Fall 2010 - Miami University
Transcription
Fall 2010 - Miami University
The Havighurst Center for Russian & Post-Soviet Studies Fall 2010 Newsletter IN THIS ISSUE Director’s Letter................1 Upcoming Events ..............2 History of the Gulag...........3 Campus News...................7 Study Abroad...................11 Student Travels/Alumni...13 Grants & Awards.............17 Fall & Spring Classes.......18 Program Funding ...........19 Director’s Message 10 Years of the Havighurst Center The Havighurst Center for Russian and Post-Soviet Studies was established in 2000, the result of a generous bequest by Walter Havighurst (1901-1994), a longtime Miami University English professor and author, who was deeply committed to improving mutual understanding between the United States and the former Soviet Union. He drew up his will at a time of enormous expansion in US-Soviet relations, when for the first time in three generations, people from each side were able to visit the other’s country, people-to-people diplomacy was at its height, and the prospect for ending the long nightmare of the arms race seemed at hand. He established a legacy through the Havighurst Center which, 10 years later, we hope we have honored. The Center has been able to support the student experience through extensive co-curricular programming; many of our activities have been designed as adjuncts to new or existing courses. We hold a bi-annual Colloquia Series and an annual International Young Researchers’ conference, many of which have resulted in subsequent publications. The Center also has aimed at providing information to the broader community in Oxford and beyond. Our culture festivals, film series, and large public lectures by prominent politicians and public intellectuals have always attracted a wide audience. The number of Russia-related courses has increased as a result of additional tenuretrack hires in Anthropology (Dr. Neringa Klumbyte), Comparative Religion (Dr. Scott Kenworthy), History (Dr. Steve Norris and Dr. Dan Prior), International Studies (Dr. Gulnaz Sharafutdinova, who is jointly hired with Political Science), and Political Science (Dr. Venelin Ganev), which strengthened a pre-existing curriculum in Russian language and literature, history and political science. These hires, combined with a widening circle of faculty associates of the Center, have led to the development of fifty-two new courses and a new major in Russian, East European and Eurasian Studies. Graduates of the program have gone on to prestigious graduate schools, non-profits, and work in the U.S. governement; we are justly proud of them and of our own work. Faculty and students have established wide contacts through successive trips to Russia, Eastern Europe and Eurasia, as an extension of Walter Havighurst’s vision. The Havighurst Center has provided scholarships for these trips that introduce this area of eleven time zones and hundreds of languages and cultures, trips which are critical to making students aware of the vastness of the area, the complexity of its history, and the challenges Americans face in seeking to understand it. In keeping with these broad objectives, this year the Center will examine two broad subjects in depth: the gulag in history and memory, with a series of lectures and an international conference, all organized around a senior and graduate student seminar course taught by Prof. Steve Norris; and in the spring, a semester-long study of the history, culture, religion and politics of contemporary Ukraine, taught by Prof. Scott Kenworthy. This study will culminate in a summer student trip to the region. -Karen Dawisha Walter E. Havighurst Professor & Director Havighurst Center UPCOMING EVENTS September 20-November 15 Havighurst Colloquia Series: The Gulag in History and Memory see page 4 for schedule September 30 Landscapes of Tourism: Silk Road, Xinjiang and Tibet As part of the Brill Fall Open-House, Dr. Stan Toops (Geography/International Studies) will speak about tourism along the Silk Road. 3:00pm, Brill Science Library October 28-30 The 10th Annual Young Researchers Conference: The Gulag in History and Memory see page 5 for schedule November 2 “Everything is Illuminated:” The Importance of Literature in Everyday Life Jonathan Safran Foer, author and activist Foer is a well known and respected author, activist, and professor. His first and bestselling book, “Everything is Illuminated,” is about his journey into the culture of postSoviet Ukraine where he tried to find the woman who saved his family during WWII. Time/Location TBA (check website for updated information) co-sponsored with Association of Jewish Students, College Democrats & Green Oxford November 30 Music and Totalitarianism Miami University Symphony Orchestra 7:30pm, Millett Hall November 30 Annual Havighurst Center Open House 5:00-7:00pm, Harrison Hall 116 December 6 Lecture and Literary Reading Serhiy Zhadan, author and activist Zhadan is the leading Ukrainian-language author from Kharkiv, Cincinnati’s sister city. He is a poet, novelist, essayist, rock musician, and political activist. In 2004, he was the head of the tent city on Kharkiv’s main square during the Orange Revolution. 