Historiennechercheuse post-doctorale (Fonds national suisse, Universit de Fribourg) et charge de cours (Facult de mdecine, Universit de Lausanne), les recherches d'Audrey Bonvin portent sur la socio-histoire du conservatisme, les organisations chrtiennes internationales, la guerre froide culturelle, les rseaux transnationaux antialcooliques et la mobilisation des rseaux dits "pro-vie" en Suisse.
Contact :
Audrey...@unifr.ch
Pey-Yi Chu is a historian of the Russian Empire and Soviet Union and an associate professor of history at Pomona College in Claremont, California. Her research focuses on the history of science, environmental history, and the history of northern Eurasia. She is interested in how ideas about nature have been shaped by culture, politics, and economic practices. Her first book, The Life of Permafrost: A History of Frozen Earth in Russian and Soviet Science was published by University of Toronto Press in 2020. Her writings have also appeared in the peer-reviewed journals Environmental History, Environment and History, Arcadia, and the edited volumes The Cambridge History of the Polar Regions, Eurasian Environments, and The Future of Nature. Support for her research has been granted by the United States Department of Education, the Social Science Research Council, the Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies, and the Rachel Carson Center for Environment and Society. Born in Taiwan and raised in the United States, Pey-Yi earned her Ph.D. in history at Princeton University.
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Rosario Forlenza is an Associate Professor of History and Political Anthropology in the Department of Political Science at Luiss University, Rome. Previously, he worked at the University of Cambridge, Princeton University, New York University, Columbia University, and the University of Padova, and held fellowships and visiting positions at the Australian Catholic University, Roskilde University, the University of Oslo, Sciences Po Bordeaux and Potsdam University.
He specializes in the history of modern Europe and Italy in its global implications, and focuses particularly on democracy and authoritarianism, political revolutions, nationalism and the politics of memory, politics and religion, and the Cold War.
He is currently working on a comparative history of revolutions from the perspective of political anthropology, on the totalitarian experience in interwar Russia, Italy, and Germany, and on the global history of Christian Democracy.
Amabel B. James Professor of History, Faculty Affiliate in the Department of Germanic Languages and Literatures, and Faculty Affiliate in the Department of Philosophy, Harvard University.
June 2023
A resident faculty member at Harvard's Minda de Gunzburg Center for European Studies, Gordon is a critical theorist and an historian of modern European philosophy and social thought, specializing in Frankfurt School critical theory, phenomenology, existentialism, and Western Marxism. Gordon received his doctorate from the University of California at Berkeley (1997) and was then a member of the Princeton Society of Fellows (1998-2000) before joining the faculty at Harvard. A frequent contributor to periodicals such as The Nation and The New York Review of Books, he is the author of many books, including Rosenzweig and Heidegger: Between Judaism and German Philosophy (2003); Continental Divide: Heidegger, Cassirer, Davos (2010); Adorno and Existence (2016); Migrants in the Profane: Critical Theory and the Question of Secularization (2020); He is also co-author of the book, Authoritarianism: Three Inquiries in Critical Theory, which also includes chapters by Wendy Brown and Max Pensky (2018). In June, 2019, on the occasion of the 50th anniversary of Theodor W. Adorno's death in 1969, he delivered the Adorno Vorlesungen at the Institute for Social Research at the Goethe-Universitt Frankfurt, on the theme, "Adorno and the Sources of Normativity." The lectures will be published soon in German as Ein Prekres Glck: Adorno und die Quellen der Normativitt (by Suhrkamp Verlag in 2023) and also in English (with the University of Chicago Press) as A Precarious Happiness: Adorno and the Sources of Normativity. Gordon has also edited numerous collections, including The Cambridge Companion to Modern Jewish Philosophy(2007); The Modernist Imagination: Essays in Intellectual History and Critical Theory (2008); Weimar Thought: A Contested Legacy (2013); and The Trace of God: Derrida and Religion (2014). He is co-editor with Warren Breckman of The Cambridge History of Modern European Thought (2019), and he is co-editor with Espen Hammer and Axel Honneth of The Routledge Companion to the Frankfurt School (2018), and co-editor with Espen Hammer and Max Pensky of A Companion to Adorno(Blackwell, 2019). He also helped to edit and wrote the introduction for the new edition of Adorno et al, The Authoritarian Personality (2019).
