, German, and French. There are no interpreting facilities available in the conference rooms.
The active participants will be offered accommodation in an international hotel free of charge.
More information will be available progressively on the web page of the Institute of Musicology of the Masaryk University Brno: http://www.phil.muni.cz/music/ under the heading Kolokvium.
Paper abstracts or questions may be directed to:
Institute of Musicology
Masaryk University Brno
Arne Novaka 1
CZ 660 88 Brno
Phone and fax: +420 5 41121434
E-mail: music@phil.muni.cz
Prof. PhDr. Jiri Fukac, CSc.
Chair of the Board of the Colloquium
PhDr. Petr Macek, Ph.D.
Secretary of the Colloquium
PhDr. Mikulas Bek, Ph.D.
Head of the Institute of Musicology
Masaryk University Brno
FIRST CALL FOR PAPERS
The Slavic Department of the University of Potsdam is pleased to announce the 4th European Conference on Formal Description of Slavic Languages (FDSL-4)
Abstracts are invited for 30-minute talks (20-minute presentation plus 10 minutes for discussion) on Slavic syntax, semantics, phonology, morphology, computer linguistics, and sentence processing. Presentations will be in any Slavic language, English or German.
Deadline for receipt of abstracts: May 30, 2001
HOW TO SUBMIT ABSTRACTS:
Abstract submission must be by post (e-mail submissions will not be accepted).
Send 5 copies of an anonymous one-page abstract to the postal address below.
One additional page with figures, data, and references should be appended.
Please include an extra sheet of paper with:
- title of paper
- your name
- complete mailing address and affiliation (or home address, if necessary)
- telephone and fax numbers
- e-mail address
In addition, we ask for a camera-ready original with the author's name, e-mail, and affiliation, which will be needed for producing a volume of conference abstracts.
Authors whose abstracts are accepted will be notified in mid-July 2001.
Those interested in attending FDSL-4 are invited to register their e-mail and/or postal addresses at the conference address below (e-mail is preferred for all communication except submission of abstracts).
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION is available at the FDSL-4 web site: http://www.uni-potsdam.de/u/slavistik/wsw/fdsl4/index.htm
ORGANIZING COMMITTEE:
Peter Kosta University of Potsdam
Jens Frasek University of Potsdam
Joanna Blaszczak University of Potsdam
Ljudmila Geist Humboldt-University of Berlin
Marzena Rochon ZAS, Berlin
POSTAL ADDRESS:
Universität Potsdam
Institut für Slavistik
FDSL-4 Organizing Committee
PF 60 15 53
D-14415 Potsdam
Germany
e-mail: fdsl4@rz.uni-potsdam.de
Phone: (0049)-331-977-2623
Fax: (0049)-331-977-2620
DATES:
DEADLINE for receipt of abstracts: May 30, 2001
Notification of acceptance: mid-July 2001
Conference: November 28-30, 2001
Deadline for submissions of papers for the proceedings volume: March 30, 2002
KazPRYAL presents traditional international MAPRYAL conference, which will take place in Almaty (Republic of Kazakstan).
Sections:
1. General Linguistics.
2. Linguistic Culturology.
3. Social Linguistics.
4. Comparative Linguistics.
5. Translation Studies.
6. Methodology of
.
7. Study of Literature.
Registration of participants and additional information are available at the web-site http://lingua.tnsplus.kz/index-e.html
Abstract submission deadline is April 1, 2001. Abstracts should be
submitted by e-mail to lingua@tnsplus.kz. Abstract size is limited to
2700 symbols. Following file formats are accepted:
* TeX/LaTeX
* plain text
* Microsoft Word95 document
* Microsoft Word97 document
Please, avoid using non-standard fonts (Times New Roman is recommended in Microsoft Word).
Abstracts can also be submitted
* by fax +(327-2)47-2609 (MAPRYAL Conference)
* by mail 480078, KazGU, philological faculty, al-Farabi, 71,
Almaty, Kazakstan
Unfortunately, we cannot accept all the papers and Organizing Committee will inform You, if Your abstract is in the program of the conference.
Conference fee for participants from CIS countries is $20, from other countries is $50. Conference fee includes materials and equipment usage, one copy of conference proceedings. Please send a conference fee only after receiving confirmation of your abstract acceptance.
