CfP: Narratives of Precarious Migrancy in the Global South

In recent years a small number of studies have sought to realign postcolonial studies with the material realities of disenfranchised, often illegalized modes of migration to the Global North. In his Postcolonial Asylum, David Farrier declared the figure of the asylum seeker a ‘scandal for postcolonial studies’ (1). A scandal first because asylum seekers expose a blindspot in the field, which has tended to understand mobility and displacement as empowering and has paid little heed to the material experience of migration for the politically, socially and economically dispossessed.

CfP: Transnational and Transatlantic Fascism in East Central and Southeastern Europe, 1918–2018: Creations, Agencies, and Afterlives of Hybrid Movements

Fascism first appeared in East Central and Southeastern Europe in the early 1920s. Organizations and individuals in this part of the continent were influenced by Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany but also developed their own indigenous forms of fascism in the 1920s, 1930s, and 1940s. Due to the heterogenous nature of East Central Europe, fascism took various forms in the territories that prior to 1918 had belonged to the Habsburg, German, Russian and Ottoman Empires. As a result, East Central Europe became a mosaic of fascist parties, organizations, and movements.

L'histoire du travail en podcasts et en vidéos - AFHMT

Depuis janvier 2021, l’AFHMT répertorie sur son site internet des ressources audio (podcasts) et visuelles (documentaires, colloques et journées d’études filmés, etc…) portant sur diverses thématiques relatives à l’histoire du travail.

 

L'histoire du travail en vidéos : https://afhmt.hypotheses.org/3833

L'histoire du travail en podcasts : https://afhmt.hypotheses.org/3796