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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20231020T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20231020T203000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115947
CREATED:20231006T153223Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231023T220117Z
UID:13088-1697826600-1697833800@shevchenko.org
SUMMARY:Book Launch and Roundtable Discussion "The Enemy Archives".
DESCRIPTION:  \nProfessor Luciuk will be joined in discussion by Alexander Motyl\, Professor of Political Science at Rutgers University and Myroslav Shkandrij\, Professor Emeritus of the University of Manitoba and a former head of the Department of German and Slavic Studies. The discussion will be moderated by Olena Nikolayenko\, Professor and Chair of the Department of Political Science at Fordham University. \nLubomyr Luciuk is professor of political geography at the Royal Military College of Canada\, a Fellow of the Chair of Ukrainian Studies at the University of Toronto\, and the author of numerous publications dealing with the political history of the Canadian Ukrainian community and contemporary Ukraine. A founding member of the Ukrainian Canadian Civil Liberties Association\, Dr. Luciuk was distinguished in 2019 with Ukraine’s Cross of Ivan Mazepa. He has been a GIC appointee to the Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada and the Parole Board of Canada\, and was\, for many years\, active on the Endowment Council of the Canadian First World War Internment Recognition Fund\, which he helped establish. He is currently writing his memoirs and completing a monograph on the redress campaign. His most recent book (with Dr. V. Viatrovych) is Enemy Archives: Soviet Counterinsurgency Operations and the Ukrainian Nationalist Movement (McGill-Queen’s University Press\, 2023). He lives in Kingston\, Ontario\, Canada. \nAlexander J. Motyl is professor emeritus of political science at Rutgers University – Newark. He is the author of six academic books and seven novels\, including Who Killed Andrei Warhol (2007). His academic work focuses on Ukraine\, Russia\, nationalism\, revolutions\, and empires. \nMyroslav Shkandrij is Professor Emeritus of the University of Manitoba and a former head of the Department of German and Slavic Studies. He researches aspects of modern Ukrainian and Russian cultural history\, including the avant-garde\, Soviet literary politics\, nationalism\, imperialism\, and contemporary debates around decolonization. His articles have appeared in Canadian Slavonic Papers\, Nationalities Papers\, Nationalism and Ethnic Politics\, Journal of Soviet and Post-Soviet Politics and Society\, Kyiv-Mohyla Humanities Journal\, and other periodicals. He is the author\, editor\, or translator of several books and curator of several art exhibitions. \nOlena Nikolayenko is professor and chair of the Department of Political Science at Fordham University. She is also an Associate at the Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies\, Harvard University. Her research interests include comparative democratization\, contentious politics\, civil resistance\, and political behavior\, with a regional focus on Eastern Europe. Her recent book Youth Movements and Elections in Eastern Europe (Cambridge University Press\, 2017) examined interactions between nonviolent youth movements and incumbent governments during national elections in five post-communist states: Azerbaijan\, Belarus\, Georgia\, Serbia\, and Ukraine. Her current book project examines women’s participation in the Revolution of Dignity in Ukraine.
URL:https://shevchenko.org/event/book-launch-and-roundtable-discussion-the-enemy-archives/
LOCATION:Ukrainian Institute of America\, 2 East 79th St.\, New York\, NY\, 10075
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20231014T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20231014T190000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115947
CREATED:20231005T205057Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231023T215342Z
UID:13083-1697302800-1697310000@shevchenko.org
SUMMARY:A New Reality in the Making: Russia's War on Ukraine and the Future of Euro-Atlantic Security
DESCRIPTION:Russia’s war on Ukraine created a new security reality in Europe. This talk combines a practitioner’s and scholarly perspectives on what was wrong with the ‘old reality’\,  what factors shaped Eastern Europe’s security ‘grey zone’\, and whether the institutional West is gradually responding to this new reality. Kateryna Shynkaruk will discuss the first lessons learned from the exposed challenges and vulnerabilities of Euro-Atlantic security and the contours of a new postwar security order. \n  \nDr. Kateryna Shynkaruk is a senior lecturer at the Texas A&M University’s Bush School of Government and Public Service in Washington DC\, where she teaches courses in East European Politics\, European Security\, and International Relations Theory. Dr. Shynkaruk is a nonresident scholar at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. She has over 15 years’ experience of working in academia\, with think tanks\, and diplomatic missions. In 2016-2022\, she taught at the International Relations Department of the National University Kyiv Mohyla Academy in Kyiv\, Ukraine. Her research interests cover Ukraine’s foreign and security policy\, European security\, and the role of ideas in International Relations. She holds a Ph.D. in Global Political Affairs (2011) from National Taras Shevchenko University of Kyiv. In 2013-2020\, during a critically important period in the US – Ukraine relations\, Dr. Shynkaruk worked as a Political Analyst at the U.S. Embassy in Ukraine. She received several high-level awards from the Department of State\, including Superior Honor Award (2018). \nPresentation in English. Discussion in English and Ukrainian.\nLive stream: https://youtu.be/a9IsiWEq37Y
URL:https://shevchenko.org/event/a-new-reality-in-the-making-russias-war-on-ukraine-and-the-future-of-euro-atlantic-security/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230930T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230930T190000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115947
CREATED:20230829T204101Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230925T154212Z
UID:13046-1696093200-1696100400@shevchenko.org
SUMMARY:Fiber Optics: Communication with the Speed of Light
DESCRIPTION:To date\, more than 4 billion kilometers of optical fibers have been installed in the world (approximately the distance between the Earth and the planet Neptune\, the farthest planet from Earth). This talk will be an introduction to fiber optic communications\, which are the backbone of most communication systems around the world. \nAndrew R. Chraplyvy received the B.S. degree in physics in 1972 from Washington University\, St. Louis\, Missouri\, and the M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in physics from Cornell University in 1975 and 1977\, respectively. He joined the physics department at General Motors Research Labs in 1977 as a Research Scientist where he studied vibrational modes of gases and impurity modes in solids using ultra-high resolution spectroscopy. Since 1980\, he has been with Bell Laboratories\, where he has held a number of research and management positions. He holds over 90 patents worldwide in the areas of lightwave systems and fiber optics and has authored hundreds of publications. Along with Bob Tkach\, Andrew Chraplyvy invented a new type of optical fiber\, NZDF\, that is widely deployed in intercontinental and long-haul terrestrial networks. In addition\, they are responsible for a number of inventions that greatly increased the capacity and speed of optical networks\, in particular the concept of dispersion management of optical nonlinearities. These inventions and technologies are found in most high-capacity optical networks worldwide. \nModerator – Roman Brukh \nDirector of the Mathematical\, Physical\, and Applied Sciences Section\,Shevchenko Scientific Society in the US. \nThe presentation will be conducted in Ukrainian\, followed by discussion in Ukrainian and English. \n  \nLive stream: \nhttps://youtube.com/live/ThR_N3B7H74?feature=share
URL:https://shevchenko.org/event/fiber-optics-communication-with-the-speed-of-light/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230922T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230922T193000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115947
CREATED:20230829T203807Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231023T213604Z
UID:13042-1695405600-1695411000@shevchenko.org
SUMMARY:Ukraine in Ruins 1941–42\, 2022–23. Paintings by Alexander Motyl
DESCRIPTION:Тhe exhibit consists of 18 black and white acrylic-and-pen paintings\, 9”x12”\, on canvas sheets. Seven depict central Kyiv in ruins in 1941–42\, as a result of explosions set off by the Soviets; the paintings were completed in mid-2021. Eleven depict Ukraine in ruins in 2022–23\, as a result of Russia’s genocidal war; these were completed during the war\, in 2022–23. All the paintings were done on the basis of photographs.
URL:https://shevchenko.org/event/ukraine-in-ruins-1941-42-2022-23-paintings-by-alexander-motyl/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230921T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230921T203000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115947
CREATED:20230914T210148Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230921T214809Z
UID:13060-1695322800-1695328200@shevchenko.org
SUMMARY:"The Zelensky Effect": Book discussion with co-author Professor Olga Onuch
DESCRIPTION:With Russian shells raining on Kyiv and tanks closing in\, American forces prepared to evacuate Ukraine’s leader. Just three years earlier\, his apparent main qualification had been playing a president on TV. But Volodymyr Zelensky reportedly retorted\, ‘I need ammunition\, not a ride.’ Ukrainian forces won the battle for Kyiv\, ensuring their country’s independence even as a longer war began for the southeast. You cannot understand the historic events of 2022 without understanding Zelensky. But the Zelensky effect is less about the man himself than about the civic nation he embodies: what makes Zelensky most extraordinary in war is his very ordinariness as a Ukrainian. The Zelensky Effect explains this paradox\, exploring Ukraine’s national history to show how its now-iconic president reflects the hopes and frustrations of the country’s first ‘independence generation’. Interweaving social and political background with compelling episodes from Zelensky’s life and career\, this is the story of Ukraine told through the journey of one man who has come to symbolize his country. \nThe event will be streamed: \nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1VHUmDRKhTk
URL:https://shevchenko.org/event/the-zelensky-effect-book-discussion-with-co-author-professor-olga-onuch/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230916T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230916T190000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115947
CREATED:20230829T203449Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230918T145004Z
UID:13038-1694883600-1694890800@shevchenko.org
SUMMARY:Understanding Ukraine. Between Trauma and the New Reality with Yevhen Hlibovytsky
DESCRIPTION:Modern Ukraine has become one of the most misinterpreted countries in the world. This talk will focus on Ukraine’s trajectory of development\, how it failed conventional analytical tests\, and the country’s future prospects. Yevhen Hlibovytsky will look into Ukraine’s security\, demography\, political culture\, religions\, economy\, and governance and will explain how these factors impact Ukraine’s future options. \nYevhen Hlibovytsky is a lecturer at Ukrainian Catholic University and a public intellectual who has been actively studying how cultural factors influence institution building and long-term prospects for Ukraine. He runs pro.mova\, a think tank and consultancy\, and is actively involved in Ukraine’s reforms sector. Yevhen Hlibovytsky is a member of the supervisory board of Suspilne\, the Ukrainian Public Broadcaster. \nDiscussants: \nOlena Nikolayenko\, Professor and Chair\, Department of Political Science\, Fordham University \nGeorge G. Grabowicz\, Dmytro Čyževskyj Research Professor of Ukrainian Literature\, Harvard University\, and Editor in Chief\, Krytyka Publishers \nPresentation in Ukrainian. Discussion in Ukrainian and English \nLive stream:https://youtube.com/live/jiAmQhUYP_4?feature=share
