BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
PRODID:-//SISSCO - ECPv6.16.2//NONSGML v1.0//EN
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
METHOD:PUBLISH
X-WR-CALNAME:SISSCO
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://www.sissco.it
X-WR-CALDESC:Eventi per SISSCO
REFRESH-INTERVAL;VALUE=DURATION:PT1H
X-Robots-Tag:noindex
X-PUBLISHED-TTL:PT1H
BEGIN:VTIMEZONE
TZID:Europe/Rome
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:+0100
TZOFFSETTO:+0200
TZNAME:CEST
DTSTART:20170326T010000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:+0200
TZOFFSETTO:+0100
TZNAME:CET
DTSTART:20171029T010000
END:STANDARD
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:+0100
TZOFFSETTO:+0200
TZNAME:CEST
DTSTART:20180325T010000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:+0200
TZOFFSETTO:+0100
TZNAME:CET
DTSTART:20181028T010000
END:STANDARD
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:+0100
TZOFFSETTO:+0200
TZNAME:CEST
DTSTART:20190331T010000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:+0200
TZOFFSETTO:+0100
TZNAME:CET
DTSTART:20191027T010000
END:STANDARD
END:VTIMEZONE
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20181115T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20181115T160000
DTSTAMP:20260518T230500
CREATED:20181107T141713Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20181107T141713Z
UID:10000621-1542297600-1542297600@www.sissco.it
SUMMARY:Managing Maladjustment in the Modern World. Perspectives from Southeastern Europe
DESCRIPTION:Managing Maladjustment in the Modern World. Perspectives from Southeastern Europe\nUniversity of Rijeka\, 15-16 November 2018\nOrganized by Heike Karge (University of Regensburg)\, Vanni D’Alessio (University of Naples and Center for Advances Studies at University of Rijeka) and Filip Čeč (University of Rijeka) \nFinanced by BAYHOST (Bavarian Academic Center for Central\, Eastern and Southeastern Europe) and Faculty of Philosophy\, University of Rijeka\nThe workshop aims at exploring and strengthening interdisciplinary approaches from the cultural history of psychiatry. This is still a largely uncharted territory for the understanding of the history of Central and Southeastern Europe\, but in recent years\, a number of studies have begun to explore the history of the area in terms of psychiatric and forensic history. The purpose of this workshop is primarily to bring together scholars dealing with the history of Southeastern Europe and the former Habsburg region through the lens of the cultural history of psychiatry. It furthermore aims to build up a scientific and interdisciplinary network of human and social scientists working on these topics in the above-mentioned region in order to explore options of research projects\, workshops and conferences\, and publications.\nThe workshop that is going to take place on November 15th and 16th\, 2018\, will discuss how norm-deviant behavior or “maladjustment” was pathologized and criminalized in increasingly modern-minded societies of the 20th century. We will discuss which factors (be they social\, sexual\, political\, biological\, etc.) were relevant for the perception of normal / abnormal or adjusted/maladjusted behavior\, and by what means and arguments such behavior was pathologized or criminalized in different times and environments.\nOn their return from their professional training at Western and central European universities\, psychiatrists from the north-eastern Adriatic to the southern Balkans were confronted with patients of mainly peasant origins. Indeed\, in some areas of Southeastern Europe\, until about 1945\, the peasant proportion among patients was up to 75%. Our understanding is that the strong agrarian character of the society in Yugoslavia and in other areas of Southeastern Europe until the mid-20th century had a significant influence on the development of psychiatric thinking in this space. The way social reality was constructed by these psychiatrists was thus not only shaped by their education at Western and Central European universities\, but significantly also by the psychiatrists’ interpretations of what they perceived as an anti-modern peasant-patients’ world. We therefore imply that due to the strong agrarian character of the patients and of the region as a whole\, the development of psychiatric knowledge (for instance about “maladjustment”) in the modernizing Southeastern Europe bears certain specific features. The idea is to explore “maladjustment” through the lens of psychiatric thinking and practice starting from these assumptions and this framework. Hence\, we wish to focus on the transfer of professional psychiatric knowledge\, on the social values and norms implied therein\, and on the adaptation of this knowledge and norms in predominantly rural Central and Southeastern European areas.