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Workshop: Noosphere – Ecosphere – Semiosphere


Together with Julia Lajus, professor at LMU Leipzig, our network member Julia Herzberg organized the workshop
“Noosphere – Ecosphere – Semiosphere: Explorations into Environmental Thoughts”
It took place in cooperation with the Rachel Carson Center in Munich,
on October 6th 2022.
Topic:
The workshop addresses the current interest in conceptualizing the ongoing geological period of the history of Earth, making the discussions relevant to the current debate on environmental governance and governance in general.
The Anthropocene demands a deeper look into the predecessors of such thinking, and the Russian-Ukrainian and Soviet geochemist Vladimir Vernadskii, who named humankind “a geological force,” is undoubtedly among them.
Vernadskii’s legacy was adapted to a broader context of ecological thought in Russia and beyond, focusing on his ideas on Noosphere as a new state of biosphere, “a sphere of reason.” Its concept was compared to related research and the causes of the weak state of planetary thinking in contemporary Russia were discussed.
As part of this, Russian Ecospheres’ member and coordinator Philipp Kohl gave a talk on Lotman’s semiosphere.
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Obituary of Julia Obertreis
In silent mourning and with much grief we hereby must say goodbye to our valued network member and appreciated colleague
Julia Obertreis
who passed unexpectedly last week at the age of 54.
We give our condolences to the family, friends and colleagues and want to honour Julia’s character and her contributions within her family and friends, but also within the research network, which has lost a dear member and bright mind.
Many of our network members have been in close contact and exchange with Julia and her original ideas, and together as well as with others, Julia has contributed to the sphere of contemporary history about Eastern Europe and as an inspiring professor for many of her students at the FAU in Erlangen. As an editor of the Slavic Review and member of the Scientific Advisory Board she enriched the scientific field with her publications on Russian and multi-ethnic empires, infrastructure and environmental, global and Eastern European history and many more.
We are full of sorrow about the loss of this dear friend, colleague and mind and we are wishing Julia’s family, friends and colleagues courage and peace during this time of mourning.

For those wanting to send a short letter of condolence or a honouring of Julia’s participation and appreciation, we can publish them collectively and thus announce our support through a lasting “memory wall”.
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Network Conference 2023: Forms of Ecological Knowledge

From the 14th to 16th of July 2023, the first public conference of our network will take place under the topic “Forms of Ecological Knowledge. DFG Network “Russian Ecospheres”. It will take place at the Ludwig Maximilian Universität in Munich.
Concept
Our network members will meet in a public conference lasting several days, in which they will present their results and progress in the various working groups and workshops.
The 2023 Russian Ecospheres Network Annual Meeting invites contributions on forms of ecological knowledge in Russia. It asks for textual, discursive, social and political modes of generating, ordering and organizing ecological knowledge. Drawing on the recent resurgence of thinking about form in theory and on historical understandings of form in the natural and social sciences as well as cultural studies, it looks for distinct Russian approaches to form and aims to locate them globally. It is interested in contributions to the conceptual history of ecological form in the Russian and Soviet empire as well as in empirical studies related to the subject.
Our conference in the context of current discourses
We assume that a dialogue about form across disciplines can help to establish a more nuanced notion of “ecological form” (Hensley, Steer). To open up the space for our disparate disciplinary approaches (literary and cultural studies, environmental history, history of science) and transdisciplinary dialogue, we chose an open, multi-angled concept of form. Such an understanding grasps forms as assemblages and configurations of ordering knowledge, characterized by recurrent and shifting patterns and materialized in distinct communicative and institutional forms of organization and genre.
Regarding anticipations of ecological form in Russian and Soviet theory, an ecocritical reassessment of Russian formalism could be a promising starting point to ask how processes of ecological and cultural transformation do influence each other:
Building on Levine’s formal theory of form, this conference asks how forms constrain, differ, overlap, intersect, travel and do political and epistemological work across time and space. In dialogue with case studies form various research contexts (linguistics, genre theory, realism, materialist aesthetics, semiotics of culture, cultural history, kulturologija, philosophy, ethics, theology, anthropology and ethnography, conceptual history, history of science, Umweltgeschichte [environmental history]), we ask for the “affordances of form” (Levine), taking into account the materiality of form, its appropriation by actors in the field and its variation in distinct settings.