URL:https://shevchenko.org/event/understanding-ukraine-between-trauma-and-the-new-reality/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230513T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230513T190000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115948
CREATED:20230420T190424Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230420T201745Z
UID:12944-1683997200-1684004400@shevchenko.org
SUMMARY:DON’T CLOSE YOUR EYES: Ukrainian Poets Respond to the War
DESCRIPTION:Poets and translators Carolyn Forche\, Marie Howe\, Olga Livshin\, Lev Friedman\, Maya Chabra\, Olena Jennings\, Vasyl Makhno\, and Hanna Melnyczuk-Stecewycz will read the work of Halyna Kruk\, Lyudmyla Khersonska\, Yulia Musakovska and others.  Introduced by Askold Melnyczuk \n  \nMaya Chhabra’s translations have appeared in The White Review\, Cardinal Points\, and PoetryTravels. She is the author of a novel in verse\, Chiara in the Dark\, and several other children’s books including Stranger on the Home Front. Her short stories and original poetry have appeared in Strange Horizons\, Pod Castle\, and various anthologies. \nLev Fridman is a speech-language pathologist based in New York City. He has facilitated translationprojects and publications\, and his own writing\, translations and reviews have appeared in variouspublications. He is co-editor of “Quiet Spiders of the Hidden Soul”: Mykola (Nik) Bazhan’s Early Experimental Poetry (Academic Studies Press\, 2020). \nCarolyn Forché has published five books of poems\, most recently In the Lateness of the World\, afinalist for the Pulitzer Prize in 2021. Her works also include translations\, anthologies\, and a memoir.She is a professor at Georgetown University. \nMarie Howe is the author of four volumes of poetry: Magdalene: Poems (W.W. Norton\, 2017); The Kingdom of Ordinary Time (W.W. Norton\, 2009); What the Living Do (1997); and The Good Thief (1988). She is also the co-editor of a book of essays\, In the Company of My Solitude: American Writing from the AIDS Pandemic (1994). From 2012-2014\, she served as the Poet Laureate of New York State. She is the poet in residence at The Cathedral Church of St. John the Divine\, and a chancellor of the Academy of American Poets. \nOlena Jennings is the author of the poetry collection The Age of Secrets (Lost Horse Press\, 2022) and the chapbook Memory Project (Underground Books\, 2018.) Her novel Temporary Shelter was released in 2021 from Cervena Barva Press. Her translation from Ukrainian with Oksana Lutsyshyna of Nobody Knows Us Here\, and We Don’t Know Anyone by Kateryna Kalytko was released in September 2022 from Lost Horse Press. Her translation of Vasyl Makhno’s collection Paper Bridge was released in October 2022 from Plamen Press. She co-edited the anthology of poetry Ukrainian American Poets Respond released from Poets of Queens Press and Yara Arts Group. Her textile art has been shown at Bliss on Bliss Art Projects and the NYC Poetry Festival. She is the founder and curator of Poets of Queens. \nOlga Livshin’s poetry and translations appear in The New York Times\, Ploughshares\, the Kenyon Review\, and other journals. She is the author of A Life Replaced: Poems with Translations from Anna Akhmatova and Vladimir Gandelsman (Poets &amp; Traitors Press\, 2019). Livshin is a co-translator of A Man Only Needs a Room\, a volume of Vladimir Gandelsman’s poetry (New Meridian Arts Books\,2022). \nVasyl Makhno is a Ukrainian poet\, prose writer\, and essayist. He is the author of fourting collectionsof poetry. He has also published a book of short stories\, The House in Baiting Hollow (2015)\, anovel\, The Eternal Calendar (2019)\, and five books of essays. Makhno’s works have been widely translated into many languages; his books have been published in Germany\, Israel\, Poland\, Romania\,Serbia and the US. Three poetry collections\, Thread and Other New York Poems (2009)\, Winter Letters (2011)\, and Paper Bridge (2022) were published in English translation. He is the recipient of Kovaliv Fund Prize (2008)\, Serbia’s International Povele Morave Prize in Poetry (2013)\, the BBC Book of the Year Award (2015)\, and Ukrainian-Jewish  Literary Prize “Encounter” (2020). \nAskold Melnyczuk’s book of stories\, The Man Who Would Not Bow\, appeared in 2021. His four novels have variously been named a New York Times Notable\, an LA Times Best Books of the Year\, and an Editor’s Choice by the American Library Association’s Booklist. He is also co-editor of From Three Worlds\, an anthology of Ukrainian Writers. His published translations include work by Oksana Zabuzhko\, Marjana Savka\, Bohdan Boychuk\, Ivan Drach\, and Hryhorij Skovoroda. His shorter work\, includingessays\, stories\, and reviews\, have appeared in The Paris Review\, The New York Times\, The Missouri Review\, The Times Literary Supplement (London)\, The Los Angeles Times\, The Harvard Review andelsewhere. He’s received a three-year Lila Wallace-Readers’ Digest Award in Fiction\, the McGinnis Award in Fiction\, and the George Garret Award from AWP for his contributions to the literary community. As founding editor of Agni he received PEN’s Magid Award for creating “one of America’s\, and the world’s\, leading literary journals.” Founding editor of Arrowsmith Press\, he has taught at Boston University\, Harvard\, Bennington College and currently teaches at the University of Massachusetts Boston. \nHanna Melnyczuk-Stecewycz received an MFA from Mass College of Art. Her work has appeared atArt Space in Maynard\, MA\, University of Massachusetts Lowell Mahoney Gallery\, The Gallery at thePiano Factory\, the Danforth Museum\, Tufts Gallery\, Brush Gallery\, Fountain Street Gallery\, New ArtCenter\, and more. She has curated two art exhibits: Agni Magazine of Emerging Artists (published by Agni Press as Agni 37: Standing on the Verge: Emerging Poets &amp; Artists alongside poetry curated byJoseph Lease and Thomas Sayers Ellis); the other\, a travelling exhibit of Ukrainian artists’ works\,Don’t Close Your Eyes\, responding to the current war. Hanna teaches Drawing and 2D Design atUniversity of Massachusetts Lowell\, and lives in Groton with her husband Joseph\, her daughter Lara\,and their cat Tello. You can see more of her work at www.hannamelnyczuk.com.
URL:https://shevchenko.org/event/dont-close-your-eyes-ukrainian-poets-respond-to-the-war/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230422T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230422T190000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115948
CREATED:20230320T160005Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230425T201817Z
UID:12719-1682182800-1682190000@shevchenko.org
SUMMARY:Зустріч із композиторкою Марією Олійник\,  стипендіяткою програми Фулбрайта 2022-2023 рр.
DESCRIPTION:  \nМарія Олійник – композиторка\, випускниця Львівської Музичної Академії та Королівської Консерваторії в Гаазі (Нідерланди). Співавторка опери «Ukraine-Terra Incognita». Викладачка катедри Композиції Львівської Музичної Академії ім. М. В. Лисенка. Стипендіятка Президента України\, Міністра Культури та Спорту Республіки Польща (Gaude Polonia)\, уряду Нідерландів (Nuffic). \nПід час зустрічі презентуватимуться оркестрові твори\, написані композиторкою протягом останніх п’яти років\, в основу яких покладено мелос української пісні. Слухачі зможуть познайомитися із уривками з опери «Ukraine – Terra Incognita» (2020)\, присвяченої оперному співаку та воїну Василю Сліпаку\, а також усім мужнім воїнам-захисникам України.
URL:https://shevchenko.org/event/%d0%b7%d1%83%d1%81%d1%82%d1%80%d1%96%d1%87-%d1%96%d0%b7-%d0%ba%d0%be%d0%bc%d0%bf%d0%be%d0%b7%d0%b8%d1%82%d0%be%d1%80%d0%ba%d0%be%d1%8e-%d0%bc%d0%b0%d1%80%d1%96%d1%94%d1%8e-%d0%be%d0%bb%d1%96%d0%b9/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230401T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230401T190000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115948
CREATED:20230320T154913Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230330T153042Z
UID:12714-1680368400-1680375600@shevchenko.org
SUMMARY:"ТРИМАЙСЯ РІВНО І ДИВИСЯ В СЕБЕ": зустріч із відомою українською поеткою Наталкою Білоцерківець
DESCRIPTION:Наталка БІЛОЦЕРКІВЕЦЬ – авторка шести поетичних книжок та вибраного “Ми помрем не в Парижі” (три видання – 2015\, 2018 і 2022). Її вірші перекладені багатьма мовами світу і удостоєні кількох національних та міжнародних відзнак. Народилася і зростала в селі Куянівка на Сумщині в сім’ї вчителів.  Закінчила  філологічний факультет Київського державного університету імені Тараса Шевченка. Працювала науковим співробітником музею Максима Рильського в Києві\,  у видавництві “Молодь”\, і понад  двадцять років редактором відділу літератури та мистецтва в журналі “Українська культура”. Авторка збірки літературно-критичних статей “У контексті епохи” (1990). Останніми роками писала прозу\, але\, після вторгнення Росії в Українy в лютому 2022 року\, повертається до поезії. Живе в Києві. \nСильний і чистий ліричний голос Наталки Білоцерківець лунає в українській літературі вже протягом кількох десятиліть. Її поезія перетворює історичне на інтимне з ніжністю та ретельною точністю\, врівноважуючи думки та емоції на терезах лінґвістичної музики. \n 
URL:https://shevchenko.org/event/%d1%82%d1%80%d0%b8%d0%bc%d0%b0%d0%b9%d1%81%d1%8f-%d1%80%d1%96%d0%b2%d0%bd%d0%be-%d1%96-%d0%b4%d0%b8%d0%b2%d0%b8%d1%81%d1%8f-%d0%b2-%d1%81%d0%b5%d0%b1%d0%b5-%d0%b7%d1%83%d1%81%d1%82%d1%80%d1%96/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230325T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230325T190000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115948
CREATED:20230330T160607Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230330T160644Z
UID:12640-1679763600-1679770800@shevchenko.org
SUMMARY:У пошуках власного "я": антиколоніальний дискурс радянського українського кіно 1920-тих рр.
