Edyta

Watch the 7th Annual Templeton Lecture by Edyta Bojanowska

Watch the 7th Annual Alan Templeton Distinguished Speaker series for Foreign Languages, Literatures and Cultures

 

“The Imperial World through Russian Eyes: Colonialism, Globalization, and a Russian Naval Voyage around Africa and Asia”

Edyta M. Bojanowska

Hosted by the Department of German and Russian

About this talk:

How did the nineteenth century world shaped by western colonial empires look to contemporary Russian observers? In answering this question, the talk follows a mid-century Russian naval voyage around the coastal rims of southern Africa and Asia, part of an official government mission to open Japan to European trade. In the extensive network of Euro-American imperialism’s global connections, the Russians see the emergence of a new world order, one in which they must compete and cooperate with their western rivals, to learn from them, but also to set their own empire apart.

About the speaker:

Edyta M. Bojanowska is Professor and Chair of the Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures at Yale University with a secondary appointment in the Department of History. She also chairs the European Studies Council at Yale’s MacMillan Center for International and Area Studies. She is the author of two prize-winning monographs about empire and nationalism in nineteenth-century Russian literature and intellectual history. Her first book, Nikolai Gogol: Between Ukrainian and Russian Nationalism (Harvard, 2007) challenges the Russocentric myths around this Ukrainian-born Russophone writer. Her recent A World of Empires: The Russian Voyage of the Frigate Pallada (Belknap, 2018) uses Ivan Goncharov’s travelogue as a lens onto global imperial history and Russian colonial imagination. An effort to integrate Russia into accounts of European imperialism connects this book with Professor Bojanowska’s current project, Empire and the Russian Classics, which explores imperial themes in the works of major nineteenth-century Russian writers. Her scholarship has been supported by the Guggenheim Fellowship, the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, the American Council of Learned Societies, and the Harvard Society of Fellows.

Starting Sept. 15, vaccination or proof of a recent negative COVID-19 test is required for all indoor events of 100 or more attendees at a UC Davis facility that involves food or drinks

1. Any attendee can show their CDC Vaccine Card (phone image acceptable) or digital vaccine record from the State of California. International students may show their translated vaccine record.

2. UC Davis employees or students can show their valid Daily Symptom Survey compliance email.

3. Show a negative COVID-19 test result from the last 72-hours. (must be a lab/PCR test; home tests/antigen tests are not valid)

Please note this is an INDOOR event and will have a food component

 

Media Resources

Edtya Bojanowska Flyer