Preliminary Programme
From our members:
Traveling Concepts Between Science and Literary Theory
- Philipp Kohl: The Substrata of Form: Paleontological Thought in Soviet Literary Theory in the 1930s
- Elena Fratto: Food, Environment, and Recycling: The Revolution as Metabolic Activity
Ecological Narratives
- Mika Perkiömäki: Forms of ecological narratives in media representations of the Chernobyl and Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plants during Russia’s war on Ukraine
- Timm Schönfelder: Narrating the Hunt. Trajectories of Venatic Knowledge towards the Fin de Siècle
- Mieka Erley: Against Entropy: Soviet Practices of Closure in Ecology and Narrative
Forms of Political Ecology
- Andy Bruno: Forms of Growth in Soviet Socialism: Reconsidering Productivism in Light of Scholarship on Degrowth
- Tatjana Petzer: Autotrophy. An Alimentary Form of Social and Literary Ecology
Reconsidering Vernacular Knowledge
- Clemens Günther: The Form of Feeling: Presentiments in Science and Literature
- Colleen McQuillen: The putevoi ocherk as a tool of epistemological colonization in late 19th C.
- Georgy Levit: On the facets of ecological method: Ernst Haeckel and Nikolai Mikloucho-Maclay
If you would like to subscribe to the Russian Ecospheres mailing list for updates, feel free to register here:
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Call for Papers: Conference on Hydro-poetics
The Department of Slavic and Hungarian Studies at the Humboldt University in Berlin invited paper proposals for a conference on “Hydro-poetics: an Ecocritical Perspective on Eastern European Arts (1960s-1990s)”.
The conference, coordinated by Russian Ecospheres member Susanne Frank, will be held in Berlin from the 5th till 7th of October 2023.

Water as a cultural phenomenon
Water is our most precious resource but also an element of culture historically charged with diverse meanings and values. The Bible, the Qur’an, and other ancient scriptures, just like modern scientific theories, regard water as the source of all life, as that element which preceded the creation of the earth. Water is a life principle, but also a force of destruction through drought and flood, a potential instrument of erasure and obliteration of landscapes and places of culture. Whether through natural phenomena or by the hand of humanity, sunken vessels, and ancient as well as modern cities are archived and preserved at the bottom of lakes and on the ocean floor. Water is crucial in processes of cleaning, and yet it is becoming a global storage of waste and pollution.
In text and image, water circulates as a quintessential metaphor of change, linked with gestation, birth, and death. Its mirroring capacity, as in the ancient myth of Narcissus, invites figurations of duplicity, visionary sights, and hypnotic effects. Water fluidity conjoins with issues of time and transience (Heraclitus); with memory, translating into motifs of forgetting and forgiving. Water structures the Earth’s surface (oceans), connects and divides (watershed) and delimits (continents). It is used to draw boundaries (left bank vs. right bank).
In human history, water has played a central role as an inter-connecting medium as well as an ill-used material substance: a conduit of travel and war, an instigator of settlements and resettlements, and an energy resource depleted by political, industrial, and economic pursuits.
Motivation for the congress
Our urge to study water as a cultural phenomenon is driven by the current ecological crisis related to the quality and availability of water. Through the symbolic realms of philosophy, literature, film, and visual arts, which reveal the polyvalence of meanings attributed to water, we strive to understand its cultural history. Every culture’s tradition engenders their own symbolic and archetypal meanings in images of water, stemming from place-specific hopes and anxieties, from language, and from shared cultural preconceptions.
The geo-cultural focus of the conference responds to the growing interest in ecocritical interpretations of Eastern European arts in research and scholarship as well as in artistic practices. While ecocritical perspectives on arts originated in Western literary theory of the early 1970s, in the region of Eastern Europe ecocriticism as a method of interpreting and understanding culture was scarce until late 1990s (in contrast to environmental history). Nonetheless, the artistic practice of the late-socialist era holds an immense corpus of works by artists who deal with issues of nature, water (and ecology) as their essential theme.