Travel and accomodation expences are paid by conference participants.
For the conference the following Kazkommertsbank accounts have been set up:
For hard currency transfers: Account number 069117012, Name Madiyeva Gulmira, Kazkommertsbank, Almaty, Kazakstan. SWIFT: KZKO KZ KX. Corr/acc. # 890-0223-057 Bank of New York, New York, USA. SWIFT: IRVTUS3N. CHIPS: 0001.
For rouble transfers: Account number 001687982 Name Madiyeva Gulmira Bayanzhanovna. Open JSC Kazkommertsbank, Almaty, Kazakstan. SWIFT: KZKOKZKX. JS commercial bank Russian Federation Savings Bank, Moscow, Russia. BIK 044541225. Corr/acc. in OPERU Russian Federation Central Bank 30101 810 400 000 000 225. SWIFT: SABRRUMM 012.
Tours and banquet will be offered at extra cost.
Residence conditions: please, let us know before June 30, 2001, if
rooms reservation is required and which hotel is preferred:
higher category -- single room $115 and more, double room $128 and more
first category -- single room $40 and more, double room $45 and more
second category -- double room $10 and more
Deadline for submission of abstracts: FEBRUARY 15, 2001
Slavic Forum 2001 will be held on the campus of the University of Chicago on April 27th and 28th, 2001. We invite graduate students working in the literatures and cultures of Russia, Central and Eastern Europe to submit abstracts for a twenty-minute presentation. This year we are pleased to expand our conference to include those working in Linguistics. Although we will gladly consider proposals for any work in these fields, we are particularly interested in submissions commemorating the new millennium with a focus on transition not necessarily limited temporally: issues of periodization such as Modernism, Post-modernism, New Sincerity; Millenarianism, Apocalyptic discourse and Messianisms; genre hybrids; interdisciplinary and new approaches in Slavic studies.
Please send a one-page abstract (approximately 250 words or less) to Steven Clancy at sclancy@midway.uchicago.edu by February 15, 2001. Although we prefer to receive abstracts via e-mail, they may be sent by post to the following address:
Slavic Forum
Attn.: Steven Clancy
University of Chicago
1130 East 59th Street
Chicago, IL 60637
20-minute presentations dedicated to formal aspects of the grammars of Slavic languages, including phonology, syntax, semantics, and their interfaces, are invited. Please submit a one-page abstract and an identifying card to the address below no later than March 9, 2001.
The 10th FASL meeting will begin on Sunday morning, May 6, and will conclude on Tuesday, May 8, at noon. This schedule was chosen so as to make it possible for interested FASL participants to arrive a day or two early and participate in the symposium Interfaces and Interactions in the Future of Linguistics, organized by the Program in Linguistics of the University of Michigan to celebrate its new status as department. The symposium will take place on May 4-5. Details will be made available soon.
We hope to see you celebrating linguistics in Ann Arbor in May 2001 with us. Further information will follow.
Contact:
Jindrich Toman
3040 MLB
University of Michigan
Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1275
fax: (734) 647 2127
The Balkan languages share sets of typological properties which have contributed to the shaping of a uniform areal typological profile, referred to as "Balkan language union" or "Balkan Sprachbund". A typological language property is assumed to be areal if (a) shared by at least three languages of the area, at least two of which belong to different genetic families, but (b) not present in all the languages of the genetic family to which the language of the area belongs (if it belongs to a language family, at all). Since the amount, the extent and the limit of areal typological properties necessary for granting membership into the Balkan Sprachbund, has not and cannot be assessed independently, linguistic discussion on Balkan Sprachbund membership has centered around specific properties.
Different analyses single out different arrays of Balkan Sprachbund properties, though most of them agree on one phonological property - the presence of the schwa phoneme - and six grammatical properties: (1) substitution of the synthetic declension markers by analytic ones; (2) grammaticalization of the category of definiteness through postpositive definite articles; (3) pronominal doubling of objects; (4) analytic expression of futurity; (5) analytic Perfect with an auxiliary verb corresponding to have; (6) loss of the infinitive and its substitution by subjunctive clauses. Two Balkan Slavic languages - Macedonian and Bulgarian, two Balkan Romance languages - Aromanian and Megleno-Romanian, as well as Albanian have been said to qualify for full membership; Romanian, Modern Greek, Balkan Romani and a group of Serbo-Croatian, or rather Serbian dialects - the Torlak ones - have been treated as peripheral members; Standard Serbo-Croatian has been very marginally included; while Turkish has been treated as a "donor" language.
