Schedule: Sessions and Panels
Monday, May 6, 2019, John F. Kennedy Institute, Berlin
13.00 Arrival and Registration
14.00 Welcome and Introduction (R. 340)
14.30-16.30 First Session
Panel 1: Humanity: Interdisciplinary Conceptual Approaches (R. 340)Chair: Ulla Haselstein (Freie Universität Berlin)
Benjamin Wilck (Humboldt Universität Berlin): Feet, Feathers, and Toes: Aristotle on the Essence of the Human
Christos Marneros (University of Kent): Human Rights After Deleuze: Towards a Jurisprudence of a Becoming-Human
Suzy Killmister (Monash University): The Human in Human Rights
16.30-17.00 Tea Break
17.00-19.00 Second Session
Panel 2: Towards New Visions of Humanity since the 17th Century (R. 201)Chair: Birte Wege (Freie Universität Berlin)
Adam Hjorthén (Freie Universität Berlin): A Humanitarian Legacy? Settler Colonial History, International Relations, and the Impact of Swedish Exceptionalism in the Delaware Valley
Catherine Arnold (University of Memphis): Affairs of Humanity: Arguing for Humanitarian Intervention in Britain and Europe
Barbara Lambauer (SIRICE, Paris): Jewish Philanthropy and Refugee Crisis in Eastern Europe, 1881-1914
Panel 3: Transnational Perspectives on Empire and Humanity (R. 203)Chair: Claudia Jarzebowski (Freie Universität Berlin)
Jessica Gienow-Hecht (Freie Universität Berlin): Gender, Empire and Humanity in 1898
Sönke Kunkel (Freie Universität Berlin): Empires and Humanity: Transnational Humanitarianism and the Earthquake of Messina (1908)
Panel 4: Humanity and Internationalism during and after World War One (R. 340)Chair: Sebastian Jobs (Freie Universität Berlin)
Andrew Johnston (Carleton University): Human Rights, the Great War, and the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom’s Critique of Nationalism
Ilaria Scaglia (Aston University): ‘Humanity’ and ‘the Humanities’ as ‘Emotional Communities’ at the International University Sanatorium of Leysin
Benjamin Martin (Uppsala Universitet): Cultural Diplomacy against Humanity: The Geopolitical Visions of Interwar Cultural Treaties
19.00-20.00 Dinner at the John F. Kennedy Institute
20.00 Keynote (R. 340)
Chair: Jessica Gienow Hecht (Freie Universität Berlin)
Siep Stuurman (Universiteit Utrecht): Paradoxes of Equality and Common Humanity: From the Enlightenment to the Present Time
Tuesday, May 7, 2019, John F. Kennedy Institute, Berlin
9.00-11.00 Third Session
Panel 5: Cultural Humanity: Art and Museums in China since the 1900s (R. 201)Chair: Nixi Cura (SOAS, University of London)
K. Ian Shin (University of Michigan): "The greatest of all record of human society": US Collectors, Chinese Art Preservation, and the Troubling Roots of Cultural Humanitarianism, 1900-1920
Yanqiu Zheng (Misericordia University): A Tenuous Beginning: The National Palace Museum and Chinese Cultural Diplomacy, 1933-39
Panel 6: Humanity in Times of War: World War II and After (R. 319)Chair: Sönke Kunkel (Freie Universität Berlin)
Catherine E. Rymph (University of Missouri): Child Evacuation: American Responses to Imperiled Children during the Second World War
Linh Vu (Arizona State University): Sovereignty of Corporeal Remains: World War II Military Graves in the China-India-Burma Theatre
Panel 7: Bones, Bricks and Humanity (R. 340)Chair: Anne Nassauer (Freie Universität Berlin)
Michael L. Krenn (Appalachian State University): Hearts, Minds, and Skulls: The International Debate on the Nature of Humanity in the Mid-Nineteenth Century
Andrew W. Bell (Boston University): American Archaeology, Pan-American Visions, and the Rise and Fall of “Our Oldest Civilization,” 1915-1940
Sarah Epping (Freie Universität Berlin): From Ancient Mesopotamia to 19th Century USA: An Axclusionary Vision of Humanity through Archaeological Excavations in Nippur, Iraq
11.00-11.30 Tea Break
11.30-13.30 Fourth Session
Panel 8: Humanity and Visual Media (R. 319)Chair: Frank Kelleter (Freie Universität Berlin)
Valérie Gorin (University of Geneva): Child Icons in International News: Shaping a Common Visual Culture of(in) Humanity