Reconsidering Eastern European arts from an ecocritical perspective means returning agency to these diverse practices of environmental art and activism. The conference intends to further the discussion around environmental engagement of Eastern European arts in critical terms derived from the specific histories of environmentalism across the socialist states of Eastern Europe, rather than those defined by the Western-centric understanding of environmental art histories. At the same time, through invigorating the aqueous aspect of cultural theory, it is our aim to enhance recognition of water’s critical presence in all spheres of our lives and encourage sustainable eco-political practice.
Preliminary contents of the conference
Possible topics for individual presentations, that were sent in paper to the coordinators till the 31st of January, and that will be reviewed and selected until the 31st of March include
- artworks addressing transformations in the environment and exhibiting growing awareness of the ecological crisis,
- water and power: politics and energy,
- organized nature/ taming of water: reflections on invasion of the natural habitat by built environments (e.g. state-controlled hydro-engineering plans such as power plants, canal, and dam building; but also aqueducts, drainage and irrigation systems, artificial ponds, etc.) and the changing relationship between humans and nature,
- ideologization of hydrological landscape/hydrosphere in Cold War context,
- aquatic imagery, language, and symbols; figurations of ephemerality, fluidity, purification, and shapeshifting,
- hydrotext in late- and post-socialist century prose fiction,
- visual arts, cinema, animation,
- video installations, artificial immersive environments, land art, site-specific environmental installations,
- materiality of water: sounds, textures, surfaces,
- socio-cultural identities and narratives of rivers, seas, and other water bodies,
- environmental conceptualism,
- meteorological metaphors,
- environmental approaches between science and art/art as science.
Furter questions or interested in taking part?
Contact hydropoetics.slawistik@hu-berlin.de
and subscribe to be updated about incoming news about the conference via
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Annual ASEEES Convention
From the 10th to 13th of November, the second part of the annual “ASEEES” Convention takes part in Chicago.
Here, the international forum for Slavic, East European & Eurasian Studies makes a broad exchange of infromation and ideas possible. By that, further work and intelectual vitality in these fields is engaged and sustained.
“The 2022 ASEEES convention invites discussion of the experiences associated with precarity in Eastern Europe and Eurasia as well as in the academic institutions that employ us to study the region.
Primarily associated with unstable, exclusive, and increasingly uncertain working conditions together with the collective cultural and individual psychological experiences that result, precarity, has become a factor on nearly every aspect of life on our planet.
While the effects of precarity are highly diverse, they have a profound impact, beyond the realms of work, on our environment, health care, mobility, social hierarchies of inclusion and exclusion, and the politics and economy of cultural production, among others.
Changes in the global economy have made precarity especially visible in the present, but these are phenomena with long histories and long-evolving cultures. The peoples of Eastern Europe and Eurasia have created and responded to those threats in important, diverse, and instructive ways, in both the past and the present.”
– ASEEES CommiteeFields of Discourse and Interdisciplinarity
- Anthropology/Cultural Studies
- Early Slavic, East European and Eurasian studies until 1800
- Economic History
- Geography/Urban studies
- History: Central and Southeast Europe
- History: Russian and Eurasian
- Literature: Central and Southeast Europe
- Literature: Russian and Eurasian
Discussion Rounds relating to Russian Ecospheres
Over the days of the convention, several panels and workshops are held, where recent publications are discussed. Relating to the topics of our network, members of our networks and other scientists of the serval fields regarding topics around ecology present their papers and take part in the panels and discussion rounds.
You can find a detailed programme with topics of interest and your personalised search by people, topics and organisation via ASEES interactive program:
Relating to our topics within the network, basic theoretical frameworks such as the Noosphere-approach and its 100 years of history are discussed, taken into context and adapted to different fields. Russian Ecospheres’ member Andy Bruno‘s Paper about Environmental Imaginaries is discussed under the topic of Post Soviet Environmental Futures with questions about how to live in zones of catastrophe and areas of environmental transformations and how current environmental governance of the state react shape the topics about nationalist history, sovereignity and developement.