Papers within any framework on any Balkan Sprachbund property, involving any of the Balkan languages, as well as languages outside the Balkans which exhibit areal properties encountered on the Balkans (e.g. the languages of the Caucasus or the Volga area) invited. Papers dealing with more than one language are strongly preferred. Please send abstracts of no more than 500 words as attachments to an e-mail message to o.tomic@let.leidenuniv.nl. Deadline March 15. Notification of acceptance by May 1.
[Back to Conference Listings]Deadline for Proposals: Monday, February 12, 2001.
Dear Colleagues and Students,
In the year 2001 the Congress of the Humanities and Social Sciences Federation of Canada will be held in Quebec City, at the Université Laval, on 23-30 May. The themes of the congress are:
(a) The Role of the Intellectual in Society;The annual meeting of the Canadian Association of Slavists has been scheduled for the 25, 26 and 27 of May. We invite you to submit proposals devoted to the above themes and also to the wide range of disciplines subsumed under Slavic Studies (e.g., Anthropology, the Arts, History, Language, Linguistics, Literature, Music, Political Science, Study of Religion, Sociology, etc.)
Panels and Papers must be submitted on a formal Proposal Form which will be available in four formats:
(1) Web-based online form, which will soon be posted on the site of *Canadian Slavonic Papers*Electronic submissions are preferred. We encourage you to submit, whenever possible, complete panel proposals.
Paper Proposal Forms should be sent directly to:
Professor Allan Reid, Chair
CAS Programme Committee,
Dep't of Culture and Language Studies
University of New Brunswick
P.O. Box 4400
Fredericton, N.B., Canada E3B 5A3
e-mail: russky@unb.ca
fax: (506) 447-3166
All proposals must include a fifty-word resume. Your observance of the deadline (February 12, 2001) will ensure the timely preparation of a preliminary programme, along with the reservation of rooms and appropriate equipment. Many associations will be meeting concurrently with CAS. Competition for space and equipment will be keen.
To defray administrative costs of processing LATE submissions, a fee --payable directly to CAS-- will be charged for proposals that arrive after February 12 ($15.00 for panels and $5.00 for individual proposals).
No proposals will be accepted after March 23.
The *Congress Registration Guide* will be mailed by the Federation to all members of CAS in the beginning of January 2001. I urge you to check whether your name appears listed on the site of *Canadian Slavonic Papers* and to inform Dr. Gust Olson immediately concerning any address changes. Slavists who are not members are very welcome to join CAS.
All participants in the CAS meeting, be they presenters or members of the audience, must register. (For purposes of registration at the Congress, the Canadian Association of Slavists is no. 56). The number of registered participants determines the amount of support that the Humanities and Social Sciences Federation of Canada lends to CAS.
The *Congress Registration Guide* will inform you about registration procedures (by mail, fax, WWW or in person), hotel and dormitory accommodations, and method of payment. The deadline for early registration is April 15. For information about the Federation and regular updates about the congress, visit http://www.hssfc.ca.
JOINT SESSIONSThe Federation encourages interdisciplinary outreach and will award special funds to associations holding joint sessions. For this reason, we draw your attention to associations whose meeting dates overlap with those of CAS.
On May 25:
Canadian Association of Eastern Christian Studies (40),
Canadian Society for the Study of Rhetoric (111), Canadian Society for
Hermeneutics and Postmodern thought (233), Canadian Society of
Church History (9), Consortium for Computing in the Humanities (255),
Canadian Catholic Historical Association (8).
On May 25 and 26:
Canadian Association of Hispanists (24),
Canadian University Music Society (41), Canadian Philosophical
Association (47), Canadian Society for the Study of Religion (50),
Canadian Society of Biblical Studies (6), Canadian Society for the
History and Philosophy of Science (25), Canadian Comparative Literature
Association (38), Canadian Society of Patristic Studies (45), Canadian
Theological Society (65), Canadian Semiotic Association (81),
Canadian Society for Aesthetics (231), Canadian Association for
Translation Studies (240), Canadian Society of Medievalists (249).