4:00pm, Hall Auditorium, Green Room 2 The Gulag in History & Memory --Stephen Norris The Soviet Gulag was a massive system of forced labor camps. During its existence, some 18 million people passed through the prisons and camps of the Gulag. Under Stalin, prisoners became an important resource for the construction of many industries, including the nation’s railways and roads, mining operations, and the timber industry. It is estimated that more than 1.5 million died as a result of their imprisonment in the Gulag. Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, a Russian novelist, wrote frequently about his experience in the Russian Gulag system. He was exiled from the Soviet Union in 1974, returning only in 1994, following the collapse of communism. After the 1962 publication of Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn’s One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich, a novel about a day in the life of a gulag inmate, he began to receive letters from fellow camp survivors. Eventually these testimonies helped the writer compile his devastating portrait of the camp system, The Gulag Archipelago. Banned from publishing it in the Soviet Union, Solzhenitsyn smuggled his manuscript abroad. Just as One Day had ignited a firestorm within the USSR, Archipelago would do the same in the West when it appeared in 1973. A German newspaper would declare that the book left “a burning question mark over fifty years of Soviet power.” The book’s appearance in France led many French communists to quit the party. It became a bestseller in the United States. Stephen Cohen, who reviewed it for The New York Times in 1974, called it “a non-fictional account from and about the other great holocaust of our century.” In his introduction, Solzhenitsyn notes that the material for his “experiment in literary investigation” came from letters and reports written by 227 people. “But,” as he ominously writes, “the time has not yet come when I dare name them.” Solzhenitsyn, who had been harassed by authorities for his increasingly inflammatory writings, would be exiled from the Soviet Union after The Gulag Archipelago appeared. He would settle in Vermont and remain there until communism’s collapse. Solzhenitsyn declared that he wanted his book to tell the truth and to provide a voice for those who had been silenced. He did not want Russia to fulfill the proverb “dwell on the past and you’ll lose an eye, but forget the past and you’ll lose both eyes.” His hope was that The Gulag Archipelago would help further the process of healing what he called the “scars and sores of the past.” That healing has taken time. After One Day’s 1962 publication, Soviet citizens had to read about the Gulag surreptitiously. The Gulag Archipelago circulated in samizdat form, passed from person to person (typically readers were asked to pass it on within 24 hours, an unwritten rule that meant many experienced Solzhenitsyn’s revelations in one marathon reading). Andrei Sakharov and other dissidents issued a “Moscow Appeal” in February 1974, declaring that the book laid bare the “monstrous crimes committed in the recent past in the USSR.” The appeal called for the book to be published and for the regime to investigate its charges. Needless to say, the demands were not met. Then came Mikhail Gorbachev and his call for the blank spots of history to be filled in. Beginning in 1986, Soviet citizens could read formerly banned books, watch films that had sat on the shelves for years, and discuss taboo subjects. Solzhenitsyn’s monumental work became part of this process. It was published officially for the 3 - continued on pg 6 The Havighurst Center Colloquia Series THE GULAG IN HISTORY AND MEMORY HST 436/536, POL 440/540 Assoc. Professor Stephen Norris All lectures are in Harrison Hall 209, 12:20-2:00pm September 20 Jehanne Gheith, Duke University ‘Our Parents Weren’t Dissidents’: Multiple Legacies of the Gulag September 27 Cathy Frierson, University of New Hampshire Children of the Gulag Tell Their Histories: Can We Trust Oral Testimonies/Memories as Historical Evidence? November 1 Deborah Kaple, Princeton University Gulag Boss: A Soviet Memoir November 8 Serguei Oushakine, Princeton University Sites of Killing, Sites of Memory: Triangulating Stalinism in Belarus November 15 Scott Kenworthy, Miami University Russian Orthodox Clergy and Believers in the Gulag 4 The Havighurst Center’s 10th Annual Young Researchers Conference: The Gulag in History and Memory Thursday, October 28 Keynote Address Lynne Viola, University of Toronto, Collectivization and the Birth of the Gulag 5:00-6:30pm, Harrison Hall 111 Friday, October 29 All panel sessions will be held at the Miami Inn, A/B Room Panel 1 (8:45-11:00): New Stories Maria Galmarini, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, Defending the Rights of Gulag Prisoners: The Story of the Political Red Cross between 1918 and 1938 Oxana Ermolaeva (State University Higher School of Economics, Russia), Making a Career in the GULAG: Square Dance with the Devil or a Normal Feature of Soviet Life? Vsevolod Bashkuev (Russian Academy of Sciences, Russia), “Based Upon Deeply Rooted Hostile Views…”: Anti-Soviet Sentiments and Resistance among the Special Settlers in Buryat-Mongolia, 1940s-1950s Discussant: Deborah Kaple, Princeton University Student Poster Session 11:30-12:30, MacMillan Hall Great Room Keynote Address Steven Barnes, George Mason University Death and Redemption: The Gulag and the Shaping of Soviet Society 12:30-2:00, MacMillan Hall Great Room Panel 2 (3:00-5:00): Transforming Lives Julie Draskoczy (University of Pittsburgh), The Put’ of Perekovka: Transforming