Panels take place about Ecociriticism, with discussing the heritage of Anton Chekhov and its naturalist tradition. Keywords such as biodiversity, deforetation and pollution are discussed and redefined. Mieka Erley, another member of our network, coordinates a panel about Ecocriticism and Russian Literature, considering negative consequences of environmental degradation and the disturbance of human-nature relations. To do so, she takes into account papers of Russian Ecosphere Members such as Philipp Kohls paper about Ecocritique of the Tarto-Moscow Semiotic-School and Coleen McQuillens paper about the Deforestation and Degeneration in the Urals.
The ecological lense is widened, for example by shedding light on the historical context of activism in post soviet cinema, its correlation to culture and heritage, and on key elements in commemoration and education of era defining contexts such as the Chernobyl catastrophe, its depiction and its aftermaths.
Take part in the discussions and register for the plural forms of interdisciplinary exchange via the ASEEES webiste:
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“Slavistik-Tag” Bochum


At the “Slavistik-Tag” Bochum, a congress of German Slavicists at the 22nd October 2022, our network organized two panels under the title “Spheres of Ecological Knowledge in Russian Culture and History”. While the first one was dedicated to a discussion of our research agenda with external panelists, the second panel included presentations of our own research.
Fist Panel:
In the first panel, three discussants commented on the perspectives and risks of our research agenda:
In her contribution “Ecorealism? Back to Reality on Behalf of Ecology” (orig.: “Ecorealism? Zurück zur Realität im Zeichen der Ökologie”), Susanne Strätling (Professor of Comparative Literature, FU Berlin) discussed the importance of literature as a form of ecological knowledge. Referring to Will Slocombe, Strätling emphasized ecocriticism as a discursive countermovement against linguistic constructivism, relativism and nihilism. Since ecological thinking about literature offers new approaches to reality, Strätling proposed the term “Ecorealism” for further debates, particularly aimed at Russian and Soviet traditions of factography and documentary aesthetics of ecological catastrophes.
In the second response “The Environment of Cultural and Literary Animal Studies”, Nadine Menzel (Research Associate, Leipzig University) pointed to the intersections of ecocriticism and a neighboring field of study, not merely in their topological focus on spaces of cohabitation such as the forest and the steppe. While the ecological perspective focuses on environments and spheres, animal studies advocate the particular, the “small” entities within larger environments. With exemplary discussions of the intermediate spaces between wilderness and civilization in Chekhov and Tolstoy’s theory of violence from a human-animal perspective, Menzel demonstrated how ecocritical readings might profit from zoological perspectives
The panel’s third discussant, Robert Kindler (Professor for Eastern European History, Institute for East European Studies, FU Berlin), looked at “Russian Ecospheres” from the viewpoint of (global) history. Kindler raised the question whether a decolonial perspective on “Ecospheres” was possible, one that would avoid imperial pitfalls of an assumed universal competence of historians of Eastern Europe. For further explorations, Kindler pleaded to overcome a widespread north-centric approach to global history (directed against the global south) and to include more disciplines and indigenous voices on ecology: local history (or kraevedenie), ethnology, and anthropology
Second Panel:
The second panel gathered presentations from the network members’ individual research on planetary knowledge in Russian modernism:
Clemens Günther gave a synopsis of imaginations of climate capsules in science-fiction texts of Russian symbolism and discussed their relationship with contemporary discourses of habitability (Chakrabarty).
Philipp Kohl looked into the poetological aspects of planetary time in Mikhail Prishvin’s prose in the 1920s and 1930s and his reception of Vladimir Vernadskii’s theory of the biosphere
Tatjana Petzer’s talk on Vladimir Vernadskii’s concept of autotrophy and its fictional representations had to be cancelled and will hopefully form part of a future meeting. The discussion revolved around questions about specific literary forms of ecological knowledge (drama, production novel, diary) and their relationship with the “outside of the text” – be it symbolic, realistic, or factographic.
