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Cardiac Surgery in Ukraine in Light of Medical Reforms

Presenter(s): Dr. Oleksandr Babliak (Kyiv)

June 1, 2019 @ 5:00 pm - 7:00 pm

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Details

Date:
June 1, 2019
Time:
5:00 pm - 7:00 pm

Event Navigation

  • « Lecture “Why Museums are Important for Tomorrow’s Education”
  • Donor Appreciation Reception with a Presentation of the Society’s Latest Scholarly Projects »

Upcoming Events

Feb 14
5:00 pm - 7:00 pm

Ukraine in the Coordinates of the Ottoman Empire through the Prism of Ottoman Archival Documents

Feb 28
5:00 pm - 7:00 pm

Poetry Reading by Mykola Vorobiov

View Calendar
Wars inevitably produce displacement and dispossession. Such experiences also rupture understandings of the past, everyday routines, and visions of the future. The speakers on this panel will explore how the uncertain present serves as a precarious moment from which past displacements during World War II and experiences following the russian invasion affect visions of the future for individual Ukrainians and for Ukraine collectively.

Julia Buyskykh (Taras Shevchenko Kyiv National University)

Natalia Otrishchenko (Center of Urban History in Lviv)

Iryna Koval-Fuchylo (Maksym Rylsky Institute of Art History, Folklore and Ethnology of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine in Kyiv)

Moderator: Catherine Wanner (Penn State University)

Julia Buyskykh is an anthropologist with a Ph.D. (Candidate of Sciences) in History and Ethnology from the Taras Shevchenko Kyiv National University. She completed a postdoctoral fellowship at the Institute of Ethnology and Cultural Anthropology at the University of Warsaw in 2015-2016 and was a Fulbright visiting scholar at the Pennsylvania State University (2019-2020). She held a Sanctuary Fellowship at University College Cork, Ireland, from September 2022 to February 2023. Her research focuses on lived religion (Orthodoxy and Catholicism) in Ukraine and Poland, inter-confessional relationships, pilgrimages, memory studies, borderlands, and ethics and empathy in ethnographic research. She is currently writing her second Ph.D. dissertation in Anthropology at the Study of Religions Department at University College Cork, Ireland, and is a visiting scholar at the German Historical Institute, Warsaw and the Institute of History, the Polish Academy of Sciences. Her book To the West of the Bug: Diaries from the Borderlands (in Ukrainian) was shortlisted for the Yuri Shevelyov Award (2024) from PEN Ukraine for the Best Collected Work of Non-Fiction Essays.

Natalia Otrishchenko is a sociologist and a research fellow at the Center for Urban History in Lviv. From 2019 to 2022, she was an associate researcher at the Center for Contemporary History in Potsdam, and during the 2022–2023 academic year, she was a Fulbright Visiting Scholar at the Department of Sociology, Columbia University. Since March 2022, she has led the Ukrainian team of the “24/02/22, 5 am” documentation initiative. Her research interests include qualitative methods, oral history, memory studies, urban sociology, and sociology of expertise. She holds a PhD in sociological methodology from the Institute of Sociology, the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine.

Iryna Koval-Fuchylo earned a doctorate in philology from the Ivan Franko University of Lviv with a dissertation titled “Ukrainian Lamentations: Genesis and Poetics.” Since 2002, she has been at the Maksym Rylsky Institute of Art History, Folklore, and Ethnology of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine in Kyiv. She is the author of more than 260 publications, including three books and three co-authored books, that have been published in 11 countries. Her research focuses on the autobiographical narratives of the Ukrainian diaspora, the oral histories of refugees from the Russo-Ukrainian war, as well as traditional Slavic culture, including rituals, songs, and the history of Ukrainian folklore. In 2022-2023, she was affiliated with the Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology at the Centre for Ethnology and Contemporary Anthropology in Warsaw, the Institute of Cultural Research at the University of Tartu, the Department of Slavic Studies at the Sorbonne in Paris, and the Archive Department of the Finnish Literary Society in Helsinki.
Webinar: Experiences of Time after Displacement
Микола Воробйов народився 12 жовтня 1941 року на Черкащині. Один із фундаторів літературного угруповання “Київська школа”. Був замовчуваний і недрукований протягом 20 років після першої публікації в Черкаський газеті “Молодь”, 1962 р., з передмовою Василя Симоненка. Учасник Міжнародного літературного фестивалю у Торонто, Канада, 1992 р. Лауреат літературних премій: імені Павла Тичини (1992), “Благовіст” (1993), “Приятелів Руху”, США (1994), Національної премії України ім. Т. Г. Шевченка (2005). Автор багатьох поетичних збірок, найновіші – Затонулі персні та Сходження (обидві 2024). В 1989 році на Державній студії “Укркінохроніка” було знято фільм “Майстер”, який висвітлював творчий шлях Миколи Воробйова як поета-філософа та самобутнього маляра.<br /><br />Модерує: Д-р Марія Ревакович<br /><br />Mykola Vorobiov was born on October 12, 1941, in the Cherkasy region of Ukraine. He is one of the founders of the literary group known as the Kyiv School. His first publication appeared in 1962 in the Cherkasy newspaper Molod, with an introduction by Vasyl Symonenko. Soon thereafter, Vorobiov was silenced and remained unpublished for nearly twenty years. He participated in the International Literary Festival in Toronto, Canada, in 1992. Vorobiov is the recipient of numerous literary awards, including the Pavlo Tychyna Prize (1992), the Blahovist Prize (1993), the Friends of the RUKh Prize (USA, 1994), and the National Taras Shevchenko Prize of Ukraine (2005). He is the author of many poetry collections; his most recent books are Zatonuli persni and Skhodzennia (both 2024). In 1989, the documentary film Master was produced at the State Studio Ukrkinokhronika, highlighting Mykola Vorobiov’s creative path as a poet-philosopher and an original painter. A volume of his selected poetry in English translation by Maria Rewakowicz, Mountain and Flower, was published by the Lost Horse Press in 2020.<br /><br />Moderator: Dr. Maria G. Rewakowicz<br /><br />The poetry reading will be held in Ukrainian.<br /><br />Читання відбудеться українською мовою.
Читання віршів Микола Воробйов
Україна в координатах Османської держави крізь призму османських архівних документів

