International Conference „The Student Milieu in the Soviet Bloc Countries 1945–1989” – Wrocław (Poland), 29 November – 1 December 2016


Institut nacionalnog sjećanja (ogranak u Wrocławu) organizira međunarodnu znanstvenu konferenciju “The student milieu in the Soviet block countries 1945-1989” (Studentsko društvo u zemljama Istočnog bloka 1945.-1989. godine) 29 studenog – 1. prosinca 2016.


 


Na konferenciji će sudjelovati niz povjesničara iz Sjedinjenih Američkih Država, Rusije, Rumunjske, Slovačke, Ukrajine i drugih. Teme vezane uz Hrvatsku i zemlje bivše Jugoslavije predstavljaju povjesničari iz Hrvatske (Marko Fuček i Martin Previšić), Srbije (Dragomir Bondžić i Petar Dragišić) te strani povjesničari koji se bave poviješću Hrvatske/Jugoslavije (Mateusz Sokulski i Piotr Żurek iz Poljske te Kaori Kimura iz Rusije).


 


Konferencija se održava na poljskom i engleskom jeziku.


 


Prijenos uživo, kao i zapis konferencije, moguće je pratiti preko kanala Instituta Nacionalnog Sjećanja:


 


https://www.youtube.com/user/IPNtvPL


 


U nastavku se nalazi program skupa.


 


Organizatori predviđaju publikaciju na poljskom i engleskom jeziku.


 


Institute of National Remembrance


 


https://ipn.gov.pl/en


 



 


Program of the International Conference „The Student Milieu in the Soviet Bloc Countries 1945–1989”


 


Wrocław, 29.11.-1.12.2016


 


TUESDAY (29.11.2016)


09.00-09.15    Official opening of the conference


 


        1. Marta Glossová (Comenius University in Bratislava, Slovakia), Slovak university students in the process of transformation of Czechoslovakia during the “people´s democracy” (1945-1948)


        1. Roman Genega, PhD (Ivan Franko National University of Lviv, Ukraine), Friend or  foe? Relations between students and lecturers of Lviv universities in 1944-1953


        1. Professor Martin Previšić (University of Zagreb, Croatia), Yugoslav students in the Tito-Stalin 1948-1956 conflict


        1. Kaori Kimura, PhD (Russian Academy of Science, Russia), Yugoslav students in USSR during the period of Stalin-Tito split (1948-1954) – their role in anti-Yugoslavia (anti-Tito) propaganda campaign in the USSR


        1. Discussion


11.05-11.20     Coffee break 


                                   


        1. Professor Mark Kramer (Harvard University, USA), Student Quiescence and Student Unrest in the USSR, 1953-1991:  Comparisons with East-Central Europe


11.40-12.00     Zbigniew Bereszyński, PhD (independent researcher, Poland), Forging the personnel for the political apparatus or the cradle of opposition? Student circles in Opole in 1954-1989


        1. Piotr Abryszeński (Gdańsk University, Poland), Preparing for rebellion. Attitudes of students of Gdańsk Technical University towards communist authorities until 1970


        1. Katarzyna Korzeniewska, PhD (independent researcher, Poland), Youth circles in Lithuania in 1970s and 1980s. Opposition, parallel society, operating within the system?


        1. Discussion


13.10-14.40     Dinner


 


 


14.40-15.00     Natalia Chomenko, PhD (National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine), Reaction of Ukrainian students to exposing the cult of Stalin


15.00-15.20     Cosmin Budeancă, PhD (The Institute for the Investigation of the Communist Crimes and the Memory of the Romanian Exile, Bucharest, Romania), The Impact of the Hungarian Revolution of 1956 on the Universities in Romania


15.20-15.40     Corina Snitar (University of Glasgow, UK), Opposing communism: the 1956 students’ movement in Timisoara


15.40-16.00     Paweł Sasanka, PhD (Institute of National Remembrance, Poland), Studenst protesting against closing the „Po Prostu” weekly in October 1957.


