Workshop: The History of Science, Race and Empire in Central and Eastern Europe. Budapest, 21-22 Feb
We are
pleased to announce an upcoming international workshop scheduled to take place
at the Department of History, Central European University, Budapest, entitled:
“The History of Science, Race and Empire
in Central and Eastern Europe”.
It is held on 21-22 February 2014, in Gellner
Room, CEU.
The workshop explores different aspects of the
history of race and racial sciences in the Austro-Hungarian and Russian Empires
in the 19th and early 20th centu ries. Rooted in the ethnically and
confessionally most mixed regions of contemporary Europe, Austro-Hungarian and
Russian sciences faced unique intellectual challenges in the process of
constructing or exploiting racial theories and creating ethnic, national and
imperial identities with the aim to contribute to nation/empire-building. The
disciplinary trajectories of ‘sciences of race’ in these regions might
therefore diverge from the models offered by the historiography in the British,
French or German contexts. To understand how concepts of race, ethnicity, the
nation, and the multi-ethnic empire were co-produced in these regions, the
talks will reflect on a variety of scientific disciplines, including
ethnography, sociology, physical anthropology, geography, oriental studies,
criminal and social statistics, biology, public health, eugenics, psychiatry,
and crowd psychology.
The workshop is free and open to the public.
Friday, 21 February, 2014
2:00-2:15 Registration
2:15-2:30 Introduction
2:30-4:45 Otherness, Normativity and the
Paradoxes of Russian Science
Nathaniel Knight (Seton Hall University, New
Jersey), “Was there a Russian Science? Academic Particularism and the
International Circulation of Ideas”
Marina Mogilner (University of Illinois at
Chicago), “Racial Psychiatry in the Russian Empire: The Imperial Dialectics of
Norm(s) and Deviation(s)”
Karl Hall (Central European Univers ity,
Budapest), "From the ‘zoological element of culture’ to psychic
heritability: Antinomies of race in late-imperial Russia"
5:30-7:00 Keynote lecture
Andrew Zimmerman (George Washington University,
Washington, DC.), “Race against Revolution in Central and Eastern Europe: From
Hegel to Weber, from Rural Insurgency to ‘Polonization’”
Saturday, 22 February, 2014
9:30-11:00 Concepts of Race and Disciplinary
Boundaries in Hungarian Natural and Social Sciences
Katalin Stráner (Central European University,
Budapest), “Concepts of ‘race’ in early Hungarian Darwinism”
Emese Lafferton (Central European University,
Budapest), “Ecological and Geographical Approaches to ‘Race’ in Hungarian
Eugenics and Turanism after 1900”
11:00-11:30 Coffee break
11:30-13:00 Measurements and Hierarchies.
Physical Anthropology and Ethnography in the Austrian Context
Margit Berner (Naturhistorisches Museum,
Vienna), “Physical Anthropological Investigations in the
Austro-Hungarian Monarchy”
Andre Gingrich (Institute for Social
Anthropology, Austrian Academy of Sciences), "Science, Race and Empire:
Academic Ethnography in Vienna before 1918"
13:00-14:00 Lunch for participants
14:00-16:15 Purity, Degeneration, Eugenics,
and Modernity in Central and Eastern Europe
Björn M. Felder (Ludwig-Maximilians-University,
Munich), "Race as Modernisation: Anthropology, Eugenics and the Biologised
Nation in the Baltic Provinces, 1880-1914“
Thomas Mayer (University of Vienna), “Early
Eugenics in Vienna before 1918”
Keely Stauter-Halsted (University of Illinois
at Chicago), “Race Science in Partitioned Poland: How Physicians Defined the Contours
of the Modern Nation”
16:15-16:30 Break
16:30-17:10 Closing Discussion. Moderator:
Mitchell Ash (University of Vienna)
For further information, please contact the
organizer, Emese Lafferton (laffertone@ceu.hu).
This project has received funding from the European Union’s Seventh Framework
Programme for research, technological development and demonstration under grant
agreement no PIEF-GA-2009-255614.