Lives at Stalin’s White-Baltic Sea Canal Wilson Bell (Dickinson College), Sex and Soviet Power in the Gulag in Siberia Discussant: Cynthia Ruder, University of Kentucky Saturday, October 30 Panel 3 (10:00-12:00): Reconsiderations Alan Barenberg (Texas Tech University), Resistance and the Everyday: Reconsidering the Vorkuta Prisoner Strike of 1953 Jeffrey Hardy (Princeton University), Gulag Tourism: Khrushchev’s “Show” Prisons in the Cold War Context, 1954-1959 Discussant: Michael Jakobson, University of Toledo Panel 4 (1:30-3:30): Memories Elza-Bair Guchinova (Russian Academy of Sciences, Russia), The Gulag Experience in the Reminiscences of Japanese Prisoners of War Josephine von Zitzewitz (Oxford University), The “Virtual Museum of the Gulag” Discussant: Stephen M. Norris, Miami University 5 (continued) The Gulag in History and Memory first time in 1989. The “return of the repressed,” as one historian described these revelations, contributed to communism’s collapse in 1991. Ironically, the end of the Soviet system meant that the work of memory Solzhenitsyn longed for would continue only haltingly. The decade of the 1990’s brought a severe economic depression. Most Russians simply did not have time for the past. The new century has brought with it new opportunities for healing history’s wounds. The relative stability of the Russian economy has helped to usher in a new interest in the past. President Putin visited Butovo in 2007, the site near Moscow where thousands were shot in the Stalinist purges, and declared that the site should commemorate the “hundreds of thousands, millions of people [who] were killed and sent to camps, shot and tortured.” President Medvedev has gone further, visiting Magadan and other former Gulag camps and calling them “a tragic page in our country’s history.” More importantly, documents and memoirs about and from the Gulag have appeared in Russian. Historians and other scholars have begun to research the camp system. Former camps have become memorial sites. Perm-36 is the largest, most extensive memorial site dedicated to the Gulag and its prisoners (http://www.perm36.ru/eng/). A Gulag Museum now exists in central Moscow and has state funding. The critical newspaper Novaya gazeta began publishing a special monthly supplement called “The Truth about the Gulag” in February 2008. In its first edition, the editors declared that it was time for Russians to get on with the work of memory because “we must grasp our recent past; only then will our country have a future.” Certainly not everything about this recent work has been rosy. Memorial, the human rights agency that got its start in the mid-1980s trying to put names to the numbers of Stalin’s victims, had its St. Petersburg offices raided in December 2008. Russian police confiscated twelve hard drives that contained information about the Gulag. Fortunately, a Russian court decided the raid violated legal procedures and the files were returned. Many scholars have found archives closed for no reason and research on the Gulag difficult at best. Writers in the Novaya gazeta series have lamented the absence of a prominent Gulag memorial in Moscow (a stone from the Solovki prison sits in Lubianka Square, across from the former KGB headquarters). The scars of the past rarely heal the way we would like them to. Many Russian politicians and Russian citizens still fear losing an eye if they look too hard into the past. Others, as the Novaya gazeta series indicates, do not want to go blind by ignoring it. Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, who died in 2008, began to participate in the reinvestigation of the Soviet past. In 2001, he published (in Russian) a collection of seven camp memoirs that had been sent to him. This time, the names of the authors appeared in print (Northwestern University Press published a translation called Voices of the Gulag earlier this year). Most significantly, The Gulag Archipelago is now required reading for Russian high school seniors. In its preface, Solzhenitsyn wrote: “And someday in the future, this Archipelago, its air, and the bones of its inhabitants, frozen in a lens of ice, will be discovered by our descendants like some improbable salamander.” This discovery, however fitfully, is certainly taking place. Stephen Norris is an associate professor in the Department of History. He is teaching this semester’s Havighurst Colloquia course, as well as organizing the Havighurst Center’s Young Researchers Conference, both on the subject of The Gulag in History & Memory. 6 CAMPUS NEWS Central Eurasian Studies Society CESS News by Prof. Daniel Prior, CESS Executive Director Now entering its fourth year of cooperation with the Havighurst Center, the Central Eurasian Studies Society (CESS) is working as hard as ever to serve the community of scholars of Central Eurasia around the world. The Secretariat, housed in Harrison Hall at Miami, says farewell this fall to graduate assistant Steve Hess, who is moving on to his doctoral research work. A recent institutional membership/fund-raising campaign has garnered pledges of multi-year contributions from federally-funded area studies centers all over the U.S. These centers, concentrating in Russian/East European, Middle East, East Asian, and other area studies, now officially join the Havighurst Center in recognition of the work CESS does to promote understanding of an important region that has