\nAs for the time periods and geography\, the contributors to the workshop will span their attention to a number of cases\, ranging from the late-Habsburg southeastern peripheries of the Austrian coastal land\, Carniola\, Croatia-Slavonia and Vojvodina\, to the interwar Yugoslavia and its bordering area\, to the socialist Yugoslavia and beyond.\nThe participants of the two-day workshop “Managing Maladjustment in the Modern World: Perspectives from Southeastern Europe” will contribute to a discussion of the questions formulated above with the following paper presentations:\nProgramme\n November 15th\, 2018\, FFRI\, room 470\, h. 16.00\n Heike Karge\, Vanni D’Alessio\, Filip Čeč\, Opening words \nIntroduction into the idea and aims of the workshop\n Vanni D’Alessio (PhD\, historian\, University of Naples)\, Filip Čeč (PhD\, philosopher\, University of Rijeka): “Habsburg imperial legacies in psychiatric thinking and practice of the early 20th century in the Northeastern Adriatic”\nHeike Karge (PhD\, historian\, University of Regensburg): “Maladjustment and modernity: The case of Yugoslavia. Theses”\n 19.30 Dinner\, Konoba Feral (City Center)\n November 16th\, 2018\, FFRI\, room 402\, 9.am\n Ana Antić (PhD\, historian\, University of Exeter): “Curing ‘primitive’ patients in Yugoslavia – The concept of ‘primitivism’ in Yugoslav psychiatry before and during socialism”\n Franko Dota (PhD\, historian\, University of Rijeka): “‘Born This Way'”: Male Homosexuality in Yugoslav Forensic and Clinical Psychiatry”\n Luca Malatesti (PhD\, philosopher\, University of Rijeka): “Philosophy of psychiatry and history: the case of antisocial disorders”\n Filip Čeč (PhD\, philosopher\, University of Rijeka): “Punishing the maladjusted: the justification of psychiatric seclusion at the turn of the century”\n  Vinko Drača (PhD student\, historian\, University of Zagreb): “Clockwork machines and fairy possession: Persecutory world of paranoid patients in the Stenjevac insane asylum”\n Jelena Seferović (PhD\, anthropologist\, University Ljubljana): “The emergence and development of the Neuropsychiatric hospital dr. Ivan Barbot Popovača in interwar Yugoslavia”\n 16.00 Final Round-up\n 19.00 Dinner\, Restaurant Nebulosa\, (City Center)
URL:https://www.sissco.it/calendario/managing-maladjustment-in-the-modern-world-perspectives-from-southeastern-europe-2/
LOCATION:University of Rijeka\, Faculty of Philosophy\, Kampus Trsat\, Sveucilisna avenija 4\, Fiume - Rijeka\, 51000\, Croazia (Nome Locale: Hrvatska)
CATEGORIES:Workshop
ORGANIZER;CN="Vanni D'Alessio%2C Heike Karge%2C Filip %C4%8Ce%C4%8D":MAILTO:gidaless@unina.it
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20181119T091500
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20181119T120000
DTSTAMP:20260518T230500
CREATED:20181115T102053Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20181115T102243Z
UID:10000635-1542618900-1542628800@www.sissco.it
SUMMARY:Un'introduzione a Omeka e Dublin Core
DESCRIPTION:Workshop di digital public history a cura di Federico Mazzini
URL:https://www.sissco.it/calendario/unintroduzione-a-omeka-e-dublin-core/
LOCATION:Dipartimento di Storia Culture Civiltà – Università di Bologna\, Piazza San Giovanni in Monte\, Bologna\, Italia
CATEGORIES:Workshop
ORGANIZER;CN="Centro Interuniversitario di Storia Culturale (CSC)":MAILTO:centro.storiaculturale@unipd.it 
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20181119T123000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20181119T235900
DTSTAMP:20260518T230500
CREATED:20181107T152347Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20181107T152347Z
UID:10000624-1542630600-1542671940@www.sissco.it
SUMMARY:World War II in the Mediterranean: A Global Perspective