Suzanne Langlois (York University): The UN and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948-1949): Visual strategies for a Common Humanity
Panel 9: Humanity and Religion after 1945 (R. 201)Chair: Arnd Bauerkämper (Freie Universität Berlin)
Bastiaan Bouwman (London School of Economics and Political Science): Universal Rights in a Divided World: The Human Rights Engagement of the World Council of Churches from the 1940s to the 1970s
David Brydan (King´s College London): ‘Supernatural, Supranational and World-Embracing’: Catholic Internationalism and Christian Visions of Humanity after 1945
Betsy Konefal (William & Mary): Liberation Theology and Visions of Revolutionary Justice in 1960s Guatemala
Panel 10: Humanity on Stage: Music, Ballets, and Human Rights after 1945 (R. 340)Chair: Esteban Buch (EHSS Paris)
Stéphanie Gonçalves (Université libre de Bruxelles): Choreographing Humanity. Maurice Béjart in the 1960’s
Anaïs Fléchet (University of Versailles Saint-Quentin-en Yvelines): Towards a New Musical Humanism: Yehudi Menuhin and the International Music Council of the UNESCO (1969-1975)
Panagiota Anagnostou (University of Strasbourg): Music, Politics and International Mobilization: The Case of Mikis Theodorakis
Igor Contreras Zubillaga (University of Huddlersfield): “La noche más larga”: Music against Capital Punishment in Late-Francoist Spain
13.45-15.00 Lunch Panel
Panel 11: Culture and International History, Twenty Years After: A Retrospective (R. 340)Chair: Jessica Gienow-Hecht (Freie Universität Berlin)
David Ellwood (John Hopkins University, SAIS Europe)
Richard Pells (University of Texas)
Rob Kroes (University of Amsterdam)
15.00-18.00 Excursion
19.00 Dinner
Wednesday, May 8, 2019, John F. Kennedy Institute, Berlin
9.00-11.00 Fifth Session
Panel 12: International Organizations and Humanity (R. 201)Chair: Lora Viola (Freie Universität Berlin)
Jonathan Voges (Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Universität Hannover): The “Formation of the Modern Man:” The League of Nations’ Organization for Intellectual Cooperation and the Search for a “New Humanism”
Lukas Schemper (Sciences Po): Protecting Humanity from Disaster: An Entangled History of Thought, Laws, and Institutions
Paul van Trigt (Leiden University): Including Disabled Persons in Humanity: A Genealogy of Disability as a Human Rights Issue
Panel 13: Indigenous Movements and Human Rights (R. 203)Chair: David Bosold (Freie Universität Berlin)
Cathleen Clark(University of Toronto): “No Single Strategy will Save the Indian People”: Using International Forums for International Indigenous Rights Action
Bettina Koschade (Concordia University Canada): Decolonizing Housing in Québec’s North: Inuit Homes, Settler Colonialism, and the UN’s Right to Adequate Housing
Panel 14: Humanity and Human Rights in the 1970s and 1980s (R. 340)Chair: Laura Belmonte (Oklahoma State University)
William Michael Schmidli (Leiden University): “Rockin’ to Free the World?” Amnesty International’s Benefit Concert Tours, 1986-88
Daniel Manulak (University of Western Ontario): A Movement of Movements: Canada, South African Apartheid, and the Struggle for Global Racial Equality, 1984-1990
Nicholas Cull(University of Southern California): Humanity Against Apartheid: Networked Humanitarian Cultural Diplomacy and the Liberation of South Africa 1970-1990
Panel 15: Visions of Humanity since the 1990s (R. 319)Chair: Martin Lüthe (Freie Universität Berlin)
Katrin Antweiler (Justus-Liebig-Universität Giessen): Constructing a Global Citizen through Memory? Contemporary Transnational Memory Politics in the Light of Human Rights Education
Sonya de Laat(Mc Master University): Images of Refugees: The Role of Canada’s International Development Photography Library in Exposing and Concealing Humanity, 1987-2013
11.00-11.30 Tea Break
11.30-13.00 Concluding Panel: All Chairs Reporting from their Panels
Chair: Sebastian Jobs (Freie Universität Berlin)