Please join the Slavic Reference Service for the inaugural Central Asia Research Forum on November 4-5, 2021, with the theme “Publishing and Book Culture.” This forum seeks to bring together students, librarians, and scholars across disciplines to discuss ongoing and completed research on Central Asia. Participants are welcome to join throughout the program as able. Registration links are provided below, and the program is available upon request.
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The Russian, East European, and Eurasian Center and the Slavic Reference Service at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign are pleased to announce a call for applications to the Spring 2022 Open Research Laboratory (ORL) Program. The program will take place January 18 - May 4, 2022. Funded in part by the U.S. Department of State's Title VIII Program, the ORL Program provides research support for graduate and post-graduate level research on Central and East Europe and the Independent States of the former Soviet Union.
Call for Papers
New Perspectives in Russian, Eastern European, and Eurasian Studies
The Havighurst Center for Russian and Post-Soviet Studies at Miami University welcomes applications from advanced graduate students and recent doctoral recipients (ABD to 5 years beyond Ph.D.) for annual international Young Researchers Conference. The conference will take place from March 31-April 3 at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio.
Translating Memories Online Speaker Series
Maria Kobielska, Jagiellonian University in Cracow, Poland
Poland Exhibited: Polish Museum Boom and the Problem of International Recognition
9 November 2021 16.00 (EST)
Tallinn University, Estonia (online)
Please register here
The American Hungarian Educators Association (AHEA) will hold its 46th Annual Conference on April 7 - 9, 2022, at Quinnipiac University, Hamden Connecticut, USA. We welcome participation by academics, independent scholars, educators, and graduate students who are devoted to the teaching, research, and dissemination of Hungarian culture, history, folklore, literature, language, fine arts, and music. This year’s conference theme is:
Hungarian Studies in the Covid-19 World.
Please join the Transnational Approaches to Modern Europe Workshop next Wednesday, November 10th from 4:30-6:00 pm CST for our fourth session of Fall Quarter 2021. We are excited to have Fabian Baumann, Postdoctoral Fellow in History at the University of Chicago, who will be presenting the introduction to his forthcoming book, provisionally titled Diverging Paths: An Intimate History of Russian and Ukrainian Nationalism in Late Imperial Kiev. Faith Hillis, Professor of Russian History and the College, will serve as the respondent.
The Department of Germanic and Slavic Languages and Literatures at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (http://gsll.unc.edu/) invites applications for a full-time tenure track position: Assistant Professor in East European Jewish Studies (Sara and E.J. Evans Fellow) to begin July 1, 2022.
The Middlebury College Kathryn Wasserman Davis School of Russian invites applications for instructors of Russian and bilingual assistants for the summer session 2022. Details are in the links below. Please encourage all interested colleagues to apply soon, review of applications will begin on December 1. Please email me with any questions: jmerrill@middlebury.edu Thank you! Jason Merrill
Instructor positions: http://apply.interfolio.com/96987
Bilingual assistant / staff positions: http://apply.interfolio.com/97049
The School of International Letters and Cultures (SILC) in The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences at Arizona State University (ASU) seeks an innovative leader and skilled administrator and scholar to serve as the next School Director, with a concurrent appointment as a tenured Professor. Appointment will be located at the Tempe campus with an anticipated start date of July 1, 2022. Salary is competitive. The College values our cultural and intellectual diversity, and continually strives to foster a welcoming and inclusive environment. We are especially interested in applicants who can strengthen the diversity of the academic community.
Award-winning author and New Yorker cartoonist Ken Krimstein will join Jessica Kirzane (Asst. Professorial Lecturer, Yiddish) in conversation about his new book, When I Grow Up: The Lost Autobiographies of Six Yiddish Teens. For more information, please see the website. Please register to attend this event. The event is sponsored by the Seminary Co-op Bookstore and co-sponsored by the Greenberg Center.
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