BEGIN:VCALENDAR VERSION:2.0 PRODID:https://fzhg.org/ BEGIN:VEVENT UID:event19022019663a946abdf1b7.83520458 DTSTART:20190218T230000Z DTEND:20190219T225959Z SUMMARY:Cultural Histories of the Great Flu Pandemic of 1918 – 1919: Representations and Memories DESCRIPTION: 19 February 2019 08.45 Guy Beiner / Steffen Bruendel: Welcome Address and Introduction 09.00 – 10.30 Conference session 1: Private and Public Forgetting/Remembering &\;nbsp\; Guy Beiner\, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev\, Be’er Sheva: “The Great Flu between Social Forgetting and Regenerated Memory” &\;nbsp\; Howard Phillips\, University of Cape Town: “The Flu Pandemic in Memory: Re Collections of the Spanish Flu” &\;nbsp\; Ida Milne\, St. Patrick’s Carlow College\, Carlow: “Using Oral History to Explore Transition in the Irish Remembering and Forgetting of the 1918-19 Influenza Pandemic” 10.30 – 11.00 Coffee Break 11.00 – 12.30 Conference session 2: Mapping Memories &\;nbsp\; David Killingray\, University of London: “Pandemic Death\, Response and Memory in Non-European societies” &\;nbsp\; Łukasz Mieszkowski\, Polish Academy of Sciences\, Warsaw: “Virus and Lice: The 1918 -1920 Polish Episode of the Spanish Flu Pandemic and its Rivalry with Typhus Epidemics” &\;nbsp\; Nancy Bristow\, University of Puget Sound\, North Tacoma\, Washington: “Public War / Private Losses: Memory and Martial Metaphor in the United States” 12.30 – 14.00 Lunch Break 14.00 – 15.30 Conference session 3: Archives and Memory &\;nbsp\; Liane Maria Bertucci and Lineti Firmo Rodrigues\, State University of Paraná\, Curitiba: “Spanish flu in the Memories of the Old and the Words of the Young (Brazil\, mid-twentieth to twenty-first century)” &\;nbsp\; Cynthia Gabbay\, Freie Universität Berlin: ”Latin American Representations of the Spanish Flu: Traces in the Archive of a Great Oblivion” &\;nbsp\; Hannah Rhian Mawdsley\, Queen Mary University of London: “Richard Hughesdon Collier – Remembering the ‘Forgotten’ Pandemic” 15.30 – 16.00 Coffee Break 16.00 –17.30 Workshop session I: Publishing Popular History &\;nbsp\; 20 February 2019 9.00 – 10.00 Conference session 4: Scientific Narratives &\;nbsp\; Mark Honigsbaum\, City University\, London: “Pandemic Dialogues: The ‘Spanish Flu’ and the Interplay of Science and History” &\;nbsp\; María-Isabel Porras\, University of Castilla-La Mancha\, Ciudad Real: “Risk Perception and Reactions to Influenza Pandemics and its Vaccines in Spain (1918-2009)” 10.00 – 10.30 Coffee Break 10.30 – 12.00 Workshop session II: &\;nbsp\;&\;nbsp\;&\;nbsp\;&\;nbsp\;&\;nbsp\;&\;nbsp\;&\;nbsp\;&\;nbsp\;&\;nbsp\;&\;nbsp\; Retrospective on Previous Anniversaries 12.00 – 13.30 Lunch Break 13.30 – 15.00 Conference session 5: Representations in Art &\;nbsp\; Steffen Bruendel\, Goethe University Frankfurt: “Between the Great War and the Great Flu. How Europe’s Avant-garde Coped with the Influenza Pandemic of 1918/19” &\;nbsp\; Laura Spinney\, science journalist and writer\, Paris: “Did Artists Ignore the Spanish Flu\, and If So Why? A Hypothesis” &\;nbsp\; Utz Thimm\, Writer and Journalist\, Frankfurt: "\;The Cultural Commemoration of the Great Flu in Belgium and the Netherlands“ (Working Title) 15.00 – 15.30 Coffee Break 15.30 – 16.30 Conference session 6: Representations in Media &\;nbsp\;&\;nbsp\;&\;nbsp\;&\;nbsp\;&\;nbsp\;&\;nbsp\;&\;nbsp\;&\;nbsp\;&\;nbsp\;&\;nbsp\;&\;nbsp\; Kate Barker\, York University\, Toronto: “Killer Advertising — how Canadians were sold the 1918-1919 influenza pandemic” &\;nbsp\; Ryan Davis\, Illinois State University\, Normal\, Illinois: “Spanish Flu Then and Now\, a View from Spain” 16:30 – 17.00 Coffee Break 17.00 – 18.30 Workshop session III: Teaching the Pandemic’s Legacy &\;nbsp\; 21 February 2019 9.00 – 10.30 Workshop session IV: Taking Stock of the Centenary 10.30 – 11.00 Coffee Break 11.00 – 12.30 Final Discussion: Developing Cultural Histories of the Great Flu \n END:VEVENT END:VCALENDAR