DESCRIPTION:Lecture by Yana Prymachenko\, Senior Researcher at the Institute of History of Ukraine\, National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine\, and Visiting Scholar at Princeton University.\n\nIn 1922\, the All-Ukrainian photo and cinema office (Ukrainian abbreviation – VUFKU) was created. It was a vertically integrated structure with a closed cinema production and distribution cycle. The VUFKU had a difficult task – to fill the cinema with Ukrainian content and create national cinematography. Young Ukrainian Soviet cinema had to overcome the colonial legacy of the tsarist’s time. The script crisis affected the movie production. There was a constant shortage of Ukrainian-trained personnel\, especially film directors and actors\, who could satisfy the demands for new images. Despite hardships\, Ukrainian silent movie production thrived. VUFKU imported its production abroad and became a rival to Russian-based production studios\, which caused a ‘customs war’ between the Russian and Ukrainian Soviet Republics. \nUkrainian cinema denied the right of the former colonial rule to stay the re-translator of new ideas\, technical achievements\, and cultural progress of the West. Ukrainization gave the voice to Ukrainian artists to form the image of Ukraine by themselves. The overcoming of consequences caused by the colonization of Ukrainian discourse by tsarist Russia that in official Soviet ideology was treated as a “prison of peoples” opened to the Kremlin leaders the unexpected truth about Ukrainian identity\, that Ukraine has more civilization ties with Europe than with Moscow. \nYana Prymachenko is a senior researcher at the Institute of History of Ukraine\, National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine. In the fall of 2022\, she joined the History Department at Princeton University as a visiting scholar. Her research interests vary greatly\, ranging from Soviet culture of the 1920s-1930s\, the history of the Second World War\, memory politics in Russia and Eastern Europe\, to the study of Soviet propaganda and informational wars. She has made a significant media contribution to promoting historical knowledge in the public sphere. Her current research focuses on the mediatization of history and historical fakes in media. \n\n\nУ ПОШУКАХ ВЛАСНОГО ‘Я’: АНТИКОЛОНІАЛЬНИЙ ДИСКУРС РАДЯНСЬКОГО УКРАЇНСЬКОГО КІНО 1920-Х РОКІВ \nдоповідь Яни Примаченкокандидата історичних наук\, старшої наукової співробітниці Інституту історії НАН України\, запрошеної дослідниці Принстонського університету\nУ 1922 році було створено Всеукраїнське фотокіноуправління (ВУФКУ). Це булавертикально інтегрована структура із замкнутим циклом виробництва та прокатукінопродукції. Перед ВУФКУ стояло складне завдання – наповнити кінематографукраїнським контентом і створити національний кінематограф. Молоде українськерадянське кіно мало подолати колоніальну спадщину царських часів. Сценарна криза вплинула на кіновиробництво. Постійно бракувало підготовлених в Україні кадрів\, особливо режисерів та акторів\, які могли б задовольнити попит на нові образи. Незважаючи на труднощі\, українське виробництво німого кіно процвітало. ВУФКУ імпортувало свою продукцію за кордон і стало конкурентом російським кіностудіям\, що спричинило «митну війну»; між Російською та Українською радянськими республіками. \nУкраїнське кіно заперечувало право колишньої метрополії залишатися ретранслятором нових ідей\, технічних досягнень і культурного прогресу Заходу. Українізація надала право українським митцям самим формувати образ України. Подолання наслідків колонізації українського дискурсу царською Росією\, яка в офіційній радянській ідеології трактувалася як «тюрма народів»;\, відкрило кремлівським лідерам несподівану правду про українську ідентичність\, про те\, що Україна має більше цивілізаційних зв’язків з Європою\, ніж з Москвою. \nЯна Примаченко – старший науковий співробітник Інституту історії України Національної Національної академії наук України. Восени 2022 року вона приєдналася до історичного факультету Прінстонського університету як запрошена дослідниця. Її дослідницькі інтереси широко варіюються від радянської культури 1920-30-х років\, історії Другої світової війни\, політики пам’яті в Росії та Східній Європі до вивчення радянської пропаганди та інформаційних війн. Вона зробила значний медійний внесок у просування історичних знань у публічну сферу. Її поточні дослідження зосереджені на медіатизації історії та історичних фейках у медіа. \n 
URL:https://shevchenko.org/event/%d1%83-%d0%bf%d0%be%d1%88%d1%83%d0%ba%d0%b0%d1%85-%d0%b2%d0%bb%d0%b0%d1%81%d0%bd%d0%be%d0%b3%d0%be-%d1%8f-%d0%b0%d0%bd%d1%82%d0%b8%d0%ba%d0%be%d0%bb%d0%be%d0%bd%d1%96%d0%b0%d0%bb%d1%8c%d0%bd/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230325T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230325T190000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115948
CREATED:20230302T184530Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230322T151951Z
UID:12435-1679763600-1679770800@shevchenko.org
SUMMARY:In Search of Self: Anticolonial Discourse of Soviet Ukrainian Cinema in the 1920s
DESCRIPTION:Lecture by Yana Prymachenko\, Senior Researcher at the Institute of History of Ukraine\, National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine\, and Visiting Scholar at Princeton University.\nIn 1922\, the All-Ukrainian photo and cinema office (Ukrainian abbreviation – VUFKU) was created. It was a vertically integrated structure with a closed cinema production and distribution cycle. The VUFKU had a difficult task – to fill the cinema with Ukrainian content and create national cinematography. Young Ukrainian Soviet cinema had to overcome the colonial legacy of the tsarist’s time. The script crisis affected the movie production. There was a constant shortage of Ukrainian-trained personnel\, especially film directors and actors\, who could satisfy the demands for new images. Despite hardships\, Ukrainian silent movie production thrived. VUFKU imported its production abroad and became a rival to Russian-based production studios\, which caused a ‘customs war’ between the Russian and Ukrainian Soviet Republics. \nUkrainian cinema denied the right of the former colonial rule to stay the re-translator of new ideas\, technical achievements\, and cultural progress of the West. Ukrainization gave the voice to Ukrainian artists to form the image of Ukraine by themselves. The overcoming of consequences caused by the colonization of Ukrainian discourse by tsarist Russia that in official Soviet ideology was treated as a “prison of peoples” opened to the Kremlin leaders the unexpected truth about Ukrainian identity\, that Ukraine has more civilization ties with Europe than with Moscow. \n  \nYana Prymachenko is a senior researcher at the Institute of History of Ukraine\, National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine. In the fall of 2022\, she joined the History Department at Princeton University as a visiting scholar. Her research interests vary greatly\, ranging from Soviet culture of the 1920s-1930s\, the history of the Second World War\, memory politics in Russia and Eastern Europe\, to the study of Soviet propaganda and informational wars. She has made a significant media contribution to promoting historical knowledge in the public sphere. Her current research focuses on the mediatization of history and historical fakes in media. \n  \n  \nУ ПОШУКАХ ВЛАСНОГО ‘Я’: АНТИКОЛОНІАЛЬНИЙ ДИСКУРС РАДЯНСЬКОГО УКРАЇНСЬКОГО КІНО 1920-Х РОКІВ \nдоповідь Яни Примаченко\nкандидата історичних наук\, старшої наукової співробітниці Інституту історії НАН України\, запрошеної дослідниці Принстонського університету\n  \nУ 1922 році було створено Всеукраїнське фотокіноуправління (ВУФКУ). Це булавертикально інтегрована структура із замкнутим циклом виробництва та прокатукінопродукції. Перед ВУФКУ стояло складне завдання – наповнити кінематографукраїнським контентом і створити національний кінематограф. Молоде українськерадянське кіно мало подолати колоніальну спадщину царських часів. Сценарна криза вплинула на кіновиробництво. Постійно бракувало підготовлених в Україні кадрів\, особливо режисерів та акторів\, які могли б задовольнити попит на нові образи. Незважаючи на труднощі\, українське виробництво німого кіно процвітало. ВУФКУ імпортувало свою продукцію за кордон і стало конкурентом російським кіностудіям\, що спричинило «митну війну»; між Російською та Українською радянськими республіками. \nУкраїнське кіно заперечувало право колишньої метрополії залишатися ретранслятором нових ідей\, технічних досягнень і культурного прогресу Заходу. Українізація надала право українським митцям самим формувати образ України. Подолання наслідків колонізації українського дискурсу царською Росією\, яка в офіційній радянській ідеології трактувалася як «тюрма народів»;\, відкрило кремлівським лідерам несподівану правду про українську ідентичність\, про те\, що Україна має більше цивілізаційних зв’язків з Європою\, ніж з Москвою. \nЯна Примаченко – старший науковий співробітник Інституту історії України Національної Національної академії наук України. Восени 2022 року вона приєдналася до історичного факультету Прінстонського університету як запрошена дослідниця. Її дослідницькі інтереси широко варіюються від радянської культури 1920-30-х років\, історії Другої світової війни\, політики пам’яті в Росії та Східній Європі до вивчення радянської пропаганди та інформаційних війн. Вона зробила значний медійний внесок у просування історичних знань у публічну сферу. Її поточні дослідження зосереджені на медіатизації історії та історичних фейках у медіа.
URL:https://shevchenko.org/event/in-search-of-own-self-the-anticolonial-discourse-of-soviet-ukrainian-cinema-in-1920th/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230311T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230311T180000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115948
CREATED:20230207T183147Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230321T214334Z
UID:12233-1678550400-1678557600@shevchenko.org
SUMMARY:XLIII Шевченківська наукова конференція і презентація перших двох томів «Спогадів про Тараса Шевченка. Критичне видання»
DESCRIPTION:Програма \nВідкриття\nАльберт Кіпа\, Президент УВАН \nГригорій Грабович\, УНІГУ/НТШ-А\n“Спогади про Тараса Шевченка: головні питання жанру\, культурного тла і психологічного змісту” \nТамара Гундорова\, Принстонський університет/Інститут літератури НАНУ ім. Т. Г. Шевченка\n“Емпатія і місце авторау творчості Шевченка” \nМихайло Назаренкo\, Київський національний університет ім. Т. Г. Шевченка\n “Критичне видання спогадів про Тараса Шевченка: проблеми упорядкування і коментування” \nОлександр Боронь Інститут літератури НАНУ ім. Т. Г. Шевченка\n“Нові видання в рамках Шевченківського проєкту НТШ-А: здобутки і перспективи” \nЗакриття\nГригорій Грабович Віце-Президент НТШ-А \n  \nГригорій Грабович – професор кафедри слов’янських мов та літератур ім. Дмитра Чижевського Гарвардського університету. Голова слов’янського відділу  (1983-1988) і директор УНІГУ (1989-1996). Один із засновників і президент Міжнародної асоціації україністів (1991-1993)\, президент Наукового Товариства ім. Шевченка в Америці (2012-2018). З 1997 року засновник і головний редактор видавництва і часопису «Критика». Найновішою фундаментальною публікацією Грабовича є двотомник «Шевченко в критиці» (2013\, 2016)\, в якому він виступив головним редактором та автором вступних статтей. Лавреат Національної премії ім. Т. Г. Шевченка за цикл статтей про модернізм і Павла Тичину (2022). \n  \nТамара Гундорова – літературознавка і культурогиня\,  професорка\, доктор наук\, членкиня-кореспондентка НАН України. Працює в  Інституту літератури імені Шевченка НАН України\, є деканом Українського Вільного університету (Німеччина) та асоційованою вченою Гарвардського українського інституту (США). З 2023 року – запрошена дослідниця і лекторка Принстонського університету. Членкиня українського ПЕН. Тамара Гундорова є авторкою багатьох книг\, найновіша з яких – Леся Українка. Книги Сивілли (2023). Стипендіатка Fulbright Scholar (1997 і 2009)\, а також грантів Yacyk Distinguished Fellowship (HURI\, 2009)\, США\, 2005)\, Shklar fellowship (HURI\, 2001-2002)\, Foreign visitors fellowship (Hokkaido University\, 2004)\, MUNK School of Global Affair fellowship (University of Toronto\, 2017)\, Philippe Schwartz Initiative of  Humboldt foundation (Giessen university\, 2022-2023). \n  \nМихайло Назаренко – літературознавець\, критик\, перекладач\, кандидат філологічних наук\, доцент Інституту філології Київського національного університету імені Тараса Шевченка. Автор праць з історії української\, російської та англомовних літератур\, в тому числі книжок «Реальність дива (Про книги Марини та Сергія Дяченків)» (2005)\, «Поховання на могилі (Шевченкова біографія у фольклорі та фейклорі)» (2006\, випр. і доп. 2017; премія «ЛітАкцент року»)\, «Крім “Кобзаря”. Антологія української літератури. 1792–1883» (2021; премії КНУ та «Книжка року»). Разом з Олександром Боронем – співупорядник та співкоментатор зведень «Тарас Шевченко в критиці» (т. I–II\, 2013–2016) і «Тарас Шевченко у спогадах» (т. I\, 2023). \n  \nОлександр Боронь – шевченкознавець\, доктор філологічних наук\, завідувач відділу шевченкознавства\, заступник директора з наукової роботи Інституту літератури імені Т. Г. Шевченка НАН України. Член Наукового товариства ім. Шевченка. Лауреат Державної премії України в галузі науки і техніки (у складі авторського колективу) за шеститомну «Шевченківську енциклопедію». Автор п’яти книжок про Шевченкову творчість. Разом із Михайлом Назаренком – співупорядник та співкоментатор зведень «Тарас Шевченко в критиці» (т. I–II\, 2013–2016) і «Тарас Шевченко у спогадах» (т. I\, 2023).
