BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
X-WR-CALNAME;VALUE=TEXT:Cultures of Protest in Russia: Interdisciplinary Workshop
PRODID:-//Harvard events data//EN
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:event_1117061_0
SUMMARY:Cultures of Protest in Russia: Interdisciplinary Workshop
DESCRIPTION:<p align="center" class="normal" style="text-align:center">	<strong>CULTURES OF PROTEST IN RUSSIA</strong></p><p align="center" class="normal" style="text-align:center">	<strong>Interdisciplinary Workshop</strong></p><p align="center" class="normal" style="text-align:center">	<strong> </strong></p><p align="center" class="normal" style="text-align:center">	<strong>March 8-9, 2018</strong></p><p align="center" class="normal" style="text-align:center">	<strong> </strong></p><p align="center" class="normal" style="text-align:center">	<strong>Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies</strong></p><p align="center" class="normal" style="text-align:center">	<strong>CGIS-South S354</strong></p><p align="center" class="normal" style="text-align:center">	<strong> </strong></p><p class="normal" style="text-align:justify">	<span lang="EN"><span style="line-height:115%"><span><span style="color:#222222">Since the start of Vladimir Putin’s presidency, Russia has experienced an escalation in state-led interventions into the mass media, non-governmental organizations and oppositional politics. In turn, protesters have taken to the streets to address a wide range of issues, including freedom of assembly, electoral fraud, corruption, monetization of welfare benefits, housing policy, and intervention in Ukraine. As the government has expanded and modified an arsenal of methods to manage civil society, activists have continued to seek new strategies of resistance. Drawing on traditions of post-Soviet mobilization, engaged citizens today persist in developing alternative repertoires of contention, experimenting with different forms of public address, and building new social networks.  The purpose of the workshop is to stimulate an interdisciplinary discussion of multiple facets of civil resistance and civic innovation in contemporary Russia.</span></span></span></span></p><p class="normal" style="text-align:justify">	 </p><p class="normal" style="text-align:justify">	<strong> </strong></p><p class="normal">	<strong>March 8, 2018</strong></p><p class="normal">	 </p><p class="normal">	<strong>4:00 p.m. - 6:30 p.m.  Graduate Student Training Session</strong></p><p class="normal">	<strong>“How to Conduct Ethnographic Fieldwork as a Humanities Scholar”</strong></p><p class="normal">	<strong> </strong></p><p class="normal">	<span lang="EN">Moderator: Fabrizio Fenghi (Brown)</span></p><p class="normal">	<strong> </strong></p><p class="normal">	<em>Open to graduate students in the Boston area. Pre-registration is required.</em></p><p class="normal">	<strong> </strong></p><p class="normal">	<strong> </strong></p><p class="normal">	<strong>March 9, 2018</strong></p><p class="normal">	 </p><p class="normal">	<strong>10:00 a.m. - 10:15 a.m. Opening Remarks</strong></p><p class="normal">	<span lang="EN">Alexandra Vacroux (Harvard)</span></p><p class="normal">	                                               </p><p class="normal">	<strong>10:15 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. Panel 1: Discourses of Resistance</strong></p><p class="normal">	<span lang="EN">Chair: Xenia Cherkaev (Harvard)</span></p><p class="normal">	<span lang="EN">Discussant: Julie Hemment (UMass Amherst)</span></p><p class="normal">	 </p><p class="normal">	<span lang="EN">“On Russian Conservative Postmodernism, Neo-Eurasianism, and the American Alt-Right”</span></p><p class="normal">	<span lang="EN">Fabrizio Fenghi (Brown)</span></p><p class="normal">	 </p><p class="normal">	<span lang="EN">“Avant-Garde Post: Radical Poetics after the Soviet Union”</span></p><p class="normal">	<span lang="EN">Marijeta Bozovic (Yale)</span></p><p class="normal">	 </p><p class="normal">	<span lang="EN">“On Three Forms of Anarchist Theater-Making: Monstration, Pussy Riot, and Teatr.doc”</span></p><p class="normal">	<span lang="EN">Ania Aizman (Harvard)</span></p><p class="normal">	 </p><p class="normal">	 </p><p class="normal">	<strong>12:00 p.m. - 1:00 p.m. Lunch Break</strong></p><p class="normal" style="text-align:justify">	 </p><p class="normal" style="text-align:justify">	 </p><p class="normal" style="text-align:justify">	<strong>1:00 p.m. - 2:30 p.m. Art of Resistance: Monstrations in Novosibirsk and Beyond</strong></p><p class="normal">	<span lang="EN">Moderator: Maria Sidorkina (Harvard)</span></p><p class="normal">	<span lang="EN">Speaker: Artem Loskutov [videoconferencing]                </span></p><p class="normal">	 </p><p class="normal">	 </p><p class="normal">	<span lang="EN">2: 30 p.m. - 2:45 p.m. <strong>Coffee Break</strong></span></p><p class="normal">	 </p><p class="normal">	 </p><p class="normal">	<strong>2:45 p.m. - 4:30 p.m. Panel 2: Re-Imagining Protests: Innovative Protest Tactics and New Social Networks</strong></p><p class="normal">	<span lang="EN">Chair: Thomas Remington (Harvard/Emory)</span></p><p class="normal">	<span lang="EN">Discussant: Graeme Robertson (University of North Carolina)</span></p><p class="normal">	 </p><p class="normal">	<span lang="EN">“Non-Identitarian Revolution: 'Object-Oriented' Protest Art in Russia since 2011–2012”</span></p><p class="normal">	<span lang="EN">Jason Cieply (Wellesley)</span></p><p class="normal">	 </p><p class="normal">	<span lang="EN">“Counter-conduct: Analyzing Russian State Power from Below”</span></p><p class="normal">	<span lang="EN">Maria Sidorkina (Amherst)</span></p><p class="normal">	 </p><p class="normal">	<span lang="EN">“Geography of Anti-Corruption Protests in Russia”</span></p><p class="normal">	<span lang="EN">Olena Nikolayenko (Fordham)</span></p><p class="normal">	 </p><p class="normal">	 </p><p class="normal" style="text-align:justify">	<strong>4: 45 pm - 6:15 p.m.  Roundtable. New Directions in the Study of Contentious Politics in Russia</strong></p><p class="normal" style="text-align:justify">	<span lang="EN">Chair: Timothy Colton (Harvard)</span></p><p class="normal">	<span lang="EN">Julie Hemment (UMass Amherst), Katharine Holt (University of St Andrews), Adam Leeds (Harvard), Graeme Robertson (University of North Carolina)</span></p><p class="normal" style="text-align:justify">	 </p><p class="normal" style="text-align:justify">	<em>The workshop is sponsored by the Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies, the Master’s Program in Russia, Eastern Europe, and Central Asia, and the Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures at Harvard University.</em></p>
LOCATION:CGIS S-354
STATUS:CONFIRMED
DTSTART:20180308T210000Z
DTEND:20180309T231500Z
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR