15 — 18 июня 2000
Международная конференция "Иерархия и власть в истории цивилизаций".
Москва.
Российский государственный гуманитарный университет, Институт культурной антропологии.
Контактный телефон: 291-4119, факс: 202-0786.
E-mail: dbondar@inafr.msk.ru
Сентябрь 2000
Международная научная конференция "Святые в истории России".
Москва.
ИРИ РАН.
Дм.Ульянова, 19.
Контактные телефоны: 126-94-49; 126-94-66.
Октябрь 2000
Чтения памяти В.И.Буганова.
Москва.
ИРИ РАН. Центр по изучению и публикации источников.
Дм.Ульянова, 19.
Контактный телефон: 123-90-54.
9 — 13 октября 2000
Международный симпозиум "Православие и культура этноса".
Москва.
Институт этнологии и антропологии РАН.
Ленинский пр-т, 32а.
Контактная информация:Воронина Татьяна Андреевна.
Тел.: 938 5293.
Ноябрь 2000
Международная научная конференция "Россия на рубеже XXI в.: оглядываясь на век минувший".
ИРИ РАН.
Дм.Ульянова, 19.
Контактные телефоны: 126-94-49; 126-94-66.
Ноябрь — декабрь 2000
Научная конференция "Российское зарубежье: проблемы историографии".
ИРИ РАН. Центр изучения истории территории и населения России.
Дм.Ульянова, 19.
Контактный телефон: 126-94-67.
Сентябрь 2001
IV Конгресс этнографов и антропологов России.
Нальчик, Кабардино-Балкария.
Конгресс организуют Ассоциация этнографов и антропологов России, совместно с Институтом
гуманитарных исследований Кабардино-Балкарской Республики, Кабардино-Балкарским Научным Центром
РАН, Институтом этнологии и антропологии им. Н.Н. Миклухо-Маклая РАН и Кабардино-Балкарским
республиканским отделением МОО “Научное общество этнографов и антропологов”.
На Конгрессе планируется обсудить этнологический и антропологический взгляды на проблему
времени и то, как время меняет взгляды исследователей на одну и ту же проблему. Кроме основной
темы, Конгресс обсудит другие важные проблемы, связанные с формированием и развитием народов и
культур, этноязыковых, этнокультурных и этнополитических ситуаций и процессов, в частности в
Кавказском регионе; вопросы развития науки, этнографического музееведения и другие. Будут
представлены результаты новейших разработок в области физической антропологии, гендерных,
этногенетических, этноправовых, этноархеологических и этнодемографических исследований.
Контактная информация:
117334 Москва, Ленинский пр., д.32а, к.1820,
Ассоциация этнографов и антропологов России;
360003, Нальчик, ул. Пушкина, д.18, ИГИ;
e-mail congress2001@iea.ras.ru, Факс (095) 938-06-00.
Справки по телефонам: в г. Москве: (095) 938-07-12;
в г. Нальчике (866-22) 2-38-40.
May 19-20, 2000
Reconsidering the Cold War - 5th Annual History Conference.
University of California, Santa Barbara.
Fifth annual graduate student conference on the Cold War, to be held on the campus of UCSB.
Contact information:
Jennifer Baker, conference coordinator
Email: baker@umail.ucsb.edu.
June 14-18, 2000
53RD ANNUAL MEETING OF ARCHITECTURAL HISTORIANS.
Biltmore Hotel - Coral Gables (MIAMI), Florida.
For a complete listing f the SESSIONS, please see the SAH Conference Page.
June 21-25, 2000
Cultural Dialogues and Dialogic Cultures - Mikhail Bakhtin and the Communication of Cultural
Studies (A Session to be held at the Third International "Crossroads in Cultural Studies" Conference).
University of Birmingham.
Birmingham, United Kingdom.
Session organiser and chair: M. Michael Schiff.
Contact information:
M. Michael Schiff
Faculty of Graduate Studies, York University
283 York Lanes, 4700 Keele Street
Toronto, Canada
M3J 1P3
Email: mmichael@yorku.ca.
Call for Papers website:
http://www.crossroads-conference.org/topics/Cultural_Studies.html.
June 22-25, 2000
World History Association Ninth Annual International Conference.
Northeastern University, Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.A.
The ninth annual conference of the World History Association will focus on the development
of world history research and its relationship to the conceptualization, methodology and teaching of world history. Panels, papers,
and roundtables are encouraged on questions such as:
*What are current world historical debates and issues?
*How can a global perspective shape archival research?
*How does a world history research project look different from one formulated in terms of area studies and national histories? What is the
relationship of world history and local histories?
*How are world history
and recent work in globalization, transnationalism and diasporas relevant to
each other?
*How can recent research be made relevant in the classroom, and how can teaching needs help shape research questions?
Presentations of recent research and teaching experience in world history are also encouraged.
Make submissions via the web site at http://www.whc.neu.edu/wha2000
or by e-mail to: amckeown@lynx.neu.edu
or by regular mail to: Adam McKeown, Department of History, Northeastern University, Boston, MA 02115.
For general questions contact Pat Manning: manning@neu.edu; tel (617) 373-4453.
July 10-13, 2000
INTERNATIONAL MEDIEVAL CONGRESS.
University of Leeds, Leeds, England.
The purpose of the International Medieval Congress is "to provide an interdisciplinary forum for the discussion of all aspects of
medieval studies." Hence, thought the theme of the IMC this year is Time and Eternity, the IMC welcomes all aspects of medieval studies. IMC aims at
including scholars from all over the world.