OXPO Research Fellow, du 28 mars au 26 avril 2022
My research and publications center on Modern European Cultural History in general and 20th Century German History in particular. I am especially interested in the relationship between culture and politics over the course of the century, and have worked on the themes of material culture, cultural diplomacy, photography, memory and nostalgia, human rights and international justice, death and changing notions of private life. My published work includes the books Within Walls: Private Life in the German Democratic Republic (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2010; paperback, 2012), which was awarded the Fraenkel Prize in Contemporary History by the Wiener Library, and The Authority of Everyday Objects: A Cultural History of West German Industrial Design (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2004; paperback, 2007). I am finishing a book, Ruin and Renewal: Civilizing Europe after World War II (Basic Books, 2020).
(LUISS University, Rome), du 28 mars au 28 avril 2022
Rosario Forlenza is an Assistant Professor of History and Political Anthropology in the Department of Political Science at Luiss University, Rome. Previously, he worked at the University of Cambridge, Princeton University, New York University and Columbia University, and held fellowships at the Australian Catholic University, the University of Oslo, and Potsdam University. His main research interests lie in the transnational history of modern Europe, religion and politics, symbolic politics, the history of democracy, authoritarianism and revolution, nationalism and the politics and memory.
Scuola Superiore Meridionale and University of Naples, Federico II. Ph.D. Thesis: Owners and Citizens. Property Rights and Citizenship of the German Ex-Enemy Aliens (1918-1932), supervisor Professor Daniela L. Caglioti (Scuola Superiore Meridionale, Napoli). In his research, he aims to examine the relationship between property rights and citizenship in the case of the former German enemy aliens who had been persecuted with the internment and the deprivation of goods by the Entente countries during WWI and in the aftermath of the conflict. In particular, by tracking down the fate of confiscated properties in Western Europe, Poland and the United States, he highlights how the economic persecution impacted the boundaries of national belonging in terms of exclusion and inclusion, as well as in the relationship between Germany and its citizens living abroad, during the interwar period.
(University of Exeter), du 15 mars au 15 avril 2022
Dr Yuexin Rachel Lin is a historian of the Sino-Russian frontier, with a particular interest in forced migration, diasporas, nationalism, ethnicity, and the legacies of empire. Her current research focuses on the Russian refugee crises of 1916-1922 and its implications for the development of international law and humanitarian practice in the region. She has completed a British Academy postdoctoral fellowship at the University of Exeter, and most recently worked as a research associate with the German Historical Institute, Moscow.
du 15 mars au 15 mai 2022
Andrea Martini is carrying on a research project titled Transnational Fascism and Its Impact on Europe After WWII (1945-1952) supported by the Gerda Henkel Foundation. The project would cast new light on the links among the fascists since 1945 and, in the meantime, the reactions of European democracies against the resurgence of fascist groups in that period.
du 21 mars au 21 avril 2022
Gerassimos Moschonas, PhD University of Paris II, is Professor of Comparative Politics in the Department of Political Science and History, Panteion University of Political and Social Sciences, Athens, Greece. He has held visiting positions at Free University of Brussels, University of Leicester, Princeton University, Yale University, University of Paris 8, Montpellier 1 University, and the University of Paris II.
Nous accueillerons par ailleurs dans le cadre de notre coopration avec le Centre for History and Economics : Emma Prevignano, doctorante du programme CHEP (Cambridge), et Jingyi Huang, postdoctorante Prize fellow (Harvard). Contact : David Todd (
david...@sciencespo.fr)
Andrea Baravelli is a professor at the Universit degli studi di Ferrara (Humanities Department). His research themes are: Italian political history and the history of institutions, in particular Parliament and the judiciary. He wishes to organize a seminar devoted to transnational collaboration in the fight against terrorism in the 1970s and 1980s.
Dr. Brigitta Bernet is a postdoctoral researcher at the Universitt Zrich (Forschungsstelle fr Sozial- und Wirtschaftsgeschichte). Her research focuses on the history of the psychologization of labor relations in the 2nd half of the 20th century and more broadly on the criticism and revival of historiography in the 60s and 70s.
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