On May 25, 26 and 27:
Canadian Linguistic Association (37), Canadian Lesbian and Gay Studies
Association (268), Canadian Historical Association (26), Canadian Women's
Studies Association (96), Canadian Society for the Study of
Practical Ethics (53).
On May 26 and 27:
Folklore Studies Association of Canada (20), Film Studies Association (242).
On May 27:
Canadian Association of Learned Journals (98),
Canadian Evangelical Theological Association (246),
Canadian Political Science Association (48), Canadian Association for the
Study of International Development (225), Environmental Studies Association
of Canada (259), Society for Socialist Studies (58), Canadian Sociology
and Anthropology Association (59), Canadian Asian Studies Association (74),
Bibliographical Society of Canada (238).
We look forward to your proposals!
Natalia Pylypiuk, President Call for Papers
Multi-disciplinary Conference
11 - 13 May, 2001
Sponsored by Comparative Literature Department, Political Science
Department and The Center for Russian, Central and East European Studies.
The unification of Germany and the nationalist tide that paralleled this historical change, the nationalist movement in Scotland that threatens to actualize the predicted break-up of Great Britain, the rise of the right in France, Belgium and Austria and a number of regionalist/nationalist movements across Europe challenge the idea that the national will give way to the supranational. At the same time, the recent collapse of communism has challenged the imaginary geography of "Europe" to include past and recent "others" (e.g., "the Balkans", the "Slavs", "the post-Soviets"), to confront the bankruptcy of state socialism and to make sense of the idiosyncratic cohabitation of post-modern and pre-modern world-views. Meanwhile, Europe is faced with new war fronts of nationalizing processes at its midst.
Consequently, the configuration of the new "European political identity" seems to be slipping away from the control of the European Union, as more voices - both within and outside the Union -- pronounce that Europe does not equate with the EU). Exploring European identity leads us into a more fluid and contested terrain that is at times bigger (narratives of expanding cosmopolitanism) and at times smaller (narratives of separatism manifested as aggressive nationalisms). This troublesome but also promising process of (re-)inventing Europe provides the opportunity to deepen our understanding of nationalism and its place in Europe, and to identify the dominant modes of recasting European identity vis-a-vis more particular identities (nationalism, regionalism, minorities). Simultaneously, we are challenged to re-conceptualize the representation of the European political identity and its actor/story-teller.
We invite graduate students to participate in this fully interdisciplinary conference, with organizers from five disciplines--history, anthropology, political science, literature, cultural studies-putting together the panels. The issues that will be addressed will include but not be limited to:
-Interplay of national and European identities at the threshold of the new millennium;We are also open to other topics as long as they address any aspect of the relationship between specific national identities and broadly defined "Europeanness".
Interdisciplinary and methodologically innovative approaches are strongly encouraged. The conference will comprise panel discussions and round tables. At the panel discussions, participants will present their own work and engage in debate. At the round table meetings, participants will explore a single piece of writing announced by the organizers in advance. The keynote speakers as well as round table discussions at the conference will be announced at a later stage. Please, visit our website periodically for updated information on the program, speakers, and schedule:
http://www.rci.rutgers.edu/~crcees/Please, address your inquiries to: Yianna Liatsos yianna@rci.rutgers.edu.
The deadline for abstracts submissions is November 27, 2000. The abstracts should be no longer than one page and can be mailed, faxed or sent via e-mail to:
CRCEESFebruary 24th-25th, 2001
Theme: The Future of the Slavic Field
The Northeastern Union of Graduate Slavists invites submissions from graduate students of all levels for its second annual Graduate Conference on Slavic Literature and Culture, to be held at Yale University, New Haven, on February 24th-25th, 2001. Papers on all topics of Slavic Literature and Culture will be considered. Papers dedicated to comparative studies and theoretical issues are encouraged. Abstracts of 250 words or less for an eventual 20 minute presentation should be sent via e-mail to subs@slavicgrad.freeservers.com by 16th December, 2000.
