PHSS 2020
Ashely Tisdale (University of South Florida) – Accessibility & Visibility: How to Incorporate Public Disability History into Your Research and Teaching
Apolonia Kuc (Jagiellonian University) – The Role of Public History Studies in M.A. Degree in Jewish History and Culture at the University of Southampton: the Perspective of M.A. Student
Vladimir Kramskoy (independent researcher), Kyrylо Stepanyan (Ivan Franko National University of Lviv) – Analysis of Representation of Roman Identity and Roman Warfare in the Video Game “Ryse: Son of Rome” (2013)
Dawid Gralik (Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań) – Video Games as Source of Historical Knowledge in Poland
Reba Drey Luiken (University of Minnesota) – Growing a Community and Planting a Garden: A Digital & Oral History of Community Gardens
Linda Levitt (Stephen F. Austin State University) – Moving the Quilt, Shifting Public History
Monica Mereu (University of Cagliari) – Oudlajan Memories: the Iranian Jewish Community of Tehran from a Female Perspective
Alessandro Porrà (University of Cagliari) – The Jewish Community of Istanbul and the Neo-Ottoman Nostalgia
Natalia Subbotina (Perm State University) – Remembering. Discourse of Stalin’s Repressions in a Small (Provincial) Town
Marta Kopiniak (Depot History Centre) – Switching the Gear: Public History in the Time of Pandemic
Chrysa Tamisoglou (University of Ioannina) – Mapping Public Sculptures: Mapping an Aspect of Public History
Daria Chuprasova (Charles University in Prague) – The Myth of the Red Baron in the Media: From the First World War to the Present Day
Pierre Marie, Pedro Réquio (University of Coimbra) – “25AprilPTLab – Interactive Laboratory of the Portuguese Democratic Transition”: Teaching and Learning Contemporary History Through Documents
Adrian Trzoss (Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań) – “Historically Enslaved Minds”: How Social Media Hijacked Historical Consciousness?
Seung Hwan Ryu (University of Vienna) – Public History (Denial) of 1980 Gwangju Uprising: Backlash of Historical Denialism on Social Media and Resultant Role of Public Historians
Kristin O’Brassill-Kulfan (Rutgers School of Arts and Sciences, Routledge) – Write and Publish on Public History
Walter Chun Hay Chan (University College London) – Disappearing Public History of Hong Kong: The Rival of Memories in the 1967 Riots under the Cold War and Colonialism
Ridhima Sharma (Jawaharlal Nehru University) – (Re)historicising the Cow Protection Movement: Gender, Caste and Labour at a Cow-Shelter in a North Indian Town
Tomasz Waśkiel (University of Wrocław) – Books by presidents as a medium of historical narrative. The case of Kazakhstan
Marta Tomczak (University of Warsaw.Sorbonne University) – New Ways of Narrating History in Kazakhstan
Dušan Ljuboja (Eötvös Loránd University) – History and Memory in the Works of the Pan-Slavists in the First Half of Nineteenth Century
Emily Davis (Loyola University of Chicago) – Making Mother Cabrini’s Memory
PHSS 2019
PHSS 2018
- Małgorzata Rymsza-Pawłowska: Notes from the field: The University of Wrocław’s Public History Summer School
- Fabio Spirinelli: Climbing out of the ivory tower, jumping into society. Some Thoughts on Public History
- Joanna Wojdon: Public History Goes to Summer School