Leszek Kołakowski Lecture: Central European philosophy and the search for truth in dark times
Leszek Kołakowski Lecture: Central European philosophy and the search for truth in dark times
The 2019 Leszek Kołakowski Lecture
Marci Shore is associate professor of history at Yale University. Her research focuses on European intellectual history, in particularly twentieth and twenty-first century Central and Eastern Europe. She received her M.A. from the University of Toronto in 1996 and her PhD from Stanford University in 2001; and since 2004 has regularly been a visiting fellow at the Institut für die Wissenschaften vom Menschen in Vienna. She is the translator of Michał Głowiński's The Black Seasons and the author of Caviar and Ashes: A Warsaw Generation's Life and Death in Marxism, 1918-1968, The Taste of Ashes: The Afterlife of Totalitarianism in Eastern Europe, and The Ukrainian Night: An Intimate History of Revolution. In 2018 she received a Guggenheim Fellowship for her current project titled “Phenomenological Encounters: Scenes from Central Europe.” Her articles and essays include “(The End of) Communism as a Generational History” (Contemporary European History); “‘If we’re proud of Freud. . .: The Family Romance of Judeo-Communism” (East European Politics and Societies); “Conversing with Ghosts: Jedwabne, Żydokomuna, and Totalitarianism” (Kritika: Explorations of Russian and Eurasian History); “Children of the Revolution: Communism, Zionism, and the Berman Brothers” (Jewish Social Studies); “Czysto Babski: A Women’s Friendship in a Man’s Revolution” (East European Politics and Societies); “In Search of Meaning after Marxism: The Komandosi, March 1968, and the Ideas that Followed” (Warsaw: The History of a Jewish Metropolis); “At the Border of Memory and Truth” (New York Review of Books); “Tevye’s Daughters: Jews and European Modernity” (Contemporary European History); “The Sacred and the Myth: Havel’s Greengrocer, Twenty Years Later” (East European Politics and Society); “Surreal Love in Prague” (TLS); “Out of the Desert: A Heidegger for Poland” (TLS); “Rescuing the Yiddish Ukraine (New York Review of Books); “Can We See Ideas? On Evocation, Experience, and Empathy” (Modern European Intellectual History); “Reading Tony Judt in Wartime Ukraine” (The New Yorker); “The Bard of Eastern Ukraine, Where Things are Falling Apart.” (The New Yorker); “Die Zerbrechlichkeit des Liberalismus oder Das Ende vom ‘Ende der Geschichte’” (Transit: Europäische Revue), “A Pre-History of Post-Truth, East and West” (Eurozine and Public Seminar); “The Poet Laureate of Hybrid War” (Foreign Policy); and “Poland Digs a Memory Hole” (New York Times).
Please email: european.studies@sant.ox.ac.uk in order to register to attend in advance.