IV Annual Conference of the SFB 1199: The Rise and Fall of Spatial Orders: Historical Narratives and Geopolitical Imaginaries

IV Annual Conference of the SFB 1199: The Rise and Fall of Spatial Orders: Historical Narratives and Geopolitical Imaginaries

Organizer
SFB 1199 “Processes of Spatialization under the Global Condition”, Leipzig University
Venue
InterCityHotel Leipzi, Tröndlinring 2 - 04105 Leipzig
Location
Leipzig
Country
Germany
From - Until
30.09.2019 - 02.10.2019
Deadline
23.09.2019
Website
By
Steffi Marung

Processes of globalization are not characterized by the dissolution of spatial orders, but rather by continuous and profound reorganizations of these orders. Globalization processes are inherently characterized by such processes of respatialization, which become particularly intense in specific times (critical junctures) and places (portals of globalization) where such processes crystalize and become interconnected. Focusing on the complex interplay between imaginations and practices contributing to the definition and implementation of spatial orders, the fourth annual conference of the SFB 1199 addresses different forms of spatial ordering, efforts to stabilize spatial orders, and challenges arising from these.

If you are interested in participating in the conference or wish to receive further information, please contact Dr. Ute Rietdorf (sfb1199@uni-leipzig.de). Conference participation is free; however, we would be grateful to receive a short note of your intention to come by 23 September 2019 for organizational matters.

Programm

Monday, 30 September 2019

12:00 pm
Registration and Refreshments

1:00 pm–3:00 pm
The transformation of imperial space: The spatial format(s) "empire" across spatial orders (17th–20th c.) Part I

Chair: Geert Castryck (Leipzig U)

Marina Bezzi (Independent Researcher): Geo-historical spatial orders in English and French support for colonial expansion in the 1580s
Matthias Middell (Leipzig U): From empire to nation-state with imperial extension: Examples from a fundamental transformation of spatial orders at the turn of the 18th and 19th century
Megan Maruschke (Leipzig U): 1789 and the new spatial format for empire: The nation-state with imperial extensions
Tanja Bührer (U Bern): The changing significance of “empire” in the long 19th century and the implications on imaginations of space

Coffee Break

3:30 pm–5:30 pm
The transformation of imperial space: The spatial format(s) "empire" across spatial orders (17th–20th c.) Part II

Chair: Megan Maruschke (Leipzig U)

Maria Ivanova (HSE Moscow): The concept of “Great Power” and the changing of spatial order, 1870–1914: The case of the Russian Empire
Julio Decker (U Bristol): Lines in the sand: Colonial railroads and territorialization in German Southwest Africa, 1898–1914
Geert Castryck (Leipzig U): Berlin’s Africa and the evolution from an inter-imperial to an international order, 1880s–1920s
Anne-Isabelle Richard (U Leiden): European empire(s): The colonial case for European cooperation

Coffee Break

6:00 pm–7:30 pm
Keynote
Cemil Aydin (U North Carolina at Chapel Hill): Global space of the Muslim world: Geopolitics, race and religion

7:30 pm Dinner

Tuesday, 1 October 2019

9:00 am–11:00 am
Making the nation state in the context of shifting world orders

Chair: Steffi Marung (Leipzig U)

Alberto Masoero (U Turin): Imperial disorder? The Siberian land survey and the politics of spatial approximation
Mariusz Lukasiewicz (Leipzig U): Gold, industry and race: The South African Republic at the 1889 Paris Exposition Universelle
Lasse Heerten (Ruhr U Bochum): Portal of re-urbanization: The free port of Hamburg and the transpatial making of a modern port city, c. 1880–1910
Discussant: Elisabeth Kaske (Leipzig U)

Coffee Break

11:30 am–1:30 pm
(Inter)Regionalisms contested and connected: Cold War blocs and new regionalisms in Africa

Chair: Katharina Döring (Leipzig U)

Steffi Marung (Leipzig U): Interregionalisms in the Cold War: The bloc and the Global South
Uwe Müller (GWZO Leipzig): Economic East-South relations in the Cold War. Interests and prospects around 1980
Ulf Engel & Jens Herpolsheimer (both Leipzig U): Africa-European interregionalism after the end of the Cold War
Discussant: Anja Jetschke (U Göttingen)

1:30 pm Lunch Break

2:30 pm–4:30 pm
Religious actors: Interventions in spatial orders and transregional connections

Chair: Gabriele Pisarz-Ramirez (Leipzig U)

Christoph Kleine (Leipzig U): Transregional networks, spatial imaginaries, and heterotopias: Religious actors as creators, inventors and interpreters of spatial orders
Nikolay Kamenov (Graduate Institute Geneva): Global protestant missions and the nation-state, 1830–1970
Ahmet Gencturk (U Rome/ Ruhr U Bochum): American protestant missionaries in Greece: Discourses, practices, and consequences (1821–1841)
Jens Reinke (Leipzig U): Parochial cosmopolitanism: Negotiating Chineseness in a global Buddhist China

7:00 pm Dinner

Wednesday, 2 October 2019

9:00 am–11:00 am
Challenges to present spatial orders

Chair: Sarah Sippel (Leipzig U)

Frank Meyer (IfL Leipzig) & Judith Miggelbrink (TU Dresden): Transformatory work: A conceptual approach towards an understanding of the role micro-practices in changing spatial order(s)
Khalid Wasim Hassan (Central U Kashmir): Militarisation and spatial orders: Re-production of public spaces in the conflict zone of Indian-administered Kashmir
Melinda Harlov-Csortán (Hungarian Academy of Sciences): Protection and heritagization as a new spatial reordering factor: The example of the Fertő-Neusiedlersee cultural landscape UNESCO World Heritage site
Srividya Balasubramanian (Leipzig U): Every village, connected: Variable spatial orders as imagined and actually existing in “Digital India”

Coffee Break

11:30 am–1:30 pm
Cartography between spatial formats and spatial orders

Chair: Sebastian Lentz (IfL Leipzig)

Matthew Edney (U Southern Maine): Cosmography, geopolitics, and the terraqueous globe: Competing global imaginaries in 18th- and 19th-century Europe
Vladimir Kolosov (Russian Academy of Sciences Moscow): The construction of the new Silk Road by means of cartography (tbc)
Jana Moser, Sebastian Lentz, Pierre Cherrier & Laura Pflug (all IfL Leipzig): Communicating spatial orders by means of visual concepts: Educational atlases in the 20th century
Jasper Trautsch (HU Berlin): The emergence of a new spatial world order: World maps and globes in mass media in the mid-20th century
Discussant: Katja Naumann (GWZO Leipzig)

1:30 pm Farewell Lunch

Contact (announcement)

Dr. Ute Rietdorf

sfb1199@uni-leipzig.de


Editors Information
Published on
11.09.2019
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