often “fallen through the cracks” of academic regional definitions. CESS will hold its 11th Annual Conference on October 28-31 in East Lansing, Michigan, where the hosts of the event will be the Center for European, Russian and Eurasian Studies and the Asian Studies Center at Michigan State University. The program consists of nearly 50 panels and 300 presenters; a special Presidential Roundtable Panel on the recent unrest in Kyrgyzstan will be one of the highlights. Please join us! See http://cers.isp.msu.edu/. CESS’s 2nd Regional Conference was held July 29-30 in Ankara, Turkey at the Center for Black Sea and Central Asia (KORA) of Middle East Technical University (METU). The biennial Regional Conferences emphasize CESS’s mission of promoting the involvement of scholars from the Central Eurasian region. The program is available at https://www.cess.muohio.edu/regional_conf_10_program.html. The CESS Board is now making plans for institutional transition, which will bring the Secretariat to another university for its next four-year rotation. Details will be announced this fall. To join CESS or learn more about the organization, visit www.cess.muohio.edu, or contact the Secretariat ([email protected]). 7 CAMPUS NEWS Faculty Publications Costica Bradatan, former Havighurst Fellow (2004-6) In Marx’s Shadow: Knowledge, Power, and Intellectuals in Eastern Europe and Russia (Lexington Books, 2010) Bradatan, former Havighurst Fellow and now assistant professor at Texas Tech University, co-edited this volume with Serguei Oushakine (Princeton University). By drawing attention to unknown and unexplored areas, trends and ways of thinking under socialism, the volume examines Eastern Europe and Russian histories of intellectual movements inspired - negatively as well as positively - by Communist arguments and dogmas. Carl Dahlman, Associate Professor, Geography His latest book is Bosnia Remade: Ethnic Cleansing and Population Returns (Oxford, 2010; with Gearóid Ó Tuathail, Virginia Tech). An authoritative account of ethnic cleansing and its partial undoing in the Bosnian wars from 1990 to the present. The book presents a bird’s-eye view of the war from onset to aftermath, with a micro-level account of three towns that underwent ethnic cleansing and - later - the return of refugees. Scott Kenworthy, Associate Professor, Comparative Religion The Heart of Russia: The Trinity-St. Sergius Monastery under Tsars and Soviets (Oxford University Press and Washington, DC: Wilson Center Press, 2010). A book-length study of the role of monastic revivals in Russian Orthodoxy from the eighteenth to the end of the twentieth centuries. Gulnaz Sharafutdinova, Assistant Professor, Political Science Political Consequences of Crony Capitalism Inside Russia (Notre Dame University Press, January 2011). This book examines the coexistence of crony capitalism and traditionally democratic institutions such as political competition and elections in Russia after the collapse of communism. 8 CAMPUS NEWS Faculty News In addition to completing her forthcoming book, Gulnaz Sharafutdinova (POL) won the Ed A. Hewett Policy Fellowship (National Council for Eurasian and East European Research) for her project “Asymmetric Federalism and Property Rights in Russia.” The project targeted the issue of property rights by examining linkages between evolving federalism and the stability of property rights in post-communist Russia. She carried out her fieldwork in Russian regions in the summer of 2010 and focused specifically on the recent and ongoing conflicts between the regional and federal governments over regional economic assets. During his 2009-10 leave, Daniel Prior (HST) published two articles: Travels of Mount Qāf: From Legend to 42° 0´ N 79° 51´ E (Oriente Moderno, vol. 89, [2009], no. 2); and Sparks and Embers of the Kirghiz Epic Tradition (Fabula, vol. 51 [2010], no. 1/2), as well as an obituary for his mentor (“Arthur T. Hatto [1910-2010]”, in the same issue of Fabula). He also presented papers on his current research at the annual conference of the Central Eurasian Studies Society; at the Central Asia Seminar, Institute for Asian and African Studies, Humboldt University, Berlin; and at the Seminar for Arabic and Islamic Studies, Oriental Institute, Martin-Luther University, Halle. He also conducted research at the Library of Congress, in the Ethnologisches Museum and the collections of South and Central Asian art in the Museum für Asiatische Kunst in Berlin, and in the Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin; and he got fired up to teach World History touring Berlin’s Altes Museum, Neues Museum, and Pergamonmuseum, and visiting a Norman-era parish church in rural Hertfordshire, England. In February 2010, Miami’s board of trustees approved the following for tenure and promotion to ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR. The Havighurst Center extends its warmest congratulations to: Vitaly Chernetsky, German, Russian, & East Asian Languages Author of Mapping Postcommunist Cultures: Russia and Ukraine in the Context of Globalization (2007) Scott Kenworthy, Comparative Religion Author of The Heart of Russia: The Trinity-St. Sergius Monastery under Tsars and Soviets (forthcoming) Benjamin Sutcliffe, German, Russian, & East Asian Languages Author of The Prose of Life: Russian Women Writers from Khrushchev to Putin (2009) Zara Torlone, Classics Author of Russia and the Classics: Poetry’s Foreign Muse (2009) 9 CAMPUS NEWS Meet Our Newest Graduate Students Azra Husejnovich, Political Science Azra graduate in 2010 from Northern Kentucky University with a degree in Economics, minoring in Political Science and Math. Azra is originally from Sarajevo, Bosnia, lived six years in Berlin, Germany, and currently calls Kentucky home. She will be focusing on American Politics at Miami, with a hope of working for the federal government after her graduate studies. Azra is also working as the Havighurst Center’s graduate assistant. Maria Semykoz, Fulbright Scholar, Political Science Maria grew up in eastern Ukraine, in the city of Severodonetsk. She moved to Kyiv in 2005, just after the Orange Revolution, to study in the National University of “Kyiv-Mohyla Academy” and received her BA in political science in 2009. Maria then spent time at Tartu University in Estonia, studying the post-Communist transition experience of the East European countries. Before receiving her Fulbright, Maria worked as a researcher in a market and social research company in Kyiv, and later as an assistant to a member of the Ukrainian parliament. Her interest in political science stems from the intense political developments taking place in Ukraine during its post-Soviet transition–“it’s easy to get fascinated with the opportunities and challenges my country has been facing for the last decades.” She will focus on party systems in post-communist countries of Eastern Europe. Ekaterina Zabrovskaya, Fulbright Scholar, Political Science Ekaterina earned her undergraduate degree in Journalism from Lomonosov Moscow State University in 2007. From her subsequent professional experience in the Russian news and information agency “RIA NOVOSTI”, she realized that her goal was to become a foreign correspondent. She believes that broadening her outlook with postgraduate study abroad and majoring in political science will give her a theoretical and pragmatic background to augment her journalism training, and help her to become more objective. Ekaterina plans to focus on foreign relations, specifically between Russia and the United States. AND undergraduate student worker, Valeria Naymark, Accounting Valeria Naymark was born in Volgograd, Russia and spent most of her life studying in Russian schools. After graduating high school in Russia in 2007, she continued her studies in the US, recognizing the rankings of top American universities in the world arena. She was accepted to Cranbrook Kingswood High School in Bloomfield Hills, MI and year later she transferred to Stony Brook High School in NY, where she graduated with high honors. Miami University became her third “home” during her freshman year and that remains the case today. she is currently the President of the “Fashion For Charity” organization on campus. 10 STUDY ABROAD Intensive Summer Russian Language Program in Novgorod June 2 - July 5,2011 (6 credit hours; 4 graduate credit hours) The four-week program in Novgorod offers an extraordinary first-hand experience of Russian life. Students study at Novgorod State University and live in home stays with Russian families. Course work includes phonetics, grammar, conversation, writing, and reading about Russian culture and daily life. All the classes are taught by native specialists in Russian as a foreign language. Included are tours and excursions in the Novgorod area and longer tours to Moscow and St. Petersburg and their environs. For more information, contact the trip director: Irina Goncharenko-Rose, GREAL, at [email protected] For a workshop application, go to the Novogorod website at: http://www.units.muohio.edu/greal/study-abroad/novgorod/ For a Havighurst Center travel grant application, visit the Havighurst Center website at: www.muohio.edu/havighurstcenter/russianstudies/documents/TRAVELGrant.PDF Havighurst Summer Workshop in Ukraine July 4 - 26, 2011 HST/REL/POL/RUS 482/582 (6 credit hours) In Summer 2011, the Havighurst Center’s Summer Workshop will go to Ukraine. This three-week workshop will offer an intensive exploration of Ukraine’s complex multicultural makeup, rich history, and present-day challenges. You will visit three of Ukraine’s most famous cities: its capital, Kyiv; the main city of the country’s western region, L’viv; and the Black Sea port, Odessa. Each location will include tours of historical sites and contemporary cultural facilities, meetings with writers and filmmakers, guest lectures by prominent local scholars, and other exciting events. The workshop’s multicultural aspect will include a focus of not only Ukrainian, but also Jewish, Polish, Russian, Greek and other cultures present in the country. Knowledge of foreign languages is not mandatory. For more information, contact the trip director: Vitaly Chernetsky, GREAL, at [email protected] For a workshop application, visit the Havighurst Center website at: www.muohio.edu/havighurstcenter/russianstudies/documents/SAApplication.pdf For a Havighurst Center travel grant application, visit the Havighurst Center website at: www.muohio.edu/havighurstcenter/russianstudies/documents/TRAVELGrant.PDF 11 STUDY ABROAD Travel Grants for summer and semester programs The Havighurst Center for Russian & Post-Soviet Studies offers financial assistance to Miami University students participating in study abroad programs to Russia and other post-Soviet states. Miami University students planning to enroll in a study