URL:https://shevchenko.org/event/xliii-%d1%88%d0%b5%d0%b2%d1%87%d0%b5%d0%bd%d0%ba%d1%96%d0%b2%d1%81%d1%8c%d0%ba%d0%b0-%d0%bd%d0%b0%d1%83%d0%ba%d0%be%d0%b2%d0%b0-%d0%ba%d0%be%d0%bd%d1%84%d0%b5%d1%80%d0%b5%d0%bd%d1%86%d1%96%d1%8f/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230211T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230211T190000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115948
CREATED:20230125T190301Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230320T215313Z
UID:11552-1676134800-1676142000@shevchenko.org
SUMMARY:Book launch "Name of the Father" by Anna Frajlich
DESCRIPTION:Name of the Father is the first collection of poetry by Anna Frajlich translated into Ukrainian. This volume of poems includes selected works from several previous collections published in Poland and abroad. Highly regarded by Czeslaw Milosz and Wislawa Szymborska\, Frajlich’s poetry uniquely combines Polish\, American\, and Jewish motifs\, turning biography\, place\, and time into important details of poetics and ways of talking to the world with subtle hints. The central work\, “Name of the Father\,” concentrates tragedy\, irony\, and a Jewish worldview of uneasiness in simple questions without answers. \nThe book was compiled and translated by Vasyl Makhno. \nAnna Frajlich is a Polish poet and essayist. She is Sr. Lecturer Emerita at the Department of Slavic Languages and Associate Faculty Member\, Harriman Institute at Columbia University in New York City. Frajlich is the author of 18 books of poetry. Her works are translated into many languages and were awarded the Kościelski Foundation literary Prize (1981)\, the Knight’s Cross of Order of Merit (2002)\, the W. & N. Turzański Foundation Prize (2003)\, the Prize for life achievements of the Union of Polish Writers in Exile (2015)\, the Susanne Lotarski Distinguished Achievement Award (2021)\, and the Oscar Halecki Prize (2021). \nThe presentation is in Ukrainian and Polish. \nДо книжки віршів польської поетки Анни Фрайліх увійшли вибрані твори з кількох попередніх книжок\, що видавалися в Польщі та за її межами. Високо поцінована Чеславом Мілошем та Віславою Шимборською\, поезія авторки своєрідно поєднує польські\, американські та єврейські мотиви\, перетворюючи біографію\, місце і час на важливі деталі поетики та способи розмовляти зі світом тонкими натяками. В центральному творі «Ім’я батька» зосереджено трагізм\, іронію та єврейське світовідчуття незатишності\, що постають  простими питаннями без відповідей. \nУклав та переклав книжку Василь Махно. \n 
URL:https://shevchenko.org/event/book-launch-name-of-the-father-by-anna-frajlich/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230128T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230128T190000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115948
CREATED:20230119T192137Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230202T162327Z
UID:10602-1674925200-1674932400@shevchenko.org
SUMMARY:Гуртування довкола прапора: соціально-політичні зміни в Україні протягом першого року війни
DESCRIPTION:Український жорсткий і досить добре організований опір російській аґресії виявився неабиякоюнесподіванкою для багатьох експертів\, котрі протягом років змальовували українську державу якбезнадійно скорумповану й дисфункціонално\, а суспільство – як глибоко поділене й нездоланнорозколоте. З’ясувалось\, однак\, що українці\, як і кожен народ\, здатні в критичних умовах\, перед лицемекзистенційних загроз\, консолідуватися\, відкидаючи партикулярні інтереси та суперечності накористь загальнонаціональної єдності та солідарності. Соціологи називають таку суспільну реакціюна зовнішні виклики «гуртуванням довкола прапора» (rallying round the flag). Жодні загрози не здатні\,однак\, об’єднати людей у націю\, якщо для того немає певних передумов. Чим\, власне\, є в Україні ціоб’єднавчі чинники\, які особливості їхнього формування\, наскільки ймовірним є їхнє збереження унормальних умовах «сталого розвитку»\, поза екстремальними обставинами? На ці та деякі іншізапитання доповідач спробує відповісти на підставі аналізу соціально-політичних процесів в Україніостанніх десятиліть та відповідних змін у ціннісних настановах\, ідентичностях і політичних орієнтаціях. \nМикола Рябчук\, доктор політичних наук\,провідний науковий працівник Інституту політичних та етнонаціональних досліджень Національної Академії наук України. Почесний президент Українського ПЕН-клубу\,співзасновник та член редколеґії часопису “Критика” \n  \n  \nДискутант: Науковий секретар НТШ-А\,професор Йоханан Петровський-Штерн
URL:https://shevchenko.org/event/%d0%b3%d1%83%d1%80%d1%82%d1%83%d0%b2%d0%b0%d0%bd%d0%bd%d1%8f-%d0%b4%d0%be%d0%b2%d0%ba%d0%be%d0%bb%d0%b0-%d0%bf%d1%80%d0%b0%d0%bf%d0%be%d1%80%d0%b0-%d1%81%d0%be%d1%86%d1%96%d0%b0%d0%bb%d1%8c%d0%bd/
LOCATION:Shevchenko Scientific Society\, 63 Fourth Avenue\, New York\, NY\, 10003\, United States
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221217T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221217T170000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115948
CREATED:20221103T200406Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221230T181919Z
UID:7841-1671296400-1671296400@shevchenko.org
SUMMARY:20th Century Ukrainian Nationalism and Memory Politics (in person)
DESCRIPTION:  \nThis event will also be livestreamed on our Youtube channel. \nPanel Discussion \n20th century Ukrainian nationalism\, in particular the Ukrainian underground known as the OUN and UPA.\, has in the last two decades been the subject of numerous books\, articles and conferences. Highly negative views have been voiced about this movement\, but increasingly in recent years Ukrainian society has also expressed positive attitudes.  The panel will offer thoughts about how to unpack and explain these conflicting assessments\, which have historical and political significance. \nParticipants: \nAlexander Motyl (Rutgers University-Newark)\nConsidering Ukrainian Nationalism\n\nAlexander Motyl is professor of political science at Rutgers University-Newark and the author of National Questions (Ibidem\, 2022) and Ostatnia Stacja Pituna (Insignis\, 2022) \n  \nMyroslav Shkandrij (University of Manitoba)\nReconsidering Ukrainian Nationalism\n\nMyroslav Shkandrij is Professor Emeritus at the University of Manitoba and is presently a Visiting Professor at Columbia University. He is author of several books on Ukrainian literature\, art and politics\, including Ukrainian Nationalism 1929-1956 (Yale UP\, 2015). \n  \nBohdan Vitvitskyi (Former Special Advisor to Ukraine’s Prosecutor General)\nHistoriography\, Political Judgement and Memory Politics\n\nBohdan Vitvitsky has written on legal\, historical and philosophical subjects\, including an early attempt to explain differences in perspectives on the Nazi Holocaust.  He has formerly served as a U.S. diplomat to Ukraine and as the Special Advisor to Ukraine’s Prosecutor General. \n  \n  \n  \n  \n  \n  \n 
URL:https://shevchenko.org/event/20th-century-ukrainian-nationalism-and-memory-politics/
LOCATION:Shevchenko Scientific Society\, 63 Fourth Avenue\, New York\, NY\, 10003\, United States
ORGANIZER;CN="Shevchenko%20Scientific%20Society":MAILTO:info@shevchenko.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221210T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221210T170000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115948
CREATED:20221207T205810Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221227T222004Z
UID:9159-1670691600-1670691600@shevchenko.org
SUMMARY:Book Release Celebration: Jennings\, Makhno\, Tkacz\, Turczyn
DESCRIPTION:  \nDecember 10\, 2022\, 5:00 PM \nIn-person event at the Shevchenko Scientific Society\n63 Fourth Ave (between 9th and 10th Streets) New York\, NY10003\n\nIn celebration of poetry books released in 2022\, Shevchenko Scientific Society presents four poets. Olena Jennings will read from The Age of Secrets (Lost Horse Press.) Vasyl Makhno will read from Paper Bridge (Plamen Press.) Virlana Tkacz will read from Three Wooden Trunks (Lost Horse Press.) Christina Turczyn will read from The Sky Inside Your Body (Poets of Queens Press and Yara Arts Group.) Join us in launching these books!\n Books will be available at the event.\nOLENA JENNINGS is a writer and translator. Her novel Temporary Shelter was released in 2021 from Cervena Barva Press. Her poetry collection\, The Age of Secrets\, was released in September from Lost Horse Press. Her translation with Oksana Lutsyshyna from Ukrainian of Kateryna Kalytko’s Nobody Knows Us Here\, and We Don’t Know Anyone was released in October from Lost Horse Press\, and her translation of Vasyl Makhno’s poetry collection Paper Bridge is forthcoming from Plamen Press. She is the founder and curator of the Poets of Queens reading series and small press. \nVASYL MAKHNO is a Ukrainian poet\, prose writer\, essayist\, and translator. He is the author of fourteen collections of poetry\, the most recent of which is One Sail House (2021). He has also published a book of short stories\, The House in Baiting Hollow (2015)\, a novel\, The Eternal Calendar (2019)\, and four books of essays\, The Gertrude Stein Memorial Cultural and Recreation Park (2006)\, Horn of Plenty  (2011)\, Suburbs and Borderland (2019)\, and Biking along the Ocean (2020).  Makhno’s works have been widely translated into many languages; his books have been published in Germany\, Israel\, Poland\, Romania\, Serbia\, and the US.\, and most recently\, Paper Bridge\,(2022)\, translated by Olena Jennings. \nVIRLANA TKACZ is the artistic director of Yara Arts Group\, a resident company at La MaMa Experimental Theatre in New York and has created thirty-nine original productions that performed in New York\, Lviv\, Kyiv\, Kharkiv\, Bishkek\, Ulan Ude\, and Ulaanbaatar\, as well as China. Virlana is the recipient of the NEA Poetry Translation Fellowship\, three Fulbright Fellowships\, the National Theatre Translation Award and numerous NYSCA grants for her translations with Wanda Phipps. In 2019\, their translation of poems by Serhiy Zhadan\, What We Live For\, What We Die For\, was published by Yale University Press. Three Wooden Trunks is a collection of poems about memory and Virlana’s family in America. \nCHRISTINA TURCZYN\, a writer and visual artist\, has contributed watercolors to twenty exhibits including Cornell Has Talent. In her career as a writer\, she has over one hundred publications in diverse magazines and journals. Those span international events covered at the Guggenheim and The World Around Summit. She is a member of the Women’s Foreign Policy Group. The Sky Inside Your Body is a convergence between poetry and nature. Among the seasons\, winter stands out most\, as we witness how the trauma of war and the pains of being a refugee are reflected in the next generation. Turczyn shows her mastery over the prose poem and closes the books with a cinematic universe.
URL:https://shevchenko.org/event/book-release-celebration-jennings-makhno-tkacz-turczyn/
LOCATION:Shevchenko Scientific Society\, 63 Fourth Avenue\, New York\, NY\, 10003\, United States
ORGANIZER;CN="Shevchenko%20Scientific%20Society":MAILTO:info@shevchenko.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221117T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221117T210000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115948
CREATED:20221115T174656Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221116T214656Z
UID:8268-1668711600-1668718800@shevchenko.org
SUMMARY:Report from Kyiv. Photos from Russian War in Ukraine (by Olena Shovkoplias) at Hunter College
DESCRIPTION:November 17\, Thursday\, 7 pm. Hunter College\, Elizabeth Hemmerdinger Center\, Room 706\, Hunter East Bldg. In-person\, with proof of vaccination. RSVP required. \nPhoto exhibition from the National Museum of the History of Ukraine in the Second World War (Kyiv)\, with comments by Prof. Susan Smith-Peter\, Maria Genkin (Razom for Ukraine)\, and Hunter College students.  Co-sponsored by the Shevchenko Scientific Society\, Razom for Ukraine\, and the Ukrainian History and Education Center. \nHunter College Library will host an exhibit from the National Museum of the History of Ukraine in the Second World War\, located in Kyiv. This exhibit consists of photos taken on March 8\, 2022\, and builds on their earlier work documenting the Russian-Ukrainian war in the Donbas region\, which began in 2014. The posters show the inhuman grip of the Russian invasion and how the boundaries between war and peaceful life were erased. It shows both the destruction of the war and the resilience of the Ukrainian people\, who stood up as a whole to defend their state and culture. \nBorn and raised in Lviv\, Maria Genkin attended the Lvivska Polytechnica. In the summer of 1994\, she received a scholarship from the Ukrainian American Business and Professionals Association to attend the summer school at HURI (Harvard Ukrainian Research Institute). The following summer\, Maria came back to the United States on a scholarship from Cornell University. Maria started her professional career at Goldman Sachs. After her son\, Aaron\, was born in 2004\, she left Goldman Sachs and since pursued a variety of projects in education and culture. Maria has been deeply involved with Razom since 2017 and has been on the board since 2020. She currently leads Razom Donations and Grants Teams and continues to serve on the board. \nSusan Smith-Peter is Professor of History and Director of the Public History program at the College of Staten Island of the City University of New York. For more than 20 years\, she has studied the history of Russian journalism and civil society.  Since the invasion\, she has dedicated herself to helping the public understand the origins of Putin’s genocidal war in Ukraine.  Working with the World War Two Museum and ThoughtMatter\, a leading design firm in NYC\, she oversaw the creation of the posters in the exhibit. \nRen Chalpin is 25 years old\, born and raised in Switzerland\, a senior student at Hunter College\, majoring in psychology and history. Ren be talking about  experiences as an NGO humanitarian volunteer in Ukraine from mid-April through mid-August and also  about personal connections to Ukraine\, travels\, struggles/difficulties faced\, and important events that were witnessed. \nDirections: At the reception desk of the Hunter West Building\, please present your ID and proof of vaccination to get a pass. From there\, take the escalator to the 3rd floor\, turn right and walk across the sky bridge to the Hunter East Building\, then take the elevator to the 7th floor. Hemmerdinger Center is at the end of the hallway past the turnstiles. CUNY policy states that to enter the campus\, visitors are required to show proof of either full vaccination or a negative PCR test within seven days of their intended visit date. Everyone MUST complete the Cleared4 Access Process\, where they will be asked to upload a photo of their vaccination card or a negative test result. The Cleared4 Access Process can be accessed here. We recommend that you complete this process prior to your visit in order to avoid a delay in entering the campus. \n 
URL:https://shevchenko.org/event/report-from-kyiv-photos-from-russian-war-in-ukraine-by-olena-shovkoplias-at-hunter-college/
LOCATION:Hunter College\, Elizabeth Hemmerdinger Center\, Room 706\, Hunter East Bldg\, 921 Lexington Ave\, New York\, NY\, 10065
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221029T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221029T190000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115948
CREATED:20221029T205931Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221227T221411Z
UID:9933-1667062800-1667070000@shevchenko.org
SUMMARY:Станіслав Асеев. «Світлий Шлях. Історія одного концтабору.»