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Imprint
Contact
contact@russianecospheres.org
Responsible für the content after § 55 ABS. 2 RSTV
Dr. Clemens Günther
Freie Universität Berlin
Eastern Europe Institute (OEI)
Garystraße 55
14195 Berlin
Tel. +49 30 83861010
E-Mail: clemens.guenther@fu-berlin.deDr. Philipp Kohl
Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München
Faculty for language and literature studies
Department II – Slavic Philology
Schellingstr. 33
80539 München
Tel. +49 (0)89 2180-3824
E-Mail: Philipp.Kohl@slavistik.uni-muenchen.deLiability for content
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Georgy S. Levit
Position:
Scientific Associate of Didactics of Biology at Friedrich Schiller University, Jena
Summary:
After conducting research on marine environment in Oldenburg and on the history of science, medicine and technolgoy as well as biodidactics in Jena, Georgy Levit was an assistant professor of the history of science and technology at the University of King’s College in Halifax. Since then, he has worked at faculties of economics and environmental management in Russia and started to research for different institutions from 2014 on.
Research Focus:
- History and philosophy of biology, biogeochemistry and geophysiology
- Alternative (non- and anti-Darwinian) evolutionary theories in the 20th century
- (History and Philosophy of) Russian and German evolutionary biology
- Evolutionary approaches in social sciences (evolutionary economics, biopolitics
- History of veterinary science, food science and of totalitarian regimes

Motivation as a part of the network:
Publications linked to the network:
- “Self-Organization Meets Evolution: Ernst Haeckel and Abiogenesis” . In book: Self-Organization as a New Paradigm in Evolutionary Biology (pp.11-32) [together with U. Hossfeld]
- “Russia’s new Lysenkoism”. Current Biology Vol. 27 No. 16. [together with E. Kolchinsky, U. Kutschera & U. Hossfeld]
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Mika Perkiömäki

Position:
Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the Aleksanteri Institute, University of Helsinki (Finland)
Summary:
Mika Perkiömäki holds a PhD in Russian Language and Culture (Tampere University, 2021). His doctoral dissertation, Imagined Riverography of Late Twentieth-Century Russian Prose, is an ecocritical study of rivers in late Soviet and early post-Soviet Siberian Village Prose. In his postdoctoral projects he has studied the interrelationship of people and nature in North-Russian literature of the early Soviet period (Languages Unit, University of Helsinki) and practices of mediatized knowledge production and distribution of fossil and renewable energy in present-day Russia (Aleksanteri Institute, University of Helsinki).
Research Focus:
- Russian language and culture
- Russian literature
- Russian Arctic
- Ecocritical studies
- Rivers in the Russian imagination
- Environmental journalism, media, and communication in Russia
- Russian environmental and climate discourses
- Nuclear fiction
- Climate fiction
Publications linked to the network:
- Dovbysh, Olga & Mika Perkiömäki. Forthcoming. Journalist/source relations in Russian environmental journalism. In Anna Maria Jönsson, Anna Rantasila & Mette Marie Roslyng (ed.): Constructed facts, contested truths: Environment and science communication in a hybrid media-scape. Routledge.
- Turoma, Sanna & Mika Perkiömäki. Forthcoming. Streaming Chernobyl: Mediated Battles over the Geopolitics of an Ecological Disaster. In Sigrid Kaasik-Krogerus, Saara Ratilainen & Sanna Turoma (ed.:) Eastern Europe and Eurasia in the Global Age: Narrating Geopolitics and Culture. Lexington Books.
- Dovbysh, Olga & Mika Perkiömäki. 2024. (De)politicization of the Environmental Agenda in Russian Media. Journalism. https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/14648849241284338.
- Perkiömäki, Mika. 2022. Between Pomor Traditions and Arctic Modernities: The Northern Sea in Early Soviet Pomor Literature. In Markku Lehtimäki, Arja Rosenholm, Elena Trubina & Nina Tynkkynen (ed.): Cold Waters: Tangible and Symbolic Seascapes of the North. Springer Polar Sciences. Cham: Springer, 147–163. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-10149-6_9.
- Perkiömäki Mika. 2021. Imagined Riverography of Late Twentieth-Century Russian Prose. Doctoral dissertation. Tampere University. http://urn.fi/URN:ISBN:978-952-03-2012-6.
- Perkiömäki, Mika. 2021. Boris Šerginin pohjoinen [Boris Shergin’s North]. Idäntutkimus 28 (1), 3–19. https://doi.org/10.33345/idantutkimus.107838.