abroad program for the summer, semester, or full academic year are eligible to apply. Travel awards are based on the cost of the program, the student’s academic record, and/or financial need. Visit the Havighurst Center website for more information and an application. www.muohio.edu/havighurstcenter/russianstudies/documents/TRAVELGrant.PDF Russian and East European Universities Semester Programs Approved for Credit at Miami University Palacky University, Olomouc, Czech Republic Instruction is in English. Fall or spring semesters. (Exchange) Central European University, Budapest, Hungary The language of instruction at CEU is English. Fall semester, spring semester, or academic year. St Petersburg State Polytechnic University, St Petersburg, Russia Instruction is in English and Russian. Fall semester, spring semester, or academic year. For more information on these and other study abroad programs in Russia and Eastern Europe, contact the Office of International Education, 216 MacMillan Hall, [email protected]. 12 Student Travels & Alumni News Matthew Bradley graduated from Miami University in 2009 with a degree in History, minoring in Russian. He attended the European University in St. Petersburg in their International MA in Russian and Eurasian Studies (IMARES) program. For those interested in Russia and/or Central Asia, European University in St. Petersburg’s IMARES program is a great opportunity to study both places in depth. The program offers a new perspective on an area that is often overlooked. The fact is that Russia and Central Asia are very key to US foreign policy planning for Afghanistan. The US is investing millions of monetary resources as well as human resources in the region, and unfortunately things have not always gone according to plan, as the examples of Uzbekistan throwing the US out of its territory in 2005 and the recent coup in Kyrgyzstan illustrate. The IMARES program gives a student a real opportunity to dig into the region, and really expand one’s knowledge. The faculty is amazing; they are very approachable, friendly and knowledgeable above all. As the program is quite small, there are real opportunities to learn from these professors. The classes are very interesting too. For someone interested in going into a career in the security agencies, they offer classes on terrorism and extremism, and even a class on comparing certain organized criminal groups. For those interested in Islam, there are multiple classes on Central Asia and Islam in the region. St. Petersburg is also a great place to learn. It is a city of five million people, so it is big enough to really get the feeling like one is in a real city, but not as big as Moscow, where one can easily get overwhelmed. St. Petersburg is also close to the Scandinavian and Baltic Countries, so you can easily visit Finland, Sweden, Norway, Estonia, Latvia and/or Lithuania quite quickly. The city itself is full of beautiful buildings and is home to the professional sports clubs Zenit and SKA St.Petersburg. Of course, it goes without saying that the cultural scene in St. Petersburg is unparalleled. On top of the wonderful topics, teachers and location of this university, the IMARES program really gives the student a chance to broaden his/her learning perspective with the other students in the program. About half of them were from European countries when I attended, and it was a very eye-opening experience. Issues tend to be seen more globally, rather than just from an American perspective. As all the teachers are Russian, discussions in class could get rather lively. The program is taught in English, so those who do not speak Russian should not be intimidated. Overall, the program was a wonderful learning experience for me, and I would recommend it to any student with an interest in going abroad. If anyone has any specific questions about the IMARES program, feel free to email me at [email protected] or go to www.eu.spb.ru/ and look under their International Programs. 13 Student Travels & Alumni News Kunduz Rysbek Kyzy is a native of Kyrgyzstan and a junior at Miami majoring in political science. This summer she served as an intern for the Kyrgyz Embassy in Washington, DC. The three months I spent in Washington, DC interning at the Kyrgyz Embassy to the United States were more rewarding than I expected in my most audacious hopes. My position at the Embassy as an Assistant to the Head of Mission allowed me to work on a broad range of diplomatic and economic undertakings. I was fulfilled with endless enthusiasm while working with other diplomats on bringing more US-based international aid organizations to Kyrgyzstan, and successfully organizing the constitutional referendum for the Kyrgyz citizens living in the US and Canada. Most of the times I worked closely with the Head of Kunduz standing next to the Head of Mission (Charge D’Affaires) near Mission, reporting to him on panel discussions hosted the Kyrgyz flag by various Washington-based political think-tanks, and attending - together with members of Congress and Assistant Secretary Robert Blake - a hearing on Kyrgyzstan at the US Helsinki Commission. Because Washington, DC is an incredibly international city, where people from all around the globe are united by one common quality, namely ambition, it has a highly sophisticated and competitive labor market. Yet, meeting interesting, experienced, internationally well-exposed spirits