Remaking the World in the Shadow of the Cold War. Migrants, Workers, Soldiers, Spies in Post-1945 Reconstruction

Remaking the World in the Shadow of the Cold War. Migrants, Workers, Soldiers, Spies in Post-1945 Reconstruction

Organizer
The CEU Jewish Studies Program in cooperation with the CEU Nationalism Studies Program and the ERC Consolidator project 'Unlikely refuge? Refugees and citizens in East-Central Europe in the 20th century'
Venue
Central European University
ZIP
1100
Location
Vienna
Country
Austria
Takes place
In Attendance
From - Until
01.06.2023 - 02.06.2023
Deadline
01.03.2023
By
Connections Redaktion, Leipzig Research Centre Global Dynamics, Universität Leipzig

This conference explores the post-war reconstruction as a global process informed by the intensifying Cold War and advancing decolonisation. Adopting this broad-spectrum perspective, it hopes to fill it with details of on-the-ground struggles and hopes of various social actors in the historiographical tradition of people’s history.

Remaking the World in the Shadow of the Cold War. Migrants, Workers, Soldiers, Spies in Post-1945 Reconstruction

“The new world will be different,” wrote the housewife Nella Last in her wartime diary on May 10, 1945. In the wake of World War II, amidst all of the destruction, visions and ideas of how to rebuild communities started to simmer, igniting minds of politicians, refugees, and ordinary citizen across the globe. How did these ideas differ in various regions, especially across the growing East-West divide? How were policies and practices of reconstruction carried out and by whom? How did various social groups experience the process of shaping the new order? What cultural representations of this period became dominant and which ones remain marginal?

This conference explores the post-war reconstruction as a global process informed by the intensifying Cold War and advancing decolonisation. Adopting this broad-spectrum perspective, it hopes to fill it with details of on-the-ground struggles and hopes of various social actors in the historiographical tradition of people’s history. It will focus on political, economic, social, and cultural aspects of the transitions from war to peace and highlight tensions and convergences between the projects and practices of reconstruction in the forming Eastern and Western blocs, as well as in non-aligned countries. In particular, we are looking forward to exploring how the experiences of Jewish refugees, who found themselves caught in these geopolitical changes in various locations from Shanghai to Leningrad, shed light on the intricacies of political and social reshaping of the world order.

Three main themes will be guiding the conference:

1) Migration in a Global Perspective
2) Religion and the Politics of Post-War Revival
3) Cultural Representations of Reconstruction

We welcome presentation proposals for 20-minutes talks. Suggested topics include but are not limited to:

- cultural and social reconstruction, including representations in art and personal documents
- population displacement and management
- experiences of various groups of refugees
- legacies of the Holocaust in constructing the post-war order
- experiences of Jewish Displaced Persons, in particular in comparative perspective
- cultural history of anxieties in the early Cold War
- contemporary visions of the future
- role of international organizations (including UNRRA, IRO, UNRWA, UNHCR) in the reconstruction
- reconstruction of families and rethinking the social order
- resettlement and making of post-war societies
- transcontinental networks of aid
- religious assistance, religious communities, and their visions of the new moral order
- Cold War espionage in relation to the work of reconstruction
- materiality of the reconstruction
- vulnerable groups of population in the new order

This conference seeks to foster dialogue between scholars working on various geographical areas and on histories of various ethnic and religious groups.

To submit a presentation proposal, please apply by March 1, 2023 by filling this form:
https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSdIN-x_GuuM3VWv-icDUMxgMZQGBQsppR6xwdJtD8TrBf7sIQ/viewform

You will be asked to provide your details, title of the presentation, abstract up to 250 words. Students and early career scholars are welcome to apply and attend the conference. Participants will be notified of the outcome by April 10. The organizers will aim to cover participants' travel and accommodation costs. If you have any questions please email Maria Gabler, Jewish Studies Program Coordinator, at gablerm@ceu.edu or Dr Katarzyna Nowak, Jewish Studies Program Postdoctoral Fellow, at nowakk@ceu.edu

Contact (announcement)

Katarzyna Nowak,
Postdoctoral Research at the CEU in Vienna
nowakk@ceu.edu

https://jewishstudies.ceu.edu/article/2023-03-01/call-papers-remaking-world-shadow-cold-war-migrants-workers-soldiers-spies-post
Editors Information
Published on
27.01.2023