Sep
11:00 o' clock
Warsaw
Martin Gumiela (Vienna University): Making zips, cakes and traffic signs. The (Austrian) Polonia firms as private SMEs in late People's Poland
The Warsaw-based German Historical Institute, founded in 1993, is an independent research institution. It is one of six German Historical Institutes abroad. Together with its sister institutes in Rome, Paris, London, Washington and Moscow, as well as the Orient Institute in Beirut, the Institute for Japanese Studies in Tokyo, the Forum for Art History in Paris, the Orient Institute in Istanbul and the Max Weber Forum for South Asian Studies in Delhi, it is part of the federal public foundation Max Weber Foundation - German Humanities, through which it is financially supported by funds from the Federal Ministry of Education and Research.
11:00 o' clock
Warsaw
Martin Gumiela (Vienna University): Making zips, cakes and traffic signs. The (Austrian) Polonia firms as private SMEs in late People's Poland
10:00 o' clock
Prag
Queer Urban Underworlds in European State Socialism
10:54 o' clock
Prag
Prof. Dan Healey (Oxford): The Unbearable Lightness of Being Queen in State Socialism
18:00 o' clock
Warsaw
Polish-German Academic Encounters: prof. Philipp Staab (Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin)
11:00 o' clock
Warsaw
Jaromír Mrňka (Prague):Conceptual reflections on the exploration of urban underworlds in the context of the queer history of state socialism
18:00 o' clock
Warsaw
Tuesday Lecture: Rafał Wnuk „Nieoczywisty koniec wojny. Podziemie antykomunistyczne w Europie Środkowo-Wschodniej”
11:00 o' clock
Warsaw
Anna Bilokon (Ukraine): German Diplomacy in Poland (1920-1930): An In-depth Analysis of its Influence on the Political Landscape in the Region.
11:00 o' clock
Warsaw
Bartosz Dziewanowski-Stefańczyk (GHI Warsaw): Historia i pamięć jako czynniki bezpieczeństwa ontologicznego. Polska polityka zagraniczna w okresie 1975-2004