DESCRIPTION:Workshop Programme\nNovember 19\, 2018\nBRAU\, Sala del Refettorio\, Piazza Bellini 60\, Napoli\n 12.40-13.00   Marco Maria Aterrano\, University of Padua     \nIntroductory remarks\n13.00-14.00 Andrew Buchanan\, University of Vermont\nThe Liliputian Bathtub: the Mediterranean in its Global Dimension during World War II\n14.00-15.00   Lunch\n15.00-15.45 Richard Hammond\, King’s College London\nThe Sea\, Shipping\, and British Wartime Strategy: Mediterranean Opportunities versus Global Vulnerabilities\n15.45-16.30   Pablo Del Hierro\, Maastricht University\nA Global Metropolis: Tangiers during the Second World War\n16.30-16.45 Coffee Break\n16.45-18.00 Roundtable with Daniela Luigia Caglioti\, Gabriella Gribaudi\, Teodoro Tagliaferri (University of Naples “Federico II”)\nThe Mediterranean theatre of the Second World War has often been considered\, by both the early historiography and the protagonists of the events\, a “backwater war”. A marginal battle in the grand scheme of the fight for the ultimate victory\, entirely dependent on the great efforts made on the eastern front\, in northern Europe\, and in the territories and waters of the Asia-Pacific. However\, over the last twenty years\, a group of historians have not only tried to reconsider the relative role of the region in the overall development of the conflict between the Allies forces and the Axis\, but to trace the origins of major aspects of the conflict precisely back to the Mediterranean tensions that arose between the European powers in the interwar years. The role played by the Italo-Anglo-French rivalry in creating the conditions necessary for the outbreak of war in the region and transforming it into a vital crossroads has now been the subject of substantial research\, but the complexity of the Mediterranean strategic landscape and its importance within the framework of European and global scenarios deserve further understanding. In particular\, this event intends to incorporate multinational perspectives\, including American\, British\, French\, German\, Italian\, Japanese and Spanish.\nAccording to recent calculations\, in fact\, for 42 months in a row the Mediterranean was the theater that attracted more resources in terms of both means and men among those available to the Western Allies\, contributing decisively to the total victory\, and to the positioning of the forces that would then determine the balances and realities of postwar Europe.\nThe global network of war theatres posed major challenges to military planners and political leaders alike\, as threats originated from more than one single theatre at a time and the means were not sufficiently rich to counter them all. The allocation of sizable defence resources to the North African campaign\, for instance\, had an impact on the British loss of Malaya and Singapore\, and the commitment of divisions and ships into the Mediterranean significantly delayed the landings in Northern Europe.\nThis conference intends to reflect on the state of the field\, combining the work of prominent scholars with that of younger researchers. It seeks to adopt a fully global approach that can take advantage of diplomatic\, military\, institutional and social perspectives in order to form an updated image of the Mediterranean during the conflict in all its central aspects in light of the new studies. It will consider the relationship between the Mediterranean and the eastern front\, northwest Europe and the campaign in the Pacific. The internal debate within the two alliances on the role the region had to play in the overall development of the war\, and the plans and imposition of the postwar order in the region also merits further assessment. Finally\, the role played by occupied countries\, civilian populations\, collaborationist regimes and insurgent movements in the area remain very important themes that offer prospects for deepened understanding and groundbreaking discovery.
URL:https://www.sissco.it/calendario/world-war-ii-in-the-mediterranean-a-global-perspective/
LOCATION:BRAU – Sala del Refettorio\, Piazza Bellini 60\, Napoli\, 80100\, Italia
CATEGORIES:Workshop
ORGANIZER;CN="Marco Maria Aterrano":MAILTO:marco.aterrano@gmail.com
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20181130T140000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20181201T235900
DTSTAMP:20260518T230500
CREATED:20181112T122253Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20181112T122253Z
UID:10001881-1543586400-1543708740@www.sissco.it
SUMMARY:1869 and Beyond. Political and Institutional Crises between the 19th and the 20th Centuries
DESCRIPTION:workshop internazionale
URL:https://www.sissco.it/calendario/1869-and-beyond-political-and-institutional-crises-between-the-19th-and-the-20th-centuries/
LOCATION:Milano\, Università Cattolica\, Via Carducci 28-30\, aule C015 (30 novembre) e C012 (1 dicembre)\, Via Carducci 28/30\, Milano\, 20123\, Italia
CATEGORIES:Workshop
ORGANIZER;CN="Arianna Arisi Rota":MAILTO:arisi@unipv.it
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR