
In cooperation with the Leonid Nevzlin Research Center for Russian and East European Jewry (The Hebrew University of Jerusalem); Leibniz-Zentrum für Zeithistorische Forschung (ZZF), Potsdam; Central European University (CEU), Vienna; Herder Institute for Historical Research on East Central Europe, Marburg; Bundesinstitut fur Kultur und Geschichte des östlichen Europa (BKGE), Oldenburg; Nordost-Institut an der Universität Hamburg; Heinrich Heine Universitat Düsseldorf; Forschungsverbund Ambivalenzen des Sowjetischen.
Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 and the ensuing Russo-Ukraine War has led to an intensive set of re-evaluations regarding the recent history of the region. Central in these debates is the question of Soviet legacy: to what extent current events are rooted in late Soviet politics and culture and how the history of the Soviet collapse foreshadowed today’s political and cultural fault lines. At the same time, Jewish life in the post-Soviet space, often reduced to a narrative of either migration or “nationalization” within the newly established states, deserves reconsideration. Rather than conceptualizing the era since Perestroika solely through the lens of emigration, it is timely to focus on Jewish agency and subjectivity in the era of reforms and change: the emergence of new localisms and mythologies, patterns of cooperation and tension with surrounding societies, and other forms of lived experience.
Hosted by the University of Vienna’s Research Center for the History of Transformations (RECET), this two-day international conference aims to bring together scholars from two fields that too often work separately: Soviet/post-Soviet history and Jewish studies.
Please see the CfP PDF.