living and working in DC, made me more eager to come back to this captivating US capital in the nearest future, as well as further motivated me to work hard and dream big at all times. Anna Montag is a senior at Miami, double majoring in Religion and Russian, East European and Eurasian Studies. She participated in the 2010 Havighurst Summer Workshop in Russia. I really enjoyed my experience with the Havighurst Center workshop. We spent three weeks in Russia: a week in Moscow, a week on a boat cruise of the Golden Ring of Russia and a week in Saint Petersburg. Not only did we get to see all of the highlights of Russia, like Red Square, the Hermitage museum, and other key sites, our group attended lectures and spent time in several churches, monasteries, and museums. The really unique aspect of the trip was the boat cruise. This was an excellent opportunity in which we were able to spend time with Russians as they vacationed. This portion of the trip was not only relaxing, but allowed us to see sights many regular tourists and even Russians themselves never get to see. The islands showcased everything from beautiful Russian wooden architecture, like on Kizhi, to the monasteries like on Vaalam Island. I learned so much about Russian culture and experienced some unique site-seeing as well. I highly recommend this trip for anyone who has an interest in Russian culture, because it offers a taste of everything Russian. 14 Student Travels & Alumni News Michelle Smith graduated from Miami University in 2006 with a B.A. in political science. In July 2010, alumna Michelle Smith joined the Atlantic Council as the assistant director of the Patriciu Eurasia Center. She will manage existing programs on Black Sea and Caspian energy, as well as develop new areas of practice on U.S. policy in Central Asia, regional economic integration, trade and development, and environmental and human security issues. In 2004 and 2005, Michelle participated in Havighurst Center summer workshops in Russia and worked at the Center. Michelle says the interest in Russia and Eurasia that she developed through the Havighurst Center--and the faculty with whom she worked and studied--inspired her to move to Washington, study U.S.-Russia relations at the postgraduate level, return to St. Petersburg for language study, and pursue a career in international policy. Prior to joining the Atlantic Council, Michelle was a research associate at the Council on Foreign Relations, where she focused on arms control, nonproliferation, and energy security issues. She interned at the Scowcroft Group and the Kennan Institute. In addition to her degree from Miami, Michelle received an MA in International Affairs from the George Washington University. Her writing has appeared in the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, Foreign Policy magazine, the International Herald Tribune, Oxford Analytica, and several publications of the Council on Foreign Relations. Russian, East European & Eurasian Studies Graduates A new major in Russian, East European and Eurasian Studies became available in Fall 2005. Here’s what some of the program’s graduates are doing now. If you graduated with a REEES degree, let us know what you’re up to and we’ll try to put it in our next newsletter. After graduating cum laude in 2009, with a degree in Interdisciplinary Studies/Russian, East European & Eurasian Studies, Sara Wenger joined the Peace Corp and is now teaching in Ukraine. Check out her blog at http://sara-wenger.blogspot.com/. Lindsey Hallock, a 2010 graduate in International Studies/ Russian, East European and Eurasian Studies, is now working in the Washington, DC office of Congressman Tom Graves, Georgia’s 9th District. Lindsey is studying for the Foreign Service Exam and investigating graduate school opportunities in International Studies. Lindsey was a student worker in the Havighurst Center from 20082010. 15 Library News Masha Misco, Slavic librarian for the Miami University Libraries, provided the following updates on some of Miami’s latest acquisitions. For information about Miami’s library holdings related to Russia, Eastern Europe and Eurasia, contact Masha at [email protected]. Pravda Digital Archive In May 2010, the Library added a very important online resource to the collection of Universal Databases. The newspaper Pravda has been the principal Russian newspaper since before the Soviet Union formed. It started in 1912 and became the official organ of the Bolshevik Central Committee in 1917. It reflected the Soviet perspective on all major events: the Russian Revolution, World War II, the Cold War, and the dissolution of the Soviet Union. Although in 1991, with the fall of the Soviet Union, Pravda officially closed down, it continued to support the oppositional stance of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation. Before its digitization, the only way to access the newspaper was through microfilm and fragile print copies. The Pravda Digital Archive now offers keyword search, browsing, and text recognition capabilities. You can access this impressive resource through the library catalog at http://www.lib.muohio.edu/. The Atlas of the Russian Empire King Library The Miami University Libraries are proud to announce the acquisition of a new facsimile of The Atlas of the Russian Empire, 1800, which has been widely considered a masterpiece of Russian cartography and has long been a bibliographical rarity. In 2008 Akteon Publishers created a facsimile hand-bound edition of this rare unique historical publication. The Atlas includes 44 maps of Russian provinces and a general map, printed on canvas. It is accompanied by a separate Index volume. 