Conference
30 Sep 2025 – 01 Oct 2025

(Un)Safe Plurality: Ukraine and Beyond

Venue: Institute for East European Studies, Freie Universität Berlin, Garystr. 55, 14185 Berlin
Research project(s): World Fiction, Post/Socialist

The international interdisciplinary conference is the concluding event of the joint project (Un)Disciplined: Pluralizing Ukrainian Studies—Understanding the War in Ukraine (UNDIPUS), funded by the German Federal Ministry of Research, Technology and Space. It draws some 30 international participants from the fields of political science, sociology, literary and cultural studies, linguistics, and history. Focusing on the multifaceted repercussions of the full-scale war in Ukraine on politics, history writing, and culture in Ukraine and beyond, the conference assesses the changes in the academic fields and societies involved, and examines the results of the efforts to pluralize East European Studies, literary and cultural theory since 2022. To this end, the conference situates the war in Ukraine within a broader comparative and historical context, in order to avoid essentializing it and to identify common patterns. Furthermore, it revisits established and emerging critical theories, such as post-/decolonial, transnational, gender, queer, spatial, and diversity studies, language management, cultural transfer, and entangled history, to determine the extent to which these frameworks retain their subversive power and pluralizing potential during wartime. Ultimately, it asks what kind of knowledge can provide ethical guidance in turbulent times, promote peace, and help build a better future.

The conference is organized by the UNDIPUS project in cooperation with the Institute for East European Studies at Freie Universität Berlin and the ZfL.

 

Program

Tuesday, 30 Sep 2025
Venue: Institute for East European Studies, Freie Universität Berlin, Garystr. 55, 14185 Berlin

9.30
Conference opening

10.00

  • Christoph Augustynowicz (Vienna): The Economic Historian and Marxist Roman Rosdolsky in the USA. Spotlight on a Marginalized Figure
  • Alexander Dmitriev (Prague): The Ukrainian Idea in the Distance, 1905/1991: Olgert Ipolyt Bochkovsky, Dmytro Chyzhevsky, and Yuri Barabash
  • Valeria Korablyova (Prague): De-centering Eastern Europe, creolizing the theory: strategic inter-imperiality in Ukraine’s wartime cultural production
  • Matthew Blackburn (Oslo): Is peace more dangerous than war? The triumph and ideology over realism in Europe

11.45

  • Alla Koval (Berlin): Agency and structural vulnerability – Coping with potentially traumatic experiences among Ukrainian women in Germany
  • Svitlana Odynets (Newcastle-upon-Tyne): Lost in recognition: The unseen dynamics of gendered Ukrainian displacement after 2022 as a form of hermeneutical injustice
  • Olga Plakhotnik (Greifswald) and Maria Mayerchyk (Kleve): New mobilities, old vulnerabilities: Colonial design of the war-related migration
  • Roman Dubasevych (Greifswald): “My Thoughts Are Silent:” Voices Lost in the Noise of War
  • Oleksandr Chertenko (Giessen): Voiny sveta vs. voiny Svety: Gendering Crisis in Belarus and Ukraine
  • Sofie Rose (Copenhagen): “I Used to Be a Patriot:” Exploring experiences among Ukrainian men who flee the full-scale war



15.00
Keynote

  • Serhiy Kudelia (Waco, Texas): Strategic Neglect: The West and Ukraine’s Unfulfilled Security Aspirations After the Cold War

17.00

  • Oleksandr Zabirko (Regensburg): Decolonizing the Wasteland: The evolution of the STALKER game series
  • Svitlana Pidoprygora (Innsbruck): Contested narratives and (un)safe plurality: Ukraine in international documentary comics
  • Matthias Schwartz (Berlin): “I, You, He, She”: Plurality, gender, and resentment in post-Soviet film comedies

  • Mikhail Kizilov (Mainz): Is there an Indigenous population in the Crimea? Discourses on the Crimea’s ethnopolitical history before and after 2014
  • Alina Strzempa (Regensburg) The Donbas and the Environmental Humanities
  • Veronika L. Sharova (Halle a.d. Saale): Post-socialist, Post-colonial and Post-crisis: Symbolic urbanscapes in the cities of contemporary Ukraine

 

Wednesday, 1 Oct 2025
Keynote lecture
Venue: Institute for East European Studies, Freie Universität Berlin, Garystr. 55, 14185 Berlin

10.00
Briefing on the previous day

10.15

  • Joanna Kula (Wrocław): Russian or Russophone Literature? The new linguistic sensitivity in the context of the Russo-Ukrainian war (The case of Alisa Ganieva and the other authors)
  • Nadine Menzel (Bamberg): Particularities and interconnections of the Ukrainian avant-garde
  • Yuliia Soroka (Geneva/Kharkiv): Wartime society’s hate speech: how our own weapons are turning against us
  • Natalia Kudriavtseva (Kryvyi Rih): Researching language in the time of war: A critical ethnographic sociolinguistic approach

12.00
Keynote

  • Manuela Boatcă (Freiburg): Whose Times Are Turning? On Interimperiality and Semiperipherality in Unequal Europes

15.00

  • Dirk Uffelmann (Giessen): Strategic essentialism in Ukrainian appeals for decolonization
  • Svitlana Biedarieva (Mexico City): Introducing Ambicolonial Theory: Epistemic borderlines, colonial desire, and neocolonial war
  • Eka Tchkoidze (Tbilisi/Halle a.d. Saale): Greece and the Russian invasion of Mariupol
  • Martin Henzelmann (Greifswald): Multilingualism and language management in Moldova and Ukraine

16.45

  • Tatjana Hofmann (Zurich): Escaping national narcissism(s): Marta Havryshko’s Facebook chronicles as “literature of fact”
  • Marta Havryshko (Worcester, Massachusetts): Dangerous liaisons: Feminism and nationalism in wartime Ukraine – online
  • Ljudmila Popović (Belgrade): Language diversity in Ukraine from the perspective of the European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages
  • Bartłomiej Chromik (Warsaw): On political and scientific revolutions: Studying languages in independent Ukraine

18.00
Common discussion and closing remarks