        1. Grzegorz Waligóra, PhD (Institute of National Remembrance, Poland), Young Democrats Association in 1956-1957


16.20-16.50     Discussion


16.50-17.05     Coffee break  


 


SESSION I


 


17.05-17.25       Rasa Balockaite, PhD (Vytautas Magnus University, Lithuania), Everyday student life in early Soviet Lithuania: Technologies state control and totalitarian domination


17.25-17.45       Andra-Octavia Drăghiciu, PhD (Karl-Franzens-University of Graz, Austria), Discos, shops and political economy. Everyday life of students in the Romanian Socialist Republic in the 1980s


17.45-18.05       Krzysztof Lesiakowski, PhD hab. (Lodz University, Poland), Not only postulates, negotiations… Everyday life of Lodz students during the strike in January– February 1981


18.05-18.35     Discussion


 


SESSION II


17.05-17.25     Florentina Budeancă, PhD (independent researcher, Romania), The Students of the Theological Romano-Catholic Institute from Alba-Iulia, Romania under the Securitate Surveillance (1951-1989)


17.25-17.45     Rafał Łatka, PhD (John Paul II Papal University, Poland), Academic Pastoral Care and its role in integrating students (1970-1980)


17.45-18.05     Zofia Fenrych (Institute of National Remembrance, Poland), „Catholic kayaks”? Tourism in academic pastoral care


18.05-18.25     Witold Kunicki-Goldfinger (University of Warsaw, Poland), Student activity in the Culture Section of the Catholic Integration Club in Warsaw in the 1970s.


18.25-18.55       Discussion


19.30               Supper and banquet


 


 


WEDNESDAY (30.11.2016)


 


9.00-9.20         Vladimir Petrov (State University of St. Petersburg, Russia), “The message came as a shock to me and forced me to think about many things.” Response of the students of the University of Leningrad to the Prague Spring and the invasion of Czechoslovakia in 1968


9.20-9.40         Professor Jakub Tyszkiewicz (Wrocław University, Poland), Student protest in Poland in 1968 in the light of American diplomatic analyses and the US intelligence


9.40-10.00       Petar Dragišić, PhD (Institute for Recent History, Serbia), 1968 in Serbia  Political Mobilization of Belgrade Students


10.00-10.20     Piotr Żurek, PhD hab. (University of Bielsko-Biala, Poland), Student protests in Slovenia in 1968


10.20-10.40     Mateusz Sokulski (Wrocław University, Poland), Between the extreme Left and nationalism. Contestation of the communist regime among Yugoslav students in 1968-1972


10.40-11.10     Discussion


11.10-11.25     Coffee break  


 


11.25-11.45       Irina Rudik, PhD (independent researcher, Estonia), “The Union of Wonderful Women” and others: illegal activity of student organizations in Soviet Estonia


11.45-12.05       Juliane Fürst, PhD (University of Bristol, UK), “Make Love not War”: The 1971 Demonstration against the Vietnam War at Moscow’s State University


12.05-12.25       Michał Siedziako, PhD (Institute of National Remembrance, Poland), Forms of student opposition operations in Polish People’s Republic in 1976-1989. Historical and political analysis


12.25-12.55     Discussion


13.00-14.30       Dinner


 


SESSION I


 


14.30-14.50       Aneta Herman (Cardinal Wyszyński University in Warsaw, Poland), Strike of Lodz Technical University students in January-February 1981


14.50-15.10       Marek Kunicki-Goldfinger (University of Warsaw, Poland) Operations of Student Self-Governments in Poland in 1980-1982


15.10-15.30       Kamil Dworaczek, PhD (Institute of National Remembrance, Poland), Student leaders of the Polish Revolution of 1980-1981. Description


15.30-15.50       Discussion


15.50-16.05       Coffee break  


 


SESSION II


 


14.30-14.50       Mateusz Kalinowski (Independent Students’ Association, Poland), Tastes of freedom – behavior of members of the Independent Students’ Association towards the government in the 1980s.


14.50-15.10       Tom Junes, PhD (Human and Social Studies Foundation, Bulgaria), The Students’ Revolutions: Student Opposition and The Demise of Communism


15.10-15.30       Arjan Shahini (Technical University of Berlin, Germany), Students’ movement in Albania during 1990-91


15.30-15.50     Discussion


15.50-16.05      Coffee break  


 


SESSION I


 


16.05-16.25       Przemysław Gasztold-Seń, PhD (Institute of National Remembrance, Poland), Studying, running away and “vacations”: students from Africa and Middle East in the Polish People’s Republic


16.25-16.45       Sylwia Szyc (Maria Curie-Skłodowska University, Poland), North Korean Students in the Polish People’s Republic


16.45-17.05       Mirco Carrattieri, PhD (University of Bologna, Italy), Italian delegations to Youth world Festivals in the ‘50s