- Perkiömäki, Mika. 2020. The Anthropocene on Planet Water. Competing Views on Rivers and Geography in Sergey Zalygin’s Ekologicheskii roman. Slavonica 25 (1), 1–24. https://doi.org/10.1080/13617427.2020.1754570.
- Perkiömäki, Mika. 2020. Rivers of Noosphere Stories: Russian Natural-Philosophical Prose as Cultural Ecology. The Soviet and Post-Soviet Review 47 (3), 257–284. https://doi.org/10.30965/18763324-20201369.
- Perkiömäki, Mika. 2018. Matka hukutetulla joella. Ympäristöoikeudenmukaisuus Valentin Rasputinin jokiproosassa [Journey on a drowned river. Environmental justice in Valentin Rasputin’s river prose]. In Markku Lehtimäki, Hanna Meretoja & Arja Rosenholm (ed.): Veteen kirjoitettu: veden merkityksiä kirjallisuudessa. Suomalaisen Kirjallisuuden Seura, 305–332.
- Perkiömäki, Mika 2017. ”The Sovereign of the River and the Sovereign of All Nature—In the Same Trap”. The River in Viktor Astafiev’s Queen Fish. In Jane Costlow, Yrjö Haila & Arja Rosenholm (ed.): Water in Social Imagination: from Technological Optimism to Contemporary Environmentalism. Brill Rodopi, Leiden, Boston, 145–166. https://doi.org/10.1163/9789004333444_009.
Research projects:
- Current research project (2021–2024): FLOWISION – Best from both worlds: Enhancing energy transition in Russia and Finland by making resource flows visible. https://flowision.fi
- Previous research project (2019–2023):
- Northern Neighbours: Environment and Modernization in the Literatures of the Russian Arctic. https://www.helsinki.fi/en/projects/environment-and-modernization-literatures-russian-arctic
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Timm Schönfelder

Position:
Research associate at Leibniz Institute for History and Culture of Eastern Europe, GWZO
Summary:
After finishing his studies in Slavic Studies, History and Hispanic Studies in Tübingen and Moscow, Timm Schönfelder went on to be a research associate of the Collaborative Research Center 923: “Threatened Orders” at the University of Tübingen. After finishing his doctorate in 2019 on Soviet environmental and technological history he started lecturing at the University of Tübingen. Since 2020, he has been a research associate at the GWZO in the department “Humans and Environment” with a project on the history of hunting in Eastern Central Europe. He is member of the ASEEES, DGO and ESEH.
Research Focus:
- Cultural history of hunting in East Central Europe
- Environmental and Technological History of Russia and the UdSSR
- Infrastructure and Science History
- Human-Nature Relationship & Human Animal Studies
Motivation as a part of the network:
Publications linked to the network:
- “Bodenerosion und Pestizidbelastung. Das Erbe des Reisanbaus im Gebiet Krasnodar,“ Osteuropa, no. 7-9 (2020): 319-330.
- “Reinventing the Steppe. The Agromeliorative Complex in the Russian Periphery”, Slavic Review [forthcoming].
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Jonathan Oldfield
Position:
Professor in Russian Environmental Studies/ Head of the Department for Geography, Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Birmingham
Summary:
Jonathan Oldfield was a lecturer in economic geography and general geography in Nottingham, London, Birmingham and senior lecturer at the University of Birmingham, before focusing on Russian Environmental Studies as the Head of Education at the University of Birmingham. He is working on interdisciplinary topics related to Soviet climate science and its intellectual legacies and Soviet contributions to climate change science.
Research Focus:
- Russian understandings of physical natural systems:
- Soviet climate science and its intellectual legacies
- the science of geoengineering in the Soviet /Russian contexts
- Russian engagements with the Anthropocene as an empirical and conceptual entity

Motivation as a part of the network:
Publications linked to the network:
- The development of Russian environmental thought: scientific and geographical perspectives on the natural environment. New York/London: Routledge, 2015 [together with Denis Shaw].
- “Imagining climates past, present and future: Soviet contributions to the science of anthropogenic climate change, 1953-1991.” Journal of Historical Geography, vol. 60 (2018): 41-51.