16 Funded Projects and Travel Grants Havighurst Center Program Grants 2009-2010 Havighurst Advisory Grants are awarded to faculty and student groups for programming related to Russian, East European, and/or Eurasian studies. The following were awarded program grants in during the last cycle of applications. Russian Club—for meetings, community dinners, newsletter $890 Travel Scholarships—for students studying abroad (see below) $15,560 Library Purchase Program—to add to the Library’s collection of materials on Russia, Eastern Europe and Eurasia $6,000 Sergio Sanabria (ARC)—The Wall—for supplies to build the “Berlin Wall” on the Slant Walk $8,000 Performing Arts Series- Concerts of Russian compositions $1,000 Peter Rose (CLS)—to host guest lecturer Boris Kagarlitsky $1,000 Vitaly Chernetsky (GREAL)—Ukrainian Speaker Series $2,550 Erik Jensen (HST)—to develop course on post-communist Berlin $732 Scott Kenworthy— to host guest lecturer Dr. Thomas Hopko, Dean Emeritus of St. Vladimir’s Theological Seminary $350 Music Department—Russian Music Recital—student organized performance of Russian works $400 TOTAL GRANTS AWARDED FOR 2009-2010 $44,022 Travel Grants The Havighurst Center offers student fellowships for Miami University undergraduate and graduate students participating in study abroad programs or individual research trips to Russia and other post-Soviet states. Recipients are selected for grants based on the cost of their programs, their academic records, and their financial need. The following students received awards in the last round of applications. Havighurst Russia Workshop Lance Cummings Jack Little Sam Richter Taylor White Kali Amos Susan Hewitt Anna Montag Cristina Rue Caroline Spiese Lindsey Hearon Zachary Davis Semester Study Sam Storey (Spring 2010) Susan Hewitt (Fall 2010) Brett Haskins (Fall 2010) Tim Boll (Full Year 2010-11) 17 Courses in Russian, East European & Eurasian Studies SPRING 2011 FALL 2010 GEO 307 Geography of Central Eastern Europe and Russia (Hamilton campus) Skryzhevska, Yelizaveta ATH 306 Peoples and Cultures of Russia & Eurasia Klumbyte, Neringa GEO 408/508 Geography of the Silk Road Toops, Stanley ATH 434 Anthropology of Democracy and Citizenship Klumbyte, Neringa GLG F108 Geology and Geopolitics: Silk Road Dilek, Yildirim ATH/HST/POL/REL/RUS 254 Introduction to Russian, East European, and Eurasian Studies Prior, Daniel HST 324 Eurasian Nomads & History Prior, Daniel HST 375 A History of the Soviet Union Norris, Stephen HST 374 Russian Empire Norris, Stephen HST 436/536/POL 440/540/REL 440/540 Havighurst Colloquia Series: Ukraine, Religion, Culture, Politics Kenworthy, Scott HST 436/536 POL 440/540 Havighurst Colloquia Series: The Gulag in History and Memory Norris, Stephen POL 332 Russian Politics Dawisha, Karen POL 331 Development of Russian Polity Ganev, Venelin POL 328 Central Asian Politics Sharafutdinova, Gulnaz POL 471 The International Systems: Gorbachev and the End of the Cold War Dawisha, Karen RUS 102 Beginners Russian Sutcliffe, Ben REL/RUS 133 Imagining Russia Kenworthy, Scott RUS 202 Intermediate Russian Chernetsky, Vitaly RUS 101 Beginners Russian Sutcliffe, Ben RUS 255 Russian Literature: From Pushkin to Dostoevsky in Translation Sutcliffe, Ben RUS 201 Intermediate Russian Chernetsky, Vitaly RUS 302 Advanced Russian II Ziolkowski, Margaret RUS 258 Contemporary Russian Women’s Writing Chernetsky, Vitaly RUS 450A Topics in Russian Culture Chernetsky, Vitaly RUS 301 Advanced Russian Ziolkowski, Margaret RUS 411 Advanced Conversation, Composition & Reading Sutcliffe, Benjamin 18 FUNDING OPPORTUNIHAVIGHURST CENTER GRANTS The Havigurst Center announces the next round of competition for grant assistance through the Havighurst Center Fund for projects/program to be undertaken in Spring and Summer 2011. The purpose of the Havighurst Fund is to provide full or partial support for projects undertaken by full-time faculty and staff from all Miami campuses in all fields that focus on Russia, Eastern Europe, and/or Eurasia. Initiatives that promote wider faculty and student awareness of the region and that seek to deepen Miami’s programmatic involvement in this area are preferred. Those who wish to be considered for funding for Spring and Summer 2011 should submit one original and 9 copies of their application no later than 5:00pm, Friday, November 1, 2010, to the Havighurst Center, 116 Harrison Hall, Miami University, Oxford, OH 45056. Another round of competition will be held in Spring 2011 to consider projects to be undertaken the following Fall. Proposals will be reviewed by the Havighurst Advisory Committee, comprised of faculty peers who will submit their recommendations to the Provost for approval. All applicants are encouraged to contact Karen Dawisha, Director of the Havighurst Center, to discuss their proposals before submitting them. [email protected]. The Havighurst Center can add you to its listserv for information about internships and job openings. Contact the Havighurst Center at [email protected] The Havighurst Center for Russian & Post-Soviet Studies Miami University 116 Harrison Hall Oxford, Ohio 45056 Karen Dawisha, Director Lynn Stevens, Program Coordinator