DESCRIPTION:  \nСТАНІСЛАВ АСЄЄВ.«СВІТЛИЙ ШЛЯХ. ІСТОРІЯ ОДНОГО КОНЦТАБОРУ» \nСУБОТА\, 29 ЖОВТНЯ (2022)\n5 по пол. за нью-йоркським часом\nShevchenko Scientific Society\n63 Fourth Ave (between 9th and 10th Streets)\nNew York\, NY 10003\n\nВ’язниця\, що насправді є концтабором\, де застосовують моторошні тортури\, діє в сучасній Україні. За тюремним парканом немає жодних законів\, тут зовсім інше життя: у приниженні\, страху й непевності\, з ранами та слідами опіків на тілі\, з болем від переламаних кісток і часто — від зламаної волі й свідомості. Тут головне завдання — вижити\, коли жити вже не хочеться й від тебе майже нічого не залежить\, зберегти здоровий глузд\, коли вже близький до божевілля\, залишитися людиною в нелюдських умовах\, де віра\, прощення\, ненависть і навіть погляд між катом і жертвою набувають інших сенсів.Щоб вижити в пеклі концтабору\, журналіст Станіслав Асєєв написав цю книжку — відверту\, емоційну\, глибоку\, в якій питань більше\, аніж відповідей\, бо життя людей після звільнення з полону назавжди розділилося на «до» і «після». Вступне слово – д-ра Олега Коцюби\, керівника видавничих проєктів УНІГУ. \n  \nСтаніслав Асєєв –  журналіст та письменник\, автор двох книжок\, у яких описує свій досвід під російською окупацією на сході України\, збірки віршів\, п’єси та роману. Під псевдонімом Станіслав Васін публікував короткі повідомлення в українській пресі про початок військових дій на Донбасі 2014 р. Заарештований і незаконно ув’язнений силами сепаратистської міліції за «екстремізм» і «шпигунство»\, Асєєв перебував у полоні. У 2021 році став лауреатом Національної премії імені Тараса Шевченка за книжку «В ізоляції: депеші з окупованого Донбасу». \n  \n\nОлег Коцюба – літературознавець\, спеціяліст з української літератури та культури 1970-80-х років та пострадянського періоду. З 2018 року керівник програми публікацій Гарвардського українського науково-дослідного інституту\, очолює проєкт Інституту Ukraïnica. \n  \n  \n  \n 
URL:https://shevchenko.org/event/stanislav_aseyev_svitlyj_shliak_istorr/
LOCATION:Shevchenko Scientific Society\, 63 Fourth Avenue\, New York\, NY\, 10003\, United States
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221001T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221001T190000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115948
CREATED:20220921T205911Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221020T141152Z
UID:6757-1664643600-1664650800@shevchenko.org
SUMMARY:Fulbright Ukraine and the Shevchenko Scientific Society Unite for Ukrainian Scholarship: An Evening of Speakers and Exhibit Featuring Ukrainian Students\, Scholars\, Artists
DESCRIPTION:Saturday\, October 1\, 2022\, 5 PM\nShevchenko Scientific Society\n63 Fourth Ave (between 9th and 10th Streets)New York\, NY10003\nOpening remarks:\nHalyna Hryn President\, Shevchenko Scientific Society in the US\nJessica Zychowycz Director\, The Fulbright Program in Ukraine\nPresentations: \nPlanning Urban Future in Times of Uncertainty\nNatalia Otrishchenko\nFulbright visiting scholar\, Department of Sociology\, Columbia University\nPublic Art:  A Connection to the People\nMisha Tyutyunik\nFulbright Alumnus – Ukraine 2018–2019 – Public Art/Murals\nWhy Does Museum Digitization in Ukraine Matter?\nIryna Tofan\nFulbright Graduate Program\, Museum Studies\, New York University\nThe brutal\, genocidal Russian-Ukrainian war has not spared Ukrainian scholarship and arts. Many institutions are in the process of being destroyed and thousands of Ukrainian scholars and artists find themselves displaced both inside and outside the borders of their homeland. Still others are making the ultimate sacrifice\, fighting on the front lines. It is essential to the mission of the Shevchenko Scientific Society and the Fulbright program that Ukrainian scholarship and arts continue to thrive. To that end\, we have joined forces to present an evening of lectures and an art exhibition featuring Fulbright fellows\, as Fulbright Ukraine celebrates its 30th anniversary and the Shevchenko Scientific Society reports on its Emergency Fund\, which has already disbursed its first 50 awards to Ukrainian scholars in need.We look forward to meeting the dozens of Ukrainian scholars now placed at universities in the New York area\, as well as Fulbright alumni\, Shevchenko Society members\, and members of the New York community. We hope that our gathering of organizations\, scholars\, and artists from around the world will help nurture the forces that Ukraine now so needs. As always\, we invite your donations and your support. All proceeds will go to support scholars and artists in Ukraine.\nART EXHIBIT. BOOK DISPLAY. RECEPTION.\nCapacity is limited: Kindly RSVP at info@shevchenko.org                   \nNatalia Otrishchenko is a research fellow at the Center for Urban History in Lviv and an associate researcher at the Center for Contemporary History in Potsdam. She holds a Ph.D. in Sociology (2015\, Institute of Sociology\, the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine). Since March 2022\, Natalia has led the Ukrainian team within the “24/02/22\, 5 am” international documentation initiative. This Fall\, she is a Fulbright visiting scholar at the Department of Sociology\, Columbia University. Natalia is interested in sociological research methods\, oral history\, urban sociology\, spatial and social transformations after state socialism.\nPlanning Urban Future During Times of Uncertainty\nFirst the COVID-19 pandemic and later the full-scale Russian invasion in Ukraine showed how fragile our plans could be\, and the planning became a privilege. Can we still plan the future\, which most likely will be the urban future? Since February 24\, 2022\, Ukrainian cities and villages have been experiencing large-scale destruction. Constant artillery shelling\, hundreds of missiles\, and bombs are destroying human lives\, housing\, infrastructures\, communal utilities\, nature\, social and spatial organization in general. Part of Ukrainian territory is still under occupation. Ukrainian society mobilized to face the aggression and to support those in need. Dreaming about our independent and peaceful future is part of our resistance.What kind of planning do we need for this future? Who is going to be involved in decision-making? How should this planning be organized? What principles should be embedded in it? What are the sources of inspiration and models for reflections? And who will be considered an expert in this discussion?\nMisha Tyutyunik is a Ukrainian-born painter\, muralist\, street artist\, illustrator\, and most recently\, virtual reality artist\, living and working out of Brooklyn\, New York.A graduate of Pratt Institute\, he travels the world creating murals and is regularly commissioned to paint and illustrate for many reputable brands\, publications and collectors. Misha has recently completed a Fulbright Grant abroad in Ukraine\, and was one of five artists chosen to paint a sanitation vehicle for the NYC Dept. of Sanitation as part of their ‘trucks of art’ initiative.\nPublic Art:  A Connection to the People\n As someone who was born in Ukraine and spent their childhood in Kyiv\, it was important to me to go back and reconnect with my roots\, as well as develop a connection to the land and the people through my public art practice.  During my Fulbright year in Ukraine\, and to the present moment\, I have been fortunate to work with many Ukrainian communities\, curators\, historians and local officials to create large scale murals that celebrate Ukrainian culture\, history and people.  It is my view that public art should be made with and for the public; otherwise it ceases to be ‘public’ art.  This was my approach to every project that I worked on during my Fulbright\, and how I continue to work on public art now.\nIryna Tofan Museum Studies MA student at NYU\, a background in Theory and History of Art. Former Communication manager at the National Art Museum of Ukraine and former Research Fellow at the Pinchuk Art Center Research Platform. Lecturer and writer on contemporary Ukrainian and international art for various Ukrainian media. Current research focuses on Museum Digitization and Digital Archives.\nWhy does Museum Digitization in Ukraine matter?\nAlthough the digitization of museums’ collections in Ukraine is not a priority now\, it is an important task for the near future. In most cases\, only 1–2% of the museum collection in Ukraine is on permanent display due to the available exhibition space\, while the remaining thousands of artworks are mostly available to employees or researchers who have special access. The fact that collections and archives remain analog means that they are vulnerable and inaccessible.\nDonate to support Ukrainian scholars and artists through the Shevchenko Emergency Fund HERE\, or mail your check to\nShevchenko Scientific Society\, Inc.\n63 4th Ave.\nNew York\, NY 10003\nFor more information please contact 212-254-5130 or info@shevchenko.org
URL:https://shevchenko.org/event/fulbright-ukraine-and-the-shevchenko-scientific-society-unite-for-ukrainian-scholarship-an-evening-of-speakers-and-an-exhibit-featuring-ukrainian-students-scholars-artists/
LOCATION:Shevchenko Scientific Society\, 63 Fourth Avenue\, New York\, NY\, 10003\, United States
ORGANIZER;CN="Shevchenko%20Scientific%20Society":MAILTO:info@shevchenko.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220925T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220925T140000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115949
CREATED:20220905T230401Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220905T230634Z
UID:6683-1664114400-1664114400@shevchenko.org
SUMMARY:The Other War Against Ukraine and Ukrainians [NTSh-A Philadelphia]
DESCRIPTION:The Philadelphia Study Center of the Shevchenko Scientific Society in the U.S. presents a lecture by Lubomyr Luciuk\, professor of political science at the Royal Military College of Canada\, titled “The Other War Against Ukraine and Ukrainians: The Crippling Legacy of Soviet-Era Disinformation in North America.” The event will take place at the Ukrainian Educational and Cultural Center (700 Cedar Rd\, Jenkintown\, PA). \n \nDisinformation Flier 9-25-22 \n 
URL:https://shevchenko.org/event/the-other-war-against-ukraine-and-ukrainians/
LOCATION:Ukrainian Educational and Cultural Center\, 700 N Cedar Rd\, Jenkintown\, PA\, 19046
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220924T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220924T113000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115949
CREATED:20220816T175249Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220916T152757Z
UID:6614-1664013600-1664019000@shevchenko.org
SUMMARY:Religion and the Russo-Ukrainian War
DESCRIPTION:RELIGION ANDTHE RUSSO-UKRAINIAN WAR \nSeptember 24\, 2022\n10:00 am – 11:30 am (EDT)\n5:00 pm – 6:30 pm (Kyiv) \nPanelists:\nNadia Kizenko\, Professor of History\, University at Albany\nThe Orthodox Churches in Russia and Ukraine\nCatherine Wanner\, Professor of History\, Anthropology\, and Religious Studies\,The Pennsylvania State University\nNon-Orthodox Churches in Ukraine\nJose Casanova\, Senior Fellow and Professor Emeritus\, Georgetown University\nGlobal Religious Reactions to the War\nDiscussant: Zenon Wasyliw\, Professor of History\, Ithaca College\nModerator: Andrew Sorokowski\, Shevchenko Scientific Society\nReligion has long been a significant factor in Russo-Ukrainian relations. Despite their shared Eastern Christian heritage\, the two nations have developed divergent religious traditions and attitudes. Russian leaders have cited religious motives for their eight-year-long war against Ukraine. At the same time\, a variety of Ukrainian churches and religious groups have supported their country’s independent course and its resistance to aggression.\nThe participants in this round table will discuss the complex relationships among Ukraine’s religious groups during the ongoing Russo-Ukrainian war. Attitudes in the Ukrainian Orthodox Church and the Orthodox Church of Ukraine\, as well as in the Russian Orthodox Church\, will be explored\, along with attitudes and reactions abroad.\nRegistration for this zoom webinar is required. REGISTER HERE\nJosé Casanova is a Senior Fellow at the Berkley Center for Religion\, Peace\, and World Affairs\, and Emeritus Professor of Sociology and Theology and Religious Studies at Georgetown University. His book\, Public Religions in the Modern World\, (Chicago\, 1994)has become a modern classic and has been translated into many European and non-European languages.  Among his recent publications areGlobal Religious and Secular Dynamics (Brill\, 2019) and two collections of essays in Ukrainian\, Po toy bik sekuliaryzatziyi(Dukh I Litera\, 2017) and Relihiya v suchasnomu sviti (UCU Press\, 2019).