Thứ Ba, 13 tháng 9, 2011

Physical Violence in Late Socialism: (Dis-)Entangling Statehood, Labor, and the Nation, IOS Regensburg, 19-21 April 2012‏

International Joint Research Project

Physical Violence and State Legitimacy in Late Socialism
First Annual Conference

Physical Violence in Late Socialism:
(Dis-)Entangling Statehood, Labor, and the Nation

Institute for East and South East European Studies (IOS)

Landshuter Str. 4, 93047 Regensburg

19 - 21 April 2012

CALL FOR PAPERS
The international joint research project “Physical Violence and State Legitimacy in Late Socialism
was launched in April 2011 (see www.physicalviolence.eu, online in October). The project, which is
coordinated by the Center for Contemporary History (ZZF) in Potsdam, focuses on physical
violence in the late socialist societies of Eastern and Southeastern Europe and on the state's
response to and practice of physical violence. The Sdost-Institut, as one of the partner institutions,
calls for proposals for the project's first annual conference, to be held on 19 " 21 April 2012 at the
newly-founded Institute for East and South East European Studies (IOS) in Regensburg (formerly
Sdost-Institut and Osteuropa-Institut).
By stressing the notion of physical violence and its significance for state legitimacy, the project
seeks to contribute to the general discussion of late socialist societies. The first annual conference
will explore physical violence within two core fields related to the legitimatory strategies and
discourses of communist statehood: the social and the national. By contextualizing physical
violence within these highly ambiguous fields, we aim to contribute to the dismantling of powerful
stereotypical narrations and images of state socialism; for example, the remnants of binary mental
maps coined by the Cold War or interpretations that have emerged on the grounds of post-socialist
nation-(re)building.
1. Violence in Labor and Social Relations
Communist regimes used violence to shape social relations, and violence was also part and parcel of
revolutionary rhetoric. One of the pertinent aims of communist societal policies was the creation of
a socialist working class. Yet, labor relations were highly ambiguous, and workers also constituted a
potentially subversive force. What role did violence play in coming to terms with these
ambivalences? How did violence (re-)shape social relations, in particular with regard to workers?
Which practices of violence exercised by workers can be identified, and how did the state relate to
them? Which forms of violence did the late socialist state apply, in order to influence and forge
social relations according to its needs and visions?
2. The National Factor in Shaping Violence
The national, as a world of meaning, continued to be interwoven into state legitimatory practices as
well as into processes of group-building during the Communist period. We look for contributions
that conceptualize the nation as a process, an institutionalized form, a practical category, a
contingent, and a context dependent event, and discuss the role of violence for shaping the national.
Proposals should seek to identify ethnic biases inherent in the violence exercised by the state and by
social actors, including questions like the following: Did police violence look different (quicker,
harsher, more lenient), depending on the ethnic background of who was involved? Can ethnic
prejudice be detected in the treatment of soldiers? Was judicial punishment conditioned by
ethnicity? How did state institutions and social actors refer to the nation when violence occurred,
for example in managing border regimes, in reacting to xenophobia, to violence against ethnic
minorities? Given that the party collapsed upon the demise of state socialism, while the (nation-
)states prevailed or were (re-)established, proposals are invited to seek lines of continuity between
the Communist era and both the pre- and post-socialist periods, exploring the systemic
interconnectivities of nationally motivated violence.
We invite proposals striving for a situational and contextualised “thick description of practices,
experiences, and representations of physical violence from the perspective of the historical actors,
both in terms of subversive strategies and the expression of state authority. Violence is to be
approached through a quadruple lens as exercised, suffered, observed and/or imagined.
The conference language is English.
Proposals should be no longer than 300 words. Please also include a short biographic note and your
institutional affiliation, as well as your contact details.
Deadline: 31 October, 2011.
Contact:
Dr. Sabine Rutar, Dost-Institut, Landshuter Str. 4, 93047 Regensburg, rutar@suedost-institut.de
(http://www.suedost-institut.de).

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