- Russian understandings of physical natural systems:
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Tatjana Petzer

Position:
Visiting Professor for Slavic Cultural Studies, Marthin-Luther-University, Halle-Wittenberg
Summary:
Tatjana Petzer studied Slavic, English/American, Russian Studies and Serbo-Croatian Studies in Berlin, Belgrade, Halle and Ljubljana. After she worked in lead projects in competence development with new media as well as an academic associate for the Center of Literary and Cultural Research (ZfL) in Berlin, before gaining her doctorate in 2006 at MLU. Subsequently, she worked as a fellow at the Cultur Studies department at the University of Konstanz, as a senior assistant for Slavic literature at the University of Zurich and project coordinator for the project “Knowledge History of Synergy” before starting her career at MLU.
Research Focus:
- Focus in the area of Slavic literatures, arts and (knowledge) cultures
- Cultural history and geoaesthetics of Southeast Europe
- Mobility and nomadicity (in) literature and art
- Synergy concepts of Slavia Orthodoxa
- Transformation and future aesthetics of modernity, immortality, cryoarchives, vestimentary orders and translation
Motivation as a part of the network:
Publications linked to the network:
- Kälteforschung und eisige Archive in Osteuropa,“ Die Welt der Slaven 64, no.2 (2019): 209–233
- Wissen und Glaube: Figurationen des Synergos in der slavischen Moderne. München: Fink, 2021
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Colleen McQuillen

Position:
Associate Professor of Slavic Languages and Literatures, University of Southern California
Summary:
Professor McQuillen is a scholar of Russian modernism with a major in slavic languages and Literatures, who researches the ways that literature extends into, influences, and refracts visual and material culture. Her primary field of research is the period known as the Silver Age. She is scholarly engaged with the issue of humanity’s relationship, Polish modernism, art activism, and theories of creative collaboration. Her current book project uses ecocritical theory to examine late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century Russian attitudes toward natural and built environments as manifested in literature, painting, and set design.
Research Focus:
- Modernism & Silver Age
- Symbolism
- Neo-Realism
- Avant-garde
- Ecocriticism
- Environmental studies
- Posthumanism
- Art activism & creative collaboration
- Social network mapping and data visualization
- Digital humanities
Motivation as a part of the network:
Publications linked to the network:
- “The Human Reimagined: Posthumanism in Russia.” Boston: Academic Studies Press, 2018 [edited together with Julia Vaingurt]
- “The Scorched and Depleted Earth: Terrestrial Decadence in Fin-de-siècle Russia.” Russian Literature, Vol. 114–115 (June–July 2020): 23-43
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Erik Martin

Position:
Academic Associate at the Faculty of Humanities (Cultural Studies), Viadrina in Frankfurt (Oder)
Summary:
After studying East Slavic Philology, philsophy and maths in Austin, Tübingen, Konstanz and Frankfurt, Erik Martin started his position as an academic associate at the Viadrina in Frankfurt (Oder) and became involved in such scientific networks as the research consortium “European Times – A Transregional Approach to the Societies of Central and Eastern Europe” and the German Slavic Association. He completed his habilitation process 2019 for teaching Slavic general and comparative literature studies.
Research Focus:
- Interactions of literature, philosophy and aesthetics
- Literature and cultural theory (cultural economics, finitude, ecocriticism)
- Literary theory (formalism, structuralism)
- Literature of the 19th and 20th centuries
- Poetics and aesthetics of the 18th century
Motivation as a part of the network:
Publications linked to the network:
- “Срубленный лес, или О резервах русского реализма: Тургенев, Толстой.“ In: Russkiĭ realizm XIX Veka. Obshchestvo, Znanie, Povestvovanie,” edited by Il’i͡ a Kliger, Kirill Ospovat, Margarita Vajsman, and Aleksej Vdovin, 344-377. Moskva: NLO, 2020. [together with Konstantin Kaminskij)
- “Von letzten und einfachen Dingen: Mickiewiczs Pan Tadeusz.“ In: Ding und Bild in der europäischen Romantik, edited by Jakob C. Heller, Erik Martin, and Sebastian Schönbeck, 173–185. Berlin: De Gruyter, 2020.