\n  \nNadia Kizenko is Professor of History and Director of Religious Studies at the University at Albany (SUNY). She is the author and co-editor of several studies of religious life in Russia and Ukraine\, most recently Good for the Souls: A History of Confession in the Russian Empire (Oxford\, 2021) and Orthodoxy in Two Manifestations? The Conflict in Ukraine as Expression of a Fault Line in World Orthodoxy (co-editor with Thomas Bremer and Alfons Brüning)\, Peter Lang\, forthcoming 2022.\n  \n  \nCatherine Wanner is a Professor of History\, Anthropology\, and Religious Studies at The Pennsylvania State University. She is the author or editor of seven books on Ukraine\, most recently Everyday Religiosity and the Politics of Belonging in Ukraine (Cornell University Press 2022) and editor of the forthcoming Dispossession:  Imperial Legacies and Russia’s War on Ukraine (Routledge\, 2023).\n  \n  \nZenon V. Wasyliw is a Professor of History at Ithaca College. He has published widely in the areas of Ukrainian and global history and social studies pedagogy\, including a forthcoming book with ibidem-Verlag Press titled “Soviet Culture in the Ukrainian Village\, 1921-1928.” Several ongoing writing and research projects include Orthodox and interfaith Church relations within the context of Ukrainian civil society and a social history of the North American Ukrainian Diaspora. Wasyliw completed his Ph.D. in history at Binghamton University (SUNY) in 1992.\n  \nAndrew Sorokowski holds degrees from the University of California\, Harvard University\, and the University of London School of Slavonic and East European Studies. He has served on the staffs of Keston College in England\, the late Myroslav Cardinal Lubachivsky’s chancery in Rome and Lviv\, and the Harvard Ukrainian Research Institute. He has taught history at several institutions of higher learning. He is retired from the US Department of Justice\, Washington\, DC.\n  \nREGISTER HERE
URL:https://shevchenko.org/event/religion-and-the-russo-ukrainian-war/
LOCATION:Virtual
ORGANIZER;CN="Shevchenko%20Scientific%20Society":MAILTO:info@shevchenko.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220917T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220917T230000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115949
CREATED:20220908T142949Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220908T143359Z
UID:6693-1663426800-1663455600@shevchenko.org
SUMMARY:Of Interest to our Members: Conference - The Independence War in Ukraine: Global Implications
DESCRIPTION:  \n \n \nDate: September 17\, 2022\nVenue: Harvard Club\n(35 West 44th Street\, Manhattan\, New York\, New York\, 10036) \nFor details and registration go to: https://kse.ua/ua/events/?eid=9357  (please be patient\, link is slow to load) \nHighlights: \n\nTwo Nobel Laureates: Paul Krugman and Roger Myerson\nTwo Ukrainian military officers\, directly from the front lines in Kherson and Kharkiv areas\nMilitary surgeon\, who operates daily\nYermak-Rasmussen group on security (AndriyYermak\, Anders Fogh Rasmussen)\nYermak-McFaul group on sanctions (Dr Jeffrey Sonnenfeld\, Nataliia Shapoval\, Dr. Tymofiy Mylovanov)\nTop economists on Ukraine (Dr. Yuriy Gorodnichenko\, Dr. Tymofiy Mylovanov\, Nataliia Shapoval)\nUkrainian investors and international businesses operating in Ukraine (Robert Gibbons\, Patrick Estaruelas\, Vadym Myroshnychenko\, David Martinon)\nGovernment vice-prime ministers\, ministers\, and deputy ministers (Adriy Yermak\, Yuliia Svyrydenko\, Olha Stefanishina\, German Galushchenko\, Mykola Solskiy\, Georgii Dubinskiy. Oleksandr Griban\, Andrii Vitrenko\, Marusyevich)\nTop world Ukrainian historians (Serhii Plokhiii\, Yaroslav Hrytsak)\nAuction items: president ticket to the presidential victory dinner post-war\, a fragment of Mryia\, Maydukov illustration of the war\, a complete collection of Ukrainian war stamps\, a collection of memorable war coins by the National Bank of Ukraine (this list is non-exclusive and is constantly updated)\n\n3pm – 5:30pm. Conference “The Independence War in Ukraine: Global Implications.” \n6:30pm – 11pm. The charity dinner “The Independence War in Ukraine: the Present and Future of the Country.”The Russian war in Ukraine has turned into the Independence War for the Ukrainian people. This war is too ab \nstract and too difficult to understand from afar. We offer a unique event that will bring together the greatest minds in the world and Ukrainians who have experienced the war\, lead through it\, and demonstrated bravery and resilience. We will aim convey the true intensity\, political reality\, and positive and negative emotions of the war on Ukraine. We will also discuss the global political and economic implications of the war and outline possible future scenarios. \nThe conference will have four panels: global security\, economy\, energy security\, and food security. The speakers and the audience are top Ukrainian and international officials\, academics\, business people\, and policymakers. \nThe charity dinner followed by a charity auction will celebrate the resilience and the spirit of the Ukrainian people. It will feature Ukrainians who will share their stories of overcoming the challenges of the war\, resisting the Russian invasion\, and maintaining and developing a democracy during a war. \nFor more information and registration go to: https://kse.ua/ua/events/?eid=9357 \nThe conference and charity dinner are co-organized by the Kyiv School of Economics (the top Ukrainian university\, economic think tank\, and educational charity)\, Razom for Ukraine (the leading US-Ukrainian charity)\, and United24 (the fundraising platform initiated by the President of Ukraine). Since the beginning of the Russian invasion\, these organizations have raised and deployed more than $200M in support of Ukraine. U.S. – Ukraine Business Council is an informational partner of the event.
URL:https://shevchenko.org/event/of-interest-to-our-members-the-ukrainian-independence-war-and-the-future-of-the-world/
LOCATION:Harvard Club\, 35 West 44th St\, New York\, NY\, 10036\, United States
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220514T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220514T133000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115949
CREATED:20220508T093018Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220508T153321Z
UID:6451-1652529600-1652535000@shevchenko.org
SUMMARY:Ukrainian Culture in the West: Its Visibility\, Problems\, and Challenges
DESCRIPTION:Round table participants will discuss the visibility\, problems\, and challenges of Ukrainian culture in the global context. They will discuss problems faced by Ukrainian artists. How has the situation changed since the beginning of the Russian-Ukrainian war? And what needs to be done for Ukrainian music and fine arts to achieve full recognition? \n  \nREGISTER: https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_vOPl7JAqSOmBPZ1oDrfJYw \n  \nVirko Baley\, professor emeritus\, University of Nevada\, Las Vegas  \n  \nMyroslava Mudrak\, professor emeritus\, Department of History of Art\, The Ohio State University \n  \nAdriana Helbig\, associate professor\, chair\, Music Department\, University of Pittsburgh \n  \nAnton Varga\, artist\, co-curator of Ukrainian Exhibition\, Venice Biennale\, Shevchenko Scientific Society in the U.S.
URL:https://shevchenko.org/event/ukrainian-culture-in-the-west/
LOCATION:Virtual
ORGANIZER;CN="Shevchenko%20Scientific%20Society":MAILTO:info@shevchenko.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220429T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220429T170000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115949
CREATED:20220404T230301Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220429T131614Z
UID:6347-1651222800-1651251600@shevchenko.org
SUMMARY:Shevchenko Expertise-a-thon for Ukraine
DESCRIPTION:Join us for an expertise marathon to benefit the Shevchenko Emergency Fund.\n\n  \nRegister to join on Zoom. \nThis event will feature NTSh-A members and guests giving 10-12 mini-lectures in the subjects of their expertise or experience\, as related to the war. There will be presentations on culture\, music\, history\, politics\, medicine\, math & sciences\, volunteering and humanitarian aid\, scholar rescue\, and cultural preservation in conditions of war. \nProgram (all times Eastern Daylight Time) \n9:00 Introduction \n9:15-10:00 Volunteering and Humanitarian Aid \n\n“Self-Organization: From Maidan to the Front Line\,” Emily Channell-Justice\, anthropologist and director\, Temerty Contemporary Ukraine Program\, Ukrainian Research Institute\, Harvard University\n“Introducing the February 24 Archive\,” Steven Seegel\, professor of Slavic and Eurasian Studies\, The University of Texas at Austin\n“On the Humanitarian Front Line: Working with Ukrainian Refugees in Poland and Beyond\,” John Vsetecka\, Ph.D. candidate\, Department of History\, Michigan State University\n\n10:00-11:00 History and Politics \n\n“New Wartime Discourse: What it Tells Us About Ukraine\,” Yohanan Petrovsky-Shtern\, Crown Family Professor of Jewish Studies and professor of history\, Northwestern University\n“Theater Then and Now: Understanding Ukraine through the Stage\,” Mayhill Fowler\, associate professor of history\, Stetson University\n“War and the City: Understanding Kharkiv through History\,” Markian Dobczansky\, associate\, Ukrainian Research Institute\, Harvard University\n“Looking to the Future: Ukrainian Identity and Ukrainian-Russian Relations after the War\,” Oxana Shevel\, associate professor of political science\, Tufts University\n\n11:00-12:00 Arts and Music \n\n“Where would ‘Great Russian Art’ be without the backwaters of Ukraine?” Myroslava Mudrak\, professor emeritus\, Department of History of Art\, The Ohio State University\n“Ukrainian Musical Diplomacy since February 24\, 2022\,” Maria Sonevytsky\, associate professor of anthropology and music\, Bard College\n“Arts\, Ideology\, and Politics\,” Virko Baley\, professor emeritus\, Department of Music\, University of Nevada\, Las Vegas\n“Why Defining the History of Ukrainian Art Music is More Important than Ever\,” Leah Batstone\, musicologist and postdoctoral researcher\, University of Vienna\n\n12:00-1:00 Scholar Rescue and Cultural Heritage Preservation \n\n“All That We Have is a Voice….: Ukrainian Writers in a Time of War\,” Askold Melnyczuk\, writer\, editor\, and professor of English\, University of Massachusetts Boston\n“Preserving Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Online: The SUCHO Project\,” Olha Aleksic\, Petro Jacyk Bibliographer for Ukrainian Collections\, Harvard University\n“Scholar Rescue in a Global World\,” Iryna Vushko\, assistant professor of history\, Princeton University\n“Assistance Efforts for Scientists\,” George Gamota\, Science and Technology Management Associates\n\n1:00-2:00 Math\, Economics\, and Technical Sciences \n\n“Supernetworks and Ukraine\,” Anna Nagurney\, Eugene M. Isenberg Chair in Integrative Studies\, University of Massachusetts Amherst\n“The Reconstruction of Ukraine\,” Yuriy Gorodnichenko\, Quantedge Presidential Professor of Economics\, University of California\, Berkeley\n“Promoting Ukrainian Narrative in Science\,” Alexey Ladokhin\, professor of biochemistry and molecular biology\, Medical Center\, University of Kansas\n“An Astrophysicist in Poland and Relief Efforts\,” Melania Nynka\, research scientist\, Massachusetts Institute of Technology\n\n2:00-3:00 Language\, Literature\, and Culture \n\n“The Language of War\,” Laada Bilaniuk\, professor\, Department of Anthropology\, University of Washington\n“The Ukrainian Film Community Responds to the War\,” Vitaly Chernetsky\, professor\, Slavic Languages and Literatures\, University of Kansas\n“How has war changed Ukrainian poetry? (Lessons from an online archive)” Amelia Glaser\, associate professor of Russian and comparative literature\, University of California\, San Diego\n“The Contemporary Resonances of Shevchenko’s ‘Kavkaz’\,” George Grabowicz\, Dmytro Čyževs’kyi Research Professor\, Harvard University\n\n3:00-4:00 Medicine and Biology \n\n“Medicine Under Occupation: A Voice from Sumy\,” Roman Moskalenko\, doctor and professor\, Sumy State University\n“Essential Healthcare for people living with opioid use disorder and HIV during Russia’s war in Ukraine\,” Jennifer Carroll\, associate professor of anthropology\, North Carolina State University\n“Improving Health Care in Ukraine: The Mission of the American-Ukrainian Medical Foundation\,” Bohdan Pichurko\, critical care physician\, Cleveland Clinic\n“Revived Soldiers Ukraine at War\,” Iryna Vashchuk Discipio\, president\, Revived Soldiers Ukraine\n\n4:00-5:00 Interdisciplinary \n\n“Women and War in Ukraine\,” Olena Nikolayenko\, professor of political science\, Fordham University\n“Ukraine Scholars at Risk program at University of California Irvine\,” Iryna Zenyuk\, associate professor of chemical and biomolecular engineering\, University of California\, Irvine\n“Ukraine’s Racial Minorities in Wartime\,” Adriana Helbig\, associate professor\, Music Department\, University of Pittsburgh\n“Fighting for Intellectual Sovereignty: The Ukrainian Global University\,” Tymofii Brik\, acting wartime vice-president of international affairs\, Kyiv School of Economics\n\nREGISTER to receive the Zoom link: https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_aNwTRX-aSHOUPeeN2pGUMw \nWatch on Facebook Live\nWatch on YouTube Live \nTo donate to the Shevchenko Emergency Fund\, please click here. \n \n\nThe Shevchenko Scientific Society in the U.S. expresses its appreciation to the Ukrainian-American Community Foundation for its support of the Shevchenko Emergency Fund. \n 