ANNOUNCING TWO SPECIAL SESSIONS, entitled "Hidden Allusions to Historical Realities: Approaches and
Representations of Contemporary Circumstances." Under the sponsorship of the Association for Art History,
Dr. Avital Heyman is organizing two sessions dealing with the multilayered posibilities of reading history in art history.
This is a way of referring to historical circumstances, realities and events. The focus will be on saintly narratives and images, and their assumed connection
to all sorts of historical and social realities.
Contact:
IMC Website: http://www.historia.ru/~historia/www.leeds.ac.uk/imi/imc/imc/htm
E-mail: IMC@leeds.ac.uk (contact Marianne O'Doherty or Josine Opmeer).
July 26-29, 2000
Workshop at the 6th Biennial Conference of the European Association of Social Anthropologists (EASA).
Cracow, Poland.
Contact information: Helen Kopnina, M.A.
Department of Social Anthropology
University of Cambridge
Free School Lane
Cambridge CB2 3RF
United Kingdom
hk213@hermes.cam.ac.uk.
Workshop proposals can be viewed at: http://www.ub.es/easa/wk.htm.
August 6-13, 2000
19th International Congress of Historical Sciences.
Oslo, Norway.
Contact:
URL: http://www.hf.uio.no/oslo2000
30 November - 3 December, 2000
Film and History Conference.
biennial conference of the History and Film Association of Australia and New
Zealand hosted by the New Zealand Film Archive.
Wellington, Aotearoa/New
Zealand.
Contact:
Dr. Russell Campbell,
Senior Lecturer in Film,
School of English, Film & Theatre,
Victoria University of Wellington/Te Whare Wananga o te Upoko o te Ika a Maui
P.O. Box 600, Wellington, New Zealand.
Email: Russell.Campbell@vuw.ac.nz
March 1 - 3, 2001
Conference "Interactions: Regional Studies, Global Processes, and Historical Analysis".
Library of Congress. Washington, D.C.
Organized by the American Historical Association, the World History Association, the Middle East Studies Association, the African Studies
Association, the Latin American Studies Association, the Conference on Latin American History, the Association for Asian Studies, the Community College
Humanities Association, and the Library of Congress, this conference aims to go
beyond traditional area studies and to cross the usual national, geographical,
and cultural boundary lines of scholarship by taking explicitly comparative,
cross-cultural, systematic, global, or other appropriate approaches. A major
purpose is to explore contemporary globalization in historical context and the
historical processes that drive globalization, as well as the way in which the
current dialectic of globalization and fragmentation affects the definition of
areas and regions.
Each of the three conference days will focus on a particular rubric. Day One: movement of peoples, ideas, and goods; material
interactions and their sites. Day Two: Networks and connections beyond the
nation-state. Day Three: Reconfigurations of "area" and "state," their
implications and interactions. More specifically, but not exclusively, papers
might consider some of the following themes and their possible combinations:
Politics: Dominant forms, countervailing forces, the rise and fall of
power centers. Alternatives to national states as units of historical analysis,
changing historical definitions of regions and sub-regions and their
historically changing relationship to one another in different world orders.
Variants of imperialism and the place that different regions have had in them.
Economics: Regional and social division of labor, social change,
formation of "world systems," uneven development. Cross-cultural trade and its
effects: sites of trade, mechanisms of trade such as brokers, trade diasporas,
conventions governing exchange. Imperialism and colonialism. Environmental,
ecological, biological exchanges.
Social organization: Global hierarchies of class, gender, race and their historical variations including the effects of
contemporary globalization. Migrations, diasporas, and a gendered analysis of
these. Civil society and human rights, the political valence of non-governmental
organizations.
Culture: Universalism vs. multiculturalism: hegemonic
ideologies such as religion, nationalism, free market, and the resistance to
these. Technological transfers, cultural exchanges and syncretism as expressions
of dominance, of subversion, and of convergence. Ethnogenesis. Postcolonial
issues of representation and identity politics.
Contact: Paper proposals of one or two pages along with a brief curriculum vitae of no more than two pages, should be sent, preferably electronically to: ddoyle@theaha.org. Otherwise by mail to Debbie Doyle, American Historical Association, 400 A Street, SE, Washington, DC 20003-3889. Deadline: March 15, 2000.
September 11-16, 2001
Riga and the Baltic Sea Region in History.
Riga.
On the occasion of the city of Riga's 800th anniversary the
University of Latvia (Riga), the Ernst-Moritz-Arndt University (Greifswald), the
Baltic Historical Commission (Goettingen) and the Herder Institute (Marburg)
will organize an international conference in connection with the Latvian Academy
of Sciences (Riga), the Permanent Conference of Historians of the Baltic Sea
Region (Greifswald) and the Institute for Comparative Urban History (Muenster).
The organizers hereby call for papers, for which the following sections are
currently envisaged:
1. The development of the urban landscape in the Baltic
Sea region;
2. Riga and the Hansa;
3. Riga and the towns of the Baltic Sea region on their way towards modernization;
4. The Baltic Sea metropolis Riga and the towns of the Baltic Sea region in the 19th and 20th centuries.
Contakt: Dr. Eduard Muehle,
Herder-Institut.
Tel.: 06421/184-100 - Direktor.
Fax: 06421/184-139.
Gisonenweg 5-7, D-35037 Marburg.
muehle@mailer.uni-marburg.de.
http://www.uni-marburg.de/herder-institut.