The Untold Stories of Russian History

Harriman Institute 420 West 118th St., New York City, NY, United States

Mikhail Magaril’s exhibition Untold Stories of Russian History will be held at the Harriman Institute, Columbia University, from March 21 to May 6, 2022. The exhibition is part of a long-term collaboration between the Harriman Institute and the Russian-American Cultural Center (RACC) for the presentation of Russian immigrant artists in New York. Mikhail Magaril specializes in the artist’s handmade book. He firmly believes that every…

Book Talk. Orbanland: Why Viktor Orban’s Hungary Matters by Lasse Skytt

Hybrid 1219 International Affairs Building, New York, United States

Please join the East Central European Center at the Harriman Institute for a discussion with Lasse Skytt, author of Orbanland: Why Viktor Orbán’s Hungary Matters (New Europe Books, 2022). Moderated by Aleksandar Bošković and Christopher Caes, co-directors of the East Central European Center. From Europe to America, political landscapes have shifted in recent years in a way summed up in microcosm no better than by the…

(Mis)translating Deceit: Disinformation’s Hidden Translingual Journey

Online

Despite growing concern about disinformation, lack of knowledge about how the term originated, or how uses of that term change over time and across different languages and cultures, is seriously hampering our ability to counter it. This presentation, based on a new collaborative project initiated by Vera Tolz and Stephen Hutchings at the University of Manchester, will tell part of…

Bruno Clément : Bergson, prix Nobel de littérature

Zoom

**The event will take place in French** Open to all on Zoom, registration HERE Bruno Clément présentera son livre Henri Bergson, prix Nobel de littérature, à l’occasion d’une conversation sur le rôle du langage en philosophie, et en particulier chez Bergson. Dans son livre, Bruno Clément se penche sur les relations entre fond et forme dans l'écriture philosophique: Bergson, Camus,…

Letters of John McGahern

Zoom

Dr. Frank Shovlin will be in conversation with Dr. Kelly Sullivan about the recently published Letters of John McGahern available from Faber and Faber. About Letters of John McGahern: "I AM NO GOOD AT LETTERS." - JOHN MCGAHERN, 1963 John McGahern is consistently hailed as one of the finest Irish writers since James Joyce and Samuel Beckett. This volume collects some of the witty,…

“This Protest is not Authorized”: Preventive Repression and Public Opinion in Electoral Autocracies

Online

Does preventive repression bolster, or does that dissent despite obstruction? While a large literature recognizes the importance of preventive repression for authoritarian stability, we know very little about its effects on public opinion. To gain traction on this question Professor Katerina Tertychnaya draws on evidence from unusually detailed data on unauthorized and authorized protest from Russia and an original survey…

Central Asia in World Literature (with Hamid Ismailov)

Uzbek-British writer and journalist Hamid Ismailov’s work spans the end of the Soviet period and the entry of the former Soviet republics into a globalized, post-Cold War world. In this talk, Ismailov will speak about these themes in his own work, which tracks Central Asia’s role in a changing global political and literary scene. The talk will also touch on…

Film Screening & Discussion. Beshoot.

Harriman Institute 420 West 118th St., New York City, NY, United States

Please join the Ukrainian Film Club at Columbia University and the Harriman Institute for a screening of director Ivan Tymchenko’s 2019 film Beshoot. Introduction and discussion led by Yuri I. Shevchuk. The soldiers of the Donbas Volunteer Battalion are at the center of this war drama inspired by real-life events. Two Ukrainian fighters volunteered with thousands of others to repel the Russian aggression against their…

Screenshot Book Talk with Bergur Ebbi

Join us March 31 with Icelandic author Bergur Ebbi as he reads passages from Screenshot, an exploration of the human condition in a digital world, now in new translation by Larissa Kyzer! Tonight’s event will also showcase a clip from a TV-series built around the book’s themes and a talk about Screenshot‘s subjects, based on a lecture on the book which ran in The Reykjavík…

Book Panel. Dostoevsky’s Crime and Punishment: A Reader’s Guide by Deborah Martinsen

Online

The Harriman Institute, together with the North American Dostoevsky Society and Academic Studies Press, will host a roundtable discussion to celebrate the publication of Deborah Martinsen’s Dostoevsky’s Crime and Punishment: A Reader’s Guide (2022). With speakers Katherine Bowers (University of British Columbia), Erica Drennan (Barnard College), Kate Holland (University of Toronto), Greta Matzner-Gore (University of Southern California), Ronald Meyer (Harriman Institute), and Marcia Morris (Georgetown University).