Османська держава протягом багатьох століть мала безпосередній кордон із землями теперішньої України. Зрештою, різні реґіони України знаходились під владою османського султана. Історична пам’ять українців зображає османів як ворогів, але стосунки українців з османами були не тільки ворожими. Це була столітня постійна взаємодія від конфронтації до співпраці та культурного обміну. На основі численних оригінальних османських документів, знайдених доповідачем в архівах Стамбула та Європи покажемо як османці бачили нас українців, а також через призму іншої – османської сторони, подивимось на різні віхи та події спільної історії. Спробуємо спростувати міфи та стереотипи про Османську державу, які побутують серед українців.

Андрій Живачівський — історик. Протягом 2010–2012 років навчався в Центрі Східноєвропейських студій Варшавського університету, а у 2011–2017 роках працював над кандидатською дисертацією в Інституті історії імені Тадеуша Мантейфеля Польської академії наук у Варшаві, зосередивши дослідження на історії османської провінції Кефе у XVI–XVII століттях. Свої наукові вишукування він проводив в архівах Москви, Кракова, Бахчисарая, Феодосії, Києва, Стамбула та Варшави. У 2014 році отримав стипендію від турецького уряду (TÜBİTAK) у Стамбулі. Автор низки наукових статей, присвячених історії османського Криму, Кримського ханату та кримських татар. Позаштатний науковий співробітник Інституту історії Польської Академії Наук та Центру медієвістичних студій.

Andrii Zhyvachivskyi

Ukraine in the Coordinates of the Ottoman Empire through the Prism of Ottoman Archival Documents

The Ottoman Empire, for many centuries, had a direct border with the lands of present-day Ukraine. Indeed, various regions of Ukraine at some point came under the rule of the Ottoman sultan. The historical memory of Ukrainians portrays the Ottomans as enemies, but relations between Ukrainians and Ottomans were not only hostile. It was a centuries-long, continuous interaction ranging from confrontation to cooperation and cultural exchange. Based on numerous original Ottoman documents discovered by the speaker in the archives of Istanbul and Europe, we will show how the Ottomans viewed us, Ukrainians, and, through the lens of the “other” — the Ottoman side — we will look at various milestones and events of our shared history. We will attempt to dispel myths and stereotypes about the Ottoman Empire that persist among Ukrainians.

Andrii Zhyvachivskyi is a historian. He graduated from the Faculty of History at the Vasyl Stefanyk Precarpathian National University in Ivano-Frankivsk. He studied at the Center for East European Studies of the University of Warsaw (2010-2012), was working on his Ph.D. at The Tadeusz Manteuffel Institute of History, Polish Academy of Sciences in Warsaw (2011-2017), with a dissertation focusing on the Ottoman province of Kefe in the 16th-17th centuries. He conducted his research in the archives of Moscow, Krakow, Bakhchisaray, Feodosia, Kyiv, Istanbul, and Warsaw. He received a scholarship from the Turkish government, TÜBİTAK, in Istanbul in 2014. He is the author of several scholarly articles on the topic of Ottoman Crimea, the Crimean Khanate, and Crimean Tatars.

 

Доповідь відбудеться українською мовою.
Дискусія українською та англійською.

 

The presentation will be held in Ukrainian.
The discussion will be in Ukrainian and English.
Україна в координатах Османської держави крізь призму османських архівних документів
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