Papers will be considered for a maximum of four panels.
For further information go to: www.slavicgrad.freeservers.com or e-mail: info@slavicgrad.freeservers.com
We hope to provide a limited travel expense reimbursement to one or more participants from outside the Northeastern region. This will be based on the merit of the abstract.
Saint-Petersburg State University, Mikhailvoskoye Museum-Preserve, All-Russia Museum of Alexander Pushkin, Cultural-Enlightment Society "Pushkin project" are pleased to invite you to take part in the International Scientific Conference "Symbolism and Russian literature of the XIXth century" (devoted to the memory of A.Pushkin and A.Blok) which is planned to be held from the 6th till the 10th of February, 2001 in Pushkinskie Gory (Pushkin Hills), Russia.
The program of the conference will include the lectures and reports on the next topics:
1. Theorists of Russian symbolism about Russian literature of the XIX century;The working language of the Conference is Russian.
The coordinates of the organizing committee:
Russia, 197022, St.Petersburg, Prof. Popova str., 25
Society "Pushkin project"
Tel./fax: 7-812-2349352, 7-812-2343527, 7-812-2340722
e-mail: piligrim@infopro.spb.su
The conference "Between Two Worlds: S. Ansky at the Turn of the Century,
an International Conference," will take place at Stanford University on
March 18 and 19, 2001. Sponsored by Jewish Studies and jointly
organized by faculty in History and Slavic Languages and Literatures,
the conference will address the writings and the legacy of
Shloyme-Zanvl Rappaport/Semyon Akimovich Ansky, an ethnographer,
populist, and writer in Russian and Yiddish who is best known for his
play,
Medieval Slavic I: Language & Literature
Medieval Slavic
II: History and Culture
Western Michigan University
Kalamazoo, Michigan
Over the years, Slavic topics have been almost nonexistent at this prestigious congress (the official printed program of the 35th Congress, which met in early May, lists no fewer than 562 panels), a fact that suggests, in a sense, that the Slavs and Slavic cultures are a non-presence in the larger Medieval picture. In an effort to redress somewhat this situation, the Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies at Saint Louis University has proposed the two sponsored sessions listed above.
Given the history of the Congress, scholars are encouraged to submit proposals for papers of a more general nature than might be given, for example, at the AATSEEL conference, since one is not able to presume an audience that is knowledgeable in things Slavic; in fact, the realpoint of these sessions is to provide what for many would be their first real exposure to the richness of the medieval Slavic cultures. The sessions are open to all disciplines; papers can focus on topics within a given Slavic culture, across Slavic cultures, or on the relationships between Slavic and non-Slavic cultures, during the period roughly 600 - 1400 AD.
One-page abstracts of papers designed for delivery in 20-25 minutes should be sent to the address provided below by September 1, 2000.
Interested scholars are encouraged to submit very brief (one paragraph) descriptions of possible papers as soon as possible, in order for me to convey to the Congress organizers a sense of how much interest in participating on these panels actually is "out there".
David T. Murphy, Ph.D., Director Phone: (314) 977-7180 Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies Fax: (314) 977-1602 Saint Louis University Email: cmrs@slu.edu 3800 Lindell Boulevard, Suite 317 PO Box 56907 Home: (314) 664-6068 St. Louis, MO 63156-0907[Back to Conference Listings]
Colloque Nina Berberova(Nina Berberova at 100), an international conference to be held Oct. 18-21, 2001, in Arles, France, seeks papers related to Nina Nikolaevna Berberova. Papers addressing issues in poetics, culture, translation, and film are encouraged. Send abstracts (in English, Russian, or French) to Dr. Ruth Rischin mrischin@sfsu.edu or Dr. Elizabeth Yellen esyellen@hotmail.com. Deadline: Nov. 1, 2000.
