American University of Central Asia - AUCA - AUCA News

Results: 526

4
Dec
2017
CASI Literature Week: “Russophone Literature: Transnational Writing in the "Wide Russian World"
SPEAKER: Naomi Caffee, University of Arizona
Abstract: What are the limits of Russian literature? What factors--language proficiency, citizenship, geographic location, family heritage--qualify someone as "Russian" or "not Russian?" Entering into dialogue with research in Francophone and Sinophone Studies, this talk introduces the transnational framework of “Russophonia” in order to analyze literature produced from within a variety of geopolitical, cultural, sociolinguistic, virtual, and subjective spaces shaped by the Russian language.
30
Nov
2017
Follow-on Workshop, Intersections of History and Literature in Central Asia
Thanks to generous funding provided by Matthew Nimetz, CASI has held a follow-on workshop this year to the seminar it conducted in 2014 on the “Intersections of History and Literature in Central Asia.” The workshop was held on the campus of AUCA in Bishkek from 30 November to 2 December 2017.
29
Nov
2017
CASI Literature Week: “An Ottoman Poet’s Struggle between Nationalism and Communism: Nazim Hikmet and Modernity”
SPEAKER: Ali İğmen, California State University
Abstract: Nazim Hikmet became an iconic figure in his homeland Turkey only decades after his death in 1965. As a son of an Ottoman civil servant father and a painter mother, Hikmet is reflective of a generation of young Ottoman subjects who learned about and struggled with modernity, nationalism, and communism. 
29
Nov
2017
CASI Literature Week: “Nasriddin in Bukhara and Berlin: Humor, Empire, and the Soviet Union at War”
 
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SPEAKER: Charles Shaw, Central European University
Abstract: What was Nasriddin afandi, the trickster of the Islamicate world, doing at the heart of Soviet culture during its war with Nazi Germany? This talk discusses Nasreddin in Bukhara (1943), the last film of Soviet director Yakov Protazanov, which was filmed in evacuation Uzbekistan and starred an array of Soviet acting elites.
29
Nov
2017
 
“An Ottoman Poet’s Struggle between Nationalism and Communism: Nazim Hikmet and Modernity”
Literature Week is a part of CASI’s Workshop on Literature and History. Supported by a generous contribution from Matthew Nimetz, the aim of the workshop is to create a community of junior scholars and advanced graduate students committed to studying literature and to applying literary tools and methodologies to the study of literary art in the Central Asian past. 
28
Nov
2017
CASI Literature Week: "Imagined Geographies? Contemporary Art of Central Asia"
 
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SPEAKER: Diana Kudaibergenova
Short abstract: The understanding of regional locality and, moreover, of regional art and cultural production poses important questions, namely, What is Central Asia and Where is Central Asia? “Central Asia” is a multi-layered jigsaw that appears as a fairly simple and well-defined but in reality as very complex yet very exciting “lively space”. 
28
Nov
2017
 
“Nasriddin in Bukhara and Berlin: Humor, Empire, and the Soviet Union at War”
Literature Week is a part of CASI’s Workshop on Literature and History. Supported by a generous contribution from Matthew Nimetz, the aim of the workshop is to create a community of junior scholars and advanced graduate students committed to studying literature and to applying literary tools and methodologies to the study of literary art in the Central Asian past.
27
Nov
2017
 
Follow-on Workshop, Intersections of History and Literature in Central Asia
CASI is holding a follow-on workshop this year to the seminar it conducted in 2014 on the “Intersections of History and Literature in Central Asia.” The workshop will be held on the campus of AUCA in Bishkek from 30 November to 2 December 2017.
24
Nov
2017
 
CASI Presents “Literature Week”
Literature Week is a part of CASI’s Workshop on Literature and History. Supported by a generous contribution from Matthew Nimetz, the aim of the workshop is to create a community of junior scholars and advanced graduate students committed to studying literature and to applying literary tools and methodologies to the study of literary art in the Central Asian past.
25
Oct
2017
 
Anastasia Valeeva: “I think the ever-moving classrooms and halls of the building echo the spirit of entrepreneurship, projects and student initiatives that are abundant”.
AUCA new faculty member - Anastasia Valeeva is data journalism lecturer and open data researcher. She has researched the use of open data in investigative data journalism as part of her fellowship at the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism, Oxford.


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