ICS Seminar - Imperialism, post-socialism and decolonisation 

Imperialism, post-socialism and decolonisation 

Event Details:

Panel 1:

Date and Time: Thursday, 8 September, 11:30am - 1:00pm (SYD time)

Location: online via Zoom. Please RSVP to e.blight@westernsydney.edu.au by COB 7 September to receive the zoom details.

Panel: Niklay Karkov (State University of New York College at Cortland), Bojana Videkanic (University of Waterloo) and Christina Novakov-Ritchey (University of California, Los Angeles)

Panel 2:

Date and Time: Thursday, 8 September, 4:00pm - 5:30pm (SYD time)

Location: online via Zoom. Please RSVP to e.blight@westernsydney.edu.au by COB 7 September to receive the zoom details.

Panel: Volodimir Ishchenko (Freie Universität Berlin), Agnes Gagyi (University of Gothenburg), Manuela Boaca (University of Freiburg) and Ovidiu Tichindeleanu (IDEA Cluj, Romania)

Abstract

The Russian invasion of Ukraine is not only reviving Cold War rhetoric but is also (re)producing a plethora of interpretative frameworks for understanding the history and the politics of the post-socialist space. While some have proclaimed the ‘end of the post-Soviet’, a growing number of Ukrainian scholars, artists and activists insist on using a decolonial framework for understanding the dependencies and ruptures between former Soviet states. This framework casts the relationship between former socialist countries in a racialised and extractivist dynamic, complicating the meanings and uses of the ‘post’.

In the span of two panel conversations, scholars from the post-socialist space will discuss the relevance of new and old analytical and political concepts like nationalism, imperialism, and capitalism for thinking about Eastern Europe and the insights we gain from this engagement for understanding global history and political economy.

Biographies

Bojana Videkanic, assistant professor in fine arts at the University of Waterloo, is a performance artist and an art historian/theorist born in Bosnia and Herzegovina (former Yugoslavia). She is currently writing a book on socialist modernism and non-aligned modernities.

Christina Novakov-Ritchey is an assistant professor of Humanities at the University of Houston - Clear Lake. Her research examines peasants, communism, ecology, folklore, and aesthetics in the Yugoslav region. Her next research project is focused on global post-socialist performance.

Nikolay Karkovis an assistant professor in philosophy at SUNY Cortland. He has published texts on decolonial practice, socialism and anti-colonialism in Eastern Europe and is part of the network Dialoguing the Posts.

Agnes Gagyi, University of Gothenburg, is a social researcher, focusing on politics and social movements in East Central Europe, from the perspective of the region’s long-term world market and geopolitical integration.

Ovidiu Țichindeleanu is a philosopher and cultural theorist, co-founder of the Romanian left-wing website CriticAtac, the Indymedia Romania platform and LeftEast. Țichindeleanu’s latest book is “Counterculture. Rudiments of Critical Philosophy”.

Volodymyr Ishchenko is a research associate at the Institute of East European Studies, Freie Universität Berlin. His research focuses on social movements, nationalism and civil society. He is working on a collective book manuscript on the Maidan uprising.