Abstracts (100 words) are invited for 20-minute papers in LITERATURE, WOMEN'S STUDIES, GENDER STUDIES, FILM AND MEDIA STUDIES, CULTURAL STUDIES to be given at the annual convention of the British Association of Slavonic and East European Studies at Fitzwilliam College, Cambridge University (UK) between 6-9 April 2001. Send abstract by 15 October 2000 to PETER I. BARTA (p.barta@surrey.ac.uk) at the Dept. of Linguistic and International Studies, University of Surrey, Guildford, Surrey GU2 5XH, England Peter I. Barta Professor of Russian and Cultural Studies Head, Russian Studies University of Surrey Guildford GU2 5XH England Tel: (01483) 300800 ext 2822 e-mail: p.barta@surrey.ac.uk fax: (01483)259527
[Back to Conference Listings]Dear colleagues!
The Lomonosov Moscow State University in collaboration with American Council of Teachers of Russian Language and Literature organizes The International Congress of Russian Language Researchers "Russian Language: its Historical Destiny and Present State"
The Congress will be held on March 13-16, 2001 at the Philological Faculty of Moscow Lomonosov State University
Chairman of Organizing Committee of the Congress -
Rector of Moscow
University, Academician of Russian Academy of Sciences Victor A. Sadovnichi
Vice-Chairman of Organizing Committee, Chairman of Program Committee of the
Congress -
Dean of Philological Faculty of Moscow University, Chair of
Russian Language Department, Professor Marina L. Remniova
Vice-Chairman of the Organizing Committee -
President of American Councils for International Education (ACTR/ACCELS), Professor Dan E. Davidson
Learned Secretary of the Organizing Committee -
Doctor of Philology,
Associate Professor of Philological faculty of MSU Anatoliy A. Polikarpov
The preliminary program of the Congress contains the following groups of
problems:
* Russian in its history and prehistory;
* Dynamic picture of
modern Russian language synchrony;
* Actual aspects of the theory and
methodology of Russian linguistics;
* Applied Rusistics and problems of the
computer analysis of Russian language;
* Russian as a means of the
international and interethnic dialogue and intercultural communications;
*
Problems of Russian language in high and higher education;
* Russian
linguistics in a spectrum of scientific paradigms.
The Preliminary Program of the Congress in details you can see at our site http://www.ruslangcongress.newmail.ru
For participation in work of the Congress it is necessary to send the theses up to 2 pages of the text (size 12, the font Times New Roman). Requirements for the theses format in details see at the site of the Congress. The theses should be sent to e-mail address: ruscongr@philol.msu.ru only attached to an e-mail message. Language of the theses - Russian. The theses should be supplied with the summary in English in 1-4 sentences.
Working languages of paper presentation on the Congress - Russian, English, German, French, Spanish.
Deadline for sending the theses - November 1, 2000. The decision on acceptance of the theses on the basis of the decision of the Program Committee will be announced to authors till December 16, 2000.
Registration fee - $ 100 (for Russian participants and other participants from the former Soviet republics - 500 roubles). The payment should be brought in to the Organizing committee after the arrival to the Congress (with getting of the receipt about the accepted sum). Registration fee provides participants with a printed collection of Congress theses and a package of informational and memorative materials. Coffe breaks with snacks also are provided.
The hotel accommodation for participants is supposed to be organized on the basis of hotels "Salute", "Universitetski" and other hotels around Moscow University. Details about the cost of residing see on our site in the section "Accommodation".
Seminars and round table meetings. Besides plenary and section sessions there the seminars and round tables on key problems of Russian language studies are provided in the time-table of work of the Congress. Please, send your suggestions for seminars and round tables topics.
The general time-table of work of the Congress:The specified time-table of work of the Congress one can find at our site in the section "Time-table of work of the Congress".
All changes and specification in the time-table of the Congress work and in other aspects of its work will be operatively reflected at our Congress site. Please, be attentive to changes.
Welcome to the Congress!
Vice-Chairman of Organizing Committee
Chairman of Program
Committee
Dean of Philological Faculty
The address of a site of the International Congress " Russian Language: its Historical Destiny and Present State" in the Internet: http//www.ruslangcongress.newmail.ru
The address of Organizing Committee of a Congress: Russia, 119899 Moscow, Vorobjovy Gory, Moscow University, 1-st Building of Humanities, room 1006
Ph.: (095) 939-31-78
Fax: (095) 939-31-78
e-mail: ruscongr@philol.msu.ru
AATSEEL Meetings and Conferences Listing is maintained by
Katherine Crosswhite
crosswhi@ling.rochester.edu