17.05-17.25       Elitza Stanoeva, PhD (Sofia University, Bulgaria), Sofia Youth Festival in the Turbulent Year of 1968: Students’ Representation, Regrouping and Reassessment


17.25-17.55     Discussion


 


SESSION II


 


16.05-16.25       Dragomir Bondžić, PhD (Institute for Contemporary History, Belgrade, Serbia), The international cooperation of Yugoslav students 1945-1960


16.25-16.45       Andrei Dudchik, PhD (Belarusian State University, Belarus), Shared memory of a common study of Marxist-Leninist philosophy in Belarus in the 1970-80-s by foreign and the Soviet students


16.45-17.05       Wojciech Marciniak, PhD (Lodz University, Poland), Polish students in the Soviet Union in the Stalin period in the materials of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs


17.05-17.25       Klejd Këlliçi, PhD (University of Tirana, Albania), Out the socialist fortress: Albanian students abroad 1979-1990


17.25-17.45       Matei Gheboianu, PhD (University of Bucharest, Romania), Romanian students’ educational mobility in the 1970s


17.45-18.15     Discussion


19.00               Supper


 


 


 


 


 


THURSDAY (1.12.2016)


 


SESSION I


 


9.00-9.20           Jacek Wołoszyn, PhD hab. (Institute of National Remembrance, Poland), Preliminary stage. Social and political verification of candidates for higher education in 1947-1956


9.20-9.40           Justyna Żukowska-Łyko (Wrocław University, Poland), Who studied history after 1945? The impact of social and political changes on the students of one faculty


9.40-10.00         Yevhen S. Rachkov (V.N. Karazin Kharkiv National University, Ukraine), Mythology of the “third labor semester”: symbolic and ritual practices of student construction brigades in Soviet Ukraine during 1960’s – 1980’s


10.00-10.20       Marko Fuček (University of Zagreb, Croatia), Vandalism, Hooliganism, and Moral Panics: Negotiated Concepts of Youth Deviance and Rehabilitation in 1950s Croatia / Yugoslavia


10.20-10.40       Cezar Stanciu, PhD (University Valahia of Targoviste, Romania), Student Associations in Romania under the impact of the “Mini-cultural Revolution”


10.40-11.10     Discussion


11.10-11.25     Coffee break   


 


SESSION II


 


9.00-9.20           Piotr Olechowski (Rzeszów University, Poland), Activities of Komsomol organization in the universities of Soviet Lviv in the early post-war period (1944-1946)


9.20-9.40           Krzysztof Łagojda (Wrocław University, Poland), Prospective students in defense of scientific heritage. Academic Guard operations in 1945 in Wroclaw


9.40-10.00         Mirosław Szumiło, PhD hab. (Maria Curie-Sklodowska University, Institute of National Remembrance, Poland), Heads of Polish Students Association / Socialist Union of Polish Students in 1950-1990 – collective portrait


10.00-10.20       Klára Pinerová, PhD (Charles University, Czech Republic), Consolidation of the Socialist Youth Union the Faculty of Arts at Charles University in Prague in the years 1970-1975


10.20-10.40       Marek Szajda (Wrocław University, Poland), Academic Union of Zionist Democrats in 1945-1950 as an example of the activity of the Jewish activity within the student circles


10.40-11.10     Discussion


11.10-11.30    Coffee break                                                   


 


 


11.30-11.50       Mariia Danchenko (National University “Kyiv-Mohyla Academy, Ukraine), Humanitary sciences in Soviet Union: Resurrection of Interest in Europe (1940-1950)


11.50-12.10       Dmitrii Kozlov, PhD (University of Bremen, Germany), Informal Censorship of the Soviet Students’ Literary Circles in the 1950s Leningrad Mining Institute LITO Case


12.10-12.30       Anna Idzikowska-Czubaj, PhD (Adam Mickiewicz University, Poland),  Student cultural activity before the „thaw”


12.30-12.50       Zdeněk Nebřenský, PhD (Charles University, Czech Republic), “We had to combat distrust”: post-Stalinist discussions about student clubs in Czechoslovakia and Poland, 1956-1968


12.50-13.10       Professof Lech Śliwonik (Aleksander Zelwerowicz National Academy of Dramatic Art, Poland), Student theater movements in Poland in 1954-1989. Changes. Synthesis


 


13.10-13.40     Discussion


13.40-13.50     Summary and closing the conference


 


14.00               Dinner


Departure of the participants


 


 


 


 


Odgovori