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…

Understanding Moscow’s Foreign Policy: Historical Perspectives and Contemporary Dilemmas

Online

In this talk, Sergey Radchenko will explore the underlying motivations of Soviet and Russian foreign policies. Drawing on recently declassified documents, he will explain the relationship between Soviet foreign policy and domestic legitimacy, and trace continuities in Moscow’s policymaking between the Cold War and the present day Sergey Radchenko is the Wilson E. Schmidt Distinguished Professor at the Johns Hopkins School…

Hope is Stronger than Life: The Vilna Ghetto Diary of Zelig Kalmanovich

Zoom

Zelig Kalmanovich (1885-1944) was a Yiddish linguist, translator, and a central member of YIVO's pre-war Vilna staff. Kalmanovich kept a vivid diary during his time in the Vilna Ghetto describing daily life, the hopes and efforts of the people to retain humanity, and his thoughts about the future of the Jewish people and Jewish culture. A new publication by the…

The New Historia premiere x Elaine Black Yoneda book launch

The New School 6 East 16th Street, New York, United States

We are pleased to invite you to celebrate the premiere of The New Historia, featuring the book launch of Elaine Black Yoneda: Jewish Immigration, Labor Activism, and Japanese American Exclusion and Incarceration (Temple University Press, December 2021) by Rachel Schreiber, PhD, Executive Dean, Parsons School of Design. Book launch co-hosted by The Center for Jewish History and The New School's Historical Studies…

“No Body is Closed”: Cornelia Thomsen and Siri Hustvedt in Conversation

1014 - space for ideas 1014 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY, United States

1014 space for ideas, in collaboration with the German Consulate General New York and Deutsches Haus at NYU, presents "No Body Is Closed: Discussing the Collective Self" a conversation between visual artist Cornelia Thomsen and renowned novelist and essayist Siri Hustvedt, which will be moderated by Eric Banks, the Director of New York Institute for the Humanities. In this exchange,…

“Going Back in Time, Rub Your Eyes”: What Can Literature Do in the time of War?

Panel I: Uses and Misuses of Historical Memory in Post-Soviet Culture and Politics 11:00am–12:30pm Excavation and reconstruction of traumatic historical memory have been at the center of cultural debates in post-Soviet space since the 1990s. This process has resulted in a number of powerful literary and cinematic works based on their authors’ deep engagement with tragic history of the Soviet…

Representing Ruins and the Imperial Imaginary

Online

Representations of archeological artefacts are themselves a unique source of information, independent of the excavations they portray. Visuals that circulate to a broad audience through a variety of media, they inspire emotions among viewers through their aesthetic allure. Ruins, the remnants of past civilizations still standing as testaments to their endurance, held special appeal as the detritus of great empires.…

Le Capitalisme contre les inégalités: Yann Coatanlem et Thomas Philippon

La Maison Française (NYU) 16 Washington Mews, New York City, NY, United States

**This event will take place in French** Hybrid event: open in person to the NYU community, open online to the public RSVP In-person HERE (NYU Community ONLY) RSVP Zoom HERE (General Public) La Maison Française de NYU accueillera Yann Coatanlem et Thomas Philippon, professeur à NYU Stern School of Business, pour une conversation autour du dernier livre de Yann Coatanlem et Antonio de Lecea:…

Archiving Dance in a Box: A Conversation about Legacies of Dance with Gabriele Brandstetter and Nanako Nakajima

Deutsches Haus Columbia 420 West 116th Street, New York City, NY, United States

Please join us for a conversation about how to preserve and transmit the histories and legacies of dance, with Gabriele Brandstetter and Nanako Nakajima. Drawing on the research and performative processes of the cross cultural project “Dance Archive Box Berlin,” the conversation will address questions of archiving and re-creating dance through the traces and fragments of its archived remains: how…

“The Valor of the Misfit: Experimental Art in Late East Germany”

Zoom

Deutsches Haus at NYU and the DEFA Film Library at UMass Amherst present a conversation between Sara Blaylock(University of Minnesota Duluth) and Seth Howes (University of Missouri) to celebrate the publication of Sara Blaylocks’s new book, "Parallel Public: Experimental Art in Late East Germany" (MIT Press, March 2022).