URL:https://shevchenko.org/event/shevchenko-expertise-a-thon-for-ukraine/
LOCATION:Virtual
ORGANIZER;CN="Shevchenko%20Scientific%20Society":MAILTO:info@shevchenko.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220416T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220416T133000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115949
CREATED:20220404T225109Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220416T161508Z
UID:6334-1650110400-1650115800@shevchenko.org
SUMMARY:Book Presentation | Ukrainian Art at the Dawn of Independence
DESCRIPTION:Painting in Excess: Kyiv’s Art Revival\, 1985-1993 (Rutgers University Press\, 2021)\nPrinted by Rutgers University Press in conjunction with the eponymous exhibition Painting in Excess: Kyiv’s Art Revival\, 1985-1993 at the Zimmerli Art Museum\, the book reflects upon the transformative moment of perestroika\, which gave birth to Ukrainian contemporary art and turned Kyiv into a bustling cultural capital. The book/catalogue will be presented by its editor\, author and exhibition curator Olena Martynyuk\, art historian and research fellow at the Harriman Institute of Columbia University\, and two of the book’s contributing authors: Alisa Lozhkina\, Ukrainian art historian and the author of the book Permanent Revolution: Art in Ukraine\, the 20th to early 21st Century\, and Asia Bazdyrieva\, art historian\, filmmaker\, educator and a co-founder of Geocinema platform. They will discuss how new art emerged during perestroika in Ukraine together with a new state\, a new art that contemplated the possibility of a new page in Ukrainian culture\, no longer defined by the categories of official and unofficial art behind the Iron Curtain. An explosion of styles and newly found freedoms in Ukraine coincided with public consideration of the traumatic past and present during the collapse of the Soviet Union. The transitional period will be discussed together with its reverberations in the present Russian-Ukrainian war. \nThe discussion will be moderated by Mayhill C. Fowler\, associate professor of history at Stetson University and full member of the Shevchenko Scientific Society in the U.S. \n\n  \n Olena Martynyuk is an art historian from Ukraine\, with an M.A. in Cultural Studies from the National University Kyiv-Mohyla Academy of Ukraine and a Ph.D. in Art History and Theory from Rutgers University. Currently\, she is a Petro Jacyk Postdoctoral Research Fellow in Ukrainian Studies at the Harriman Institute of Columbia University\, where she is doing research and teaching classes on Ukrainian and Russian art history. She taught art history classes at Rutgers University and CUNY College of Staten Island\, and organized exhibitions at the Zimmerli Art Museum\, the Ukrainian Museum\, and the Ukrainian Institute of America in New York City. Her most recent exhibition Painting in Excess: Kyiv’s Art Revival\, 1985-1993 is currently on view at the Zimmerli Art Museum. Martynyuk edited a comprehensive catalogue which was published in conjunction with the exhibition by Rutgers University Press. She authored and co-authored book chapters on Ukrainian art in books From ‘The Ukraine’ to Ukraine: A contemporary History\, 1991-2021\, edited by Mykhailo Minakov\, Georgiy Kasianov and Matthew Rojansky (2021\, together with Oksana Barshynova) and Contemporary Art in Ukraine and the Baltic Countries: Political and Social Perspectives\, edited by Svitlana Biedarieva (2021). Currently\, she is working on the Introduction to Ukrainian Contemporary Art as a co-editor with Alla Rosenfeld (forthcoming from University of Toronto Press) and on her own monograph on Ukrainian neo-baroque. \nAlisa Lozhkina is an independent Ukrainian curator\, art historian and critic currently based in the San Francisco Bay Area. In 2010-2016 she was the editor in chief of the major Ukrainian art magazine ART UKRAINE. In 2013-2016 she served as a Deputy Director of Mystetskyi Arsenal. Alisa Lozhkina curated seven large-scale international exhibitions of contemporary art\, including “Permanent Revolution. Ukrainian Art Now” at Ludwig Museum\, Budapest which was nominated for Global Fine Art Awards (New York\, USA) as one of the best museum exhibitions of post-war and contemporary art in 2018. Additionally\, Lozhkina is known as the author of the following books: Point Zero. The Newest History of Ukrainian Contemporary Art (Сo-authored with Oleksandr Soloviov\, 2010) and Permanent Revolution: Art in Ukraine\, the 20th to the Early 21st Century which was published in Ukrainian\, French\, and\, most recently\, in English. Alisa is currently an ABD in Comparative History at Central European University (Vienna-Budapest) where she is writing her dissertation on the interconnection of art and revolutions in recent Ukrainian history. \nAsia Bazdyrieva is an art historian and filmmaker whose practice revolves around writing\, research\, and education in Ukraine and internationally. Her research interests span across visual culture\, (feminist) epistemology and environmental humanities at large\, and pays particular attention to the project of Soviet modernity with its ideological and material implications in spaces\, bodies\, and lands. She holds master’s degrees in art history from the City University of New York and analytical chemistry from the Kyiv National University. She was a Fulbright scholar in 2015–2017\, and a researcher in Storefront for Art and Architecture (NYC) as an Edmund S. Muskie fellow (2017). Bazdyrieva co-authors ‘Geocinema’ (with designer and filmmaker Solveig Qu Suess)—a collaborative project that explores the possibilities of a “planetary” notion of cinema. \n  \n\n \nThis book was published with support from the Ukrainian Institute. \n\nRegistration is required and can be completed here: https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_SpeSpjflTkWsZY3SLQ5KhA
URL:https://shevchenko.org/event/ukrainian-art-2022/
LOCATION:Virtual
ORGANIZER;CN="Shevchenko%20Scientific%20Society":MAILTO:info@shevchenko.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220403T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220403T170000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115949
CREATED:20220328T222633Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220328T222710Z
UID:6305-1648998000-1649005200@shevchenko.org
SUMMARY:A Celebration of the Lives and Contributions of Drs. Aleksander Lushnycky and Natalia Ishchuk-Pazuniak (Philadelphia\, PA)
DESCRIPTION:The Philadelphia chapter of the Shevchenko Scientific Society cordially invites everyone to “A Celebration of the Lives and Contributions of Drs. Aleksander Lushnycky and Natalia Ishchuk-Pazuniak” on Sunday\, April 3\, 2022\, 3:00 pm at the Ukrainian Educational and Cultural Center (700 Cedar Rd\, Jenkintown\, PA). The event will feature presentations by Profs. Leo Rudnytzky\, Laryssa Onyshkevych and Albert Kipa\, Oksana Sokolyk (Toronto)\, and performances by concert pianist Irene Pelech Zwarych and Kyiv Opera soprano Lidia Bychkova. \nFor further information please contact Ulana Mazurkevych\, Program Committee Chairperson at ulanamazurkevich@aol.com or by phone (215) 858-3006.
URL:https://shevchenko.org/event/a-celebration-of-the-lives-and-contributions-of-drs-aleksander-lushnycky-and-natalia-ishchuk-pazuniak/
LOCATION:Ukrainian Educational and Cultural Center\, 700 N Cedar Rd\, Jenkintown\, PA\, 19046
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220402T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220402T133000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115949
CREATED:20220325T200553Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220328T222727Z
UID:6287-1648900800-1648906200@shevchenko.org
SUMMARY:"Жидівський король": презетнація книжки Олександра Авербуха | "The Jewish King": A Book Presentation by Alex Averbuch (Webinar)
DESCRIPTION:Презентація-вебінар\nПожертви\, зібрані під час події\, будуть передані Науковим Товариством ім Шевченка в Америці для підтримки літераторів та митців України. Можна пожертвувати\, використовуючи PayPal. \nУ збірці віршів Жидівський король Олександр Авербух пропонує\, а точніше\, вигадує письмо\, у якому щільно переплітаються пам’ять і забуття\, забування і згадування\, відтворення й реанімування. Це заплутана панорама інтимної\, приватної історії\, що сполучає близькі родинні голоси з голосами цілком чужими\, але водночас зрозумілими. Поєднуючи у собі модерністичні традиції з документальним письмом\, ці вірші оприявнюють найгостріші проблеми та найболючіші\, непроговорені теми: єврейських катастроф упродовж погромів і під час Голокосту\, переміщених остарбайтерів з утраченими домівками\, урешті-решт\, мови\, яка постійно зазнає змін\, але повсякчас залишається чи не єдиним інструментом\, здатним передавати ці переживання. – Остап Кінь \n  \nОлександр Авербух – поет\, перекладач і літературознавець. Народився 1985 року в селищі Новоайдар на Луганщині. Його поезія українською і російською мовами та переклади виходили друком в різних літературних часописах й антологіях. Олександр є автором трьох поетичних збірок і низки літературних перекладів івритом\, російською\, українською та англійською мовами. Організатор численних поетичних перформансів і фестивалів (зокрема\, нещодавнього Міжнародного фестивалю сучасної української поезії\, літо 2020 року). У своїх творах торкається питань етнічної фрагментації та межовости\, множинних ідентичностей\, крос- та багатомовності\, документалістичного письма й памʼяті. Автор праць із теорії квірности й фемінізму\, критичної теорії раси та культури споживання. \n  \nВіталій Чернецький – професор славістики Канзаського університету\, перший віце-президент НТШ в Америці\, екс-президент (2009-2018) Американської асоціації україністів. Автор монографії Картографуючи посткомуністичні культури: Росія та Україна в контексті глобалізації (вид. ун-тів МакҐил та Квінс\, 2007; україномовна версія\, вид. «Критика»\, 2013) та статей про модерні та сучасні слов’янські та східноєвропейські літератури і культури\, де він наголошує на міжреґіональних та міждисциплінарних контекстах. Нова книга українською\, Перетини і прориви: Українська література і кіно поміж глобальним та локальним\, готується до друку у видавництві «Критика». Співредактор двомовної антології сучасної української поезії Листи з України (2016) та анотованого українського перекладу Культури й імперіялізму Едварда Саїда (2007)\, запрошений редактор спеціального числа електронного часопису КіноКультура\, присвяченого Україні (2009). Серед його перекладів англійською романи Юрія Андруховича Московіада (2008) та Дванадцять обручів (2015)\, а також збірка його вибраних поезій\, Пісні для мертвого півня (2018\, спільно з Остапом Конем). \n  \nОстап Кінь упорядкував антології Babyn Yar: Ukrainian Poets Respond (готується до друку видавничим відділом Harvard Ukrainian Research Institute) та New York Elegies: Ukrainian Poems on the City (Academic Studies Press). Співперекладач англійською мовою поетичних збірок Юрія Андруховича та Сергія Жадана. Тепер працює над антологією українсько-єврейських поетів у перекладі англійською. \nВасиль Махно – поет\, прозаїк\, есеїст\, перекладач. Автор чотирнадцятох поетичних збірок\, найновіша з яких – “Одновітрильний дім» (2021); книжки оповідань “Дім у Бейтінґ Голлов” (2015)\, роману «Вічний календар» (2019) та книжок есеїстики “Парк культури та відпочинку імені Ґертруди Стайн” (2006)\, “Котилася торба” (2011) «Околиці та пограниччя (2019)\, “Уздовж океану на ровері” (2020); перекладів польських поетів Збіґнєва Герберта “Струна світла” (1996)\, Януша Шубера “Спійманий у сіть” (2007) та Анни Фрайліх «Ім’я батька» (2021). Окремими книжками вірші та проза виходили у Ізраїлі\, Польщі\, Німеччині\, Румунії\, Сербії та США. Лауреат літературних відзнак\, зокрема Міжнародної премії “Повеље Мораве” (2013)\, “Книга року BBC” (2015) та українсько-єврейської премії «Зустріч» (2020). \nРеєстрація обов’язкова і доступна тут: https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_jvDGKqZLQdaCa3AlEBGivA
URL:https://shevchenko.org/event/averbuch_poetry/
LOCATION:Virtual
ORGANIZER;CN="Shevchenko%20Scientific%20Society":MAILTO:info@shevchenko.org
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220326T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220326T133000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115949
CREATED:20220316T145229Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220326T133735Z
UID:6254-1648296000-1648301400@shevchenko.org
SUMMARY:Alexander Motyl | Discussion and Reading from his Putin Trilogy: The Jew Who Was Ukrainian\, Vovochka\, and Pitun's Last Stand
DESCRIPTION:Discussion and reading with Alexander Motyl (virtual)\n    .    \nThe Jew Who Was Ukrainian\, Vovochka\, and Pitun’s Last Stand form Alexander Motyl’s “Pitun Trilogy.” Written between 2011 and 2021\, the three novels imagine Mother Russia’s extraordinarily great leader’s bizarre rise and humiliating fall. Rumor has it that Motyl is planning to write a fourth novel\, Pitun Stands Trial. \nThe author will discuss his three novels\, read some excerpts\, and try to convey just why he has an obsession with Vladimir Putin. \nAlexander J. Motyl is professor of political science at Rutgers University-Newark. He served as associate director of the Harriman Institute at Columbia University in 1992-1998 and of the Division of Global Affairs at Rutgers in 1999-2009; he has taught at Harvard\, Lehigh\, and Kyiv Mohyla Universities and lectured throughout Europe. Trained as a Sovietologist and East Europeanist\, he has expanded his research interests to Western and Central Europe\, especially with respect to the historical development of nations and nationalism\, the rise and fall of empires\, and the causes and consequences of revolutions. He is a regular contributor to Foreign Policy and Foreign Affairs and is the author of seven academic books\, nine novels\, and two collections of poetry; also a painter\, Motyl has exhibited in solo and group shows in New York\, Philadelphia\, and Toronto. \nRegistration is required and can be completed here: https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_3U1ExGEeRHawXnjS4P_oPg
URL:https://shevchenko.org/event/motyl-2022/
LOCATION:Virtual
ORGANIZER;CN="Shevchenko%20Scientific%20Society":MAILTO:info@shevchenko.org
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220319T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220319T133000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115949
CREATED:20220315T143000Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220315T145428Z
UID:6242-1647691200-1647696600@shevchenko.org
SUMMARY:Book presentation | Margarita Balmaceda\, Russian Energy Chains: the Remaking of Technopolitics from Siberia to Ukraine to the European Union
DESCRIPTION:  \nEnergy entanglements and supply chains involving actors in Russia\, Ukraine\, and  the European Union are key for understanding the sources and directions of Russia’s war against Ukraine.  Following three energy molecules (a natural gas molecule\, an oil molecule. and a coal molecule) traveling from production jn Siberia to final use in Germany\, Margarita Balmaceda’s new book\, Russian Energy Chains: the Remaking of Technopolitics from Siberia to Ukraine to the European Union (Columbia U.P.\, 2021) analyzes these entanglements from the perspective of  the threat and temptation embodied in these chains. This presentation\, will highlight how different aspects of this triangular relationship as discussed in the book play a key role for understanding the current crisis – from the uniqueness of Russian domestic energy politics to the tensions in EU and German policy affecting their responses to Russia. Russian Energy Chains is available for purchase here. Use code CUP20 at checkout for 20% discount; chapter one of the book is also available at the above link. \n  \nRegistration is required and can be completed by following this link: https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_4bwXAqDtQTOAiID90UoS3A \n  \nParticipants \nMargarita M. Balmaceda (author) is Professor of Diplomacy and International Relations at Seton Hall University. Concurrently\, she is an Associate at the Harvard Ukrainian Research Institute (HURI)\, and heads the Study Group on “Energy materiality: Infrastructure\, Spatiality and Power” at the HWK Hanse Wissenschaftskolleg (Germany).  With support\, among others\, a Marie Skłodowska-Curie Fellowship from the European Commission\, a Woodrow Wilson Fellowship\, and three Fulbright Fellowships\, she has conducted extensive research in Ukraine\, Russia\, Belarus\, Lithuania\, Moldova\, Hungary\, Germany and Finland. Her education includes a Ph.D. in Politics from Princeton University\, Post-doctoral training at Harvard University\, and ongoing training on metallurgical technology through courses at the World Steel University. \n  \nCommentators: \nDr. Andrian Prokip is director of the energy program at the Ukrainian Institute of the Future Український інститут майбутнього (Kyiv) and Senior Associate at the Kenan Institute (Woodrow Wilson Center\, Washington DC)\, where he also was a Fulbright-Kennan Institute Research Scholar in 2015-2016 and is a frequent contributor to its publications series. \nMr. Oleh Savitsky  is a climate and energy policy expert at the Ukrainian Climate Network (UCN)\, board member of the NGO Ecoaction/ Екодія (Kyiv)\, and a former fellow of the Succow Foundation  (Greifswald\, Germany). His main focus is the coal industry\, decarbonisation of the power sector and heavy industry as well as reduction of air pollution. \nProf. Guido Hausmann is Head of the History Division at the  Leibniz Institute for East and Southeast European Studies (Leibniz-Institut für Ost- und Südosteuropaforschung – IOS) and Professor of History of Southeast and Eastern Europe\, University of Regensburg. Among other fellowships\, he was a HURI Visiting Fellow in 2003. \nProf. Steven Seegel\,  a historian of geography and cartography in Ukraine and its neighbors\, is Professor of Slavic and Eurasian Studies at The University of Texas at Austin\, the host on three channels at the New Books Network (NBN) podcast series\, and a former director of the Harvard Ukrainian Research Institute’s summer program (HUSI). \n 
URL:https://shevchenko.org/event/book-presentation-margarita-m-balmaceda-russian-energy-chains-the-remaking-of-teachnopolitics-from-siberia-to-ukraine-to-the-european-union-new-york-columbia-u-press-2021/
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220314T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220314T143000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115949
CREATED:20220305T032803Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220312T191232Z
UID:6122-1647262800-1647268200@shevchenko.org
SUMMARY:Women and Russia's War on Ukraine
DESCRIPTION:  \nThe roundtable will discuss women’s experiences of war and women’s activism in contemporary Ukraine. In addition\, panelists will examine ways in which the international community can alleviate human suffering in the war-torn country. \nOlga Boichak is a Lecturer in Digital Cultures at the Department of Media and Communications\, University of Sydney. She is a sociologist with expertise in computational social science\, and her research interests span networks\, narratives\, and cultures of activism in the digital age. Before joining the University of Sydney in 2019\, Olga was a visiting scholar at Ryerson University (Canada) and a research assistant at the Center for Computational and Data Sciences (Syracuse University\, USA)\, where she contributed to the development of tools and analytic techniques that support social listening\, bot detection\, information literacy\, and decision-making in complex scenarios. Prior to becoming an academic\, she managed political campaigns in Ukraine and ran the Centre for Public Opinion Research (2005-2015)\, as well as served as Ukraine’s youth delegate to the United Nations (2014). Her work has appeared\, among others\, in Big Data & Society\, International Journal of Communication\, Media\, War & Conflict\, Global Networks\, and the Oxford Handbook of Sociology and Digital Media.  \nChristina Olha Jarymowycz is a scholar with research interests in gender and agency\, transnational feminism\, gendered embodiment\, and postsocialism. She holds a doctorate in Sociology from Boston University and a master’s degree in Regional Studies – Russia\, Eastern Europe\, and Central Asia from Harvard University. Currently\, Dr. Jarymowycz is working as a researcher at Harvard Business School\, where she studies investors and companies that seek to generate social benefit alongside financial profit. \nTamara Martsenyuk is an Associate Professor at the Department of Sociology\, National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy (Ukraine) and the 2017-2018 Fulbright Scholar at the Harriman Institute\, Columbia University. Dr. Martsenyuk holds a Ph.D. (Candidate of Sciences) in Sociology. She is the author of over 100 articles\, book chapters\, and textbook chapters. For her outstanding contributions to research in social sciences\, Dr. Martsenyuk received the 2020 Petro Mohyla Prize annually awarded to distinguished faculty at the National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy. She is engaged in educational activism and conducts trainings for a wide target audience: journalists\, think tanks\, civil servants\, politicians\, civic activists\, and more. Dr. Martsenyuk embraces the idea of public sociology – science and research for the sake of social change and is therefore constantly involved in various research or teaching projects. Her research interests include gender and social structure\, among them women’s access to the military. In 2021 Dr. Martsenyuk (with the research team) conducted a research project\, titled “Invisible Battalion 3.0: Sexual Harassment in the Military.” \nOlena Nikolayenko is a Professor of Political Science at Fordham University. Originally from Ukraine\, she received her Ph.D. in political science from the University of Toronto and held visiting appointments at the Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies at Harvard University\, the Princeton Institute for International and Regional Studies at Princeton University\,  the Center on Democracy\, Development\, and the Rule of Law at Stanford University\, the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich (Germany)\, and the Department of Sociology at the National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy (Ukraine). Her research interests include comparative democratization\, contentious politics\, women’s activism\, and youth\, with a regional focus on Eastern Europe. Her recent book\, Youth Movements and Elections in Eastern Europe (Cambridge University Press 2017)\, examined tactical interactions between nonviolent youth movements and incumbent governments in Azerbaijan\, Belarus\, Georgia\, Serbia\, and Ukraine. Her current research focuses on women’s activism in Belarus and Ukraine. She currently serves as the chair of the communications committee at the Shevchenko Scientific Society in the United States. \nJessica Zychowicz is the Director of Fulbright Ukraine & IIE: Institute of International Education\, Kyiv Office. She recently published her monograph\, Superfluous Women: Art\, Feminism\, and Revolution in Twenty-First Century Ukraine (University of Toronto Press 2020). In 2017-2018 Dr. Zychowicz was a U.S. Fulbright Scholar to Kyiv-Mohyla Academy\, where she taught courses in visual sociology\, gender\, and conducted interviews and archival research toward her second book. She has authored numerous articles on gender\, human rights\, revolution and protest in postcommunism. She has also been a Research Fellow at the University of Toronto Munk School of Global Affairs (2015-2016); a Visiting Scholar at Uppsala University’s Institute for Russian and East European Studies in Sweden (Fall 2019); and a Visiting Scholar as the 2018-2021 Stasiuk Fellow of the University of Alberta in the Contemporary Ukraine Studies Program (CUSP). Dr. Zychowicz is a Board Member of the Association for Women in Slavic Studies (AWSS)\, an Advisory Board member of H-Net H-Ukraine\, and is a founding co-editor of the Forum for Race and Postcolonialism at Krytyka.com. She earned her doctorate at the University of Michigan and holds a degree in English literature from U.C. Berkeley. For more information: https://www.jes-zychowicz.com/. \nRegistration is required and can be completed by following this link:  https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_9IHAhOioRQiBfx5AF-M4pQ
URL:https://shevchenko.org/event/women-and-conflict/
LOCATION:Virtual
ORGANIZER;CN="Shevchenko%20Scientific%20Society":MAILTO:info@shevchenko.org
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