Star historian and Balkan expert Maria Todorova delivers this year’s IWM Lectures in Human Sciences

No, it is not a mistake. The titles of this year’s IWM Lectures in Human Sciences allude to Mission Impossiblethe Tom Cruise film series. While it is impossible to perform his physical stunts, the tricky mountainous terrain of the Balkans and their trickier history offer enough vertigo. Still, there is nothing comparable to looking down from a mountain peak in the Balkans. But Gadamer is there, with his defense of humanities, with his thoughts on tradition, prejudice, experience, dialogue, negotiation, reciprocity, situatedness, and the fusion of horizons. In three consecutive lectures, taking place on 16, 23, and 25 OctoberMaria Todorova will attempt to take stock of her own shifting horizons as she has both experienced and contemplated the Balkans over the course of her life.

The first lecture – Tracing the Balkans or Mission Possible: Fallout – tracks the beginnings and fading of the Balkans, and the fallout from this by trying to address some of the omissions and insights coming with the span of several decades, particularly the pertinence of the category of race. IWM Rector Misha Glenny will moderate the evening.

The second lecture – Measuring the Balkans or Mission Possible: Dead Reckoning – seeks to describe the different approaches or measurements that aim to reach this moving object or shifting unit, from specialization to the institutionalization of the discipline as well as the dominant trends that move it. The evening will be moderated by Philipp Therprofessor of Central European History at the University of Vienna.

The third lecture – Framing Balkan Biographies or Mission Possible: Rogue Nation – shifts the perspective drastically to focus on individuals, with the intention to let them speak and enter in a “true conversation, a conversation in which we seek to find ‘our’ languageーto grasp what we have in common” (Gadamer), by presenting brief biographies of several relatively unknown individuals from different social backgrounds. IWM Permanent Fellow Ivan Vejvoda will moderate the third evening.


Maria Todorova is a Bulgarian historian specializing in the Balkans. She publishes extensively on Eastern Europe, the Balkans, and Communism. Her most influential book, Imagining the Balkans (1997), has become a staple of university curricula worldwide. Todorova is Edward William & Jane Marr Gutgsell Endowed Professor Emerita at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. Currently, she is Guest of the Institute at the Institute for Human Sciences (IWM Vienna).

The Balkans: Mission Possible | IWM Lectures in Human Sciences with Maria Todorova

Part I. Tracing the Balkans or Mission Possible: Fallout

Datum: October 16, 2024, 6:00 p.m

Art: Lectures and discussions

Ort: Auditorium on campus, courtyard 1.11 (University of Vienna)

Spitalgasse 2

1090 Wien

Austria

URL: https://www.iwm.at/event/part-i-tracing-the-balkans-or-mission-possible-fallout

The Balkans: Mission Possible | IWM Lectures in Human Sciences with Maria Todorova

Part II: Measuring the Balkans or Mission Possible: Dead Reckoning

Datum: October 23, 2024, 6:00 p.m

Art: Lectures and discussions

Ort: Auditorium on campus, courtyard 1.11 (University of Vienna)

Spitalgasse 2

1090 Wien

Austria

URL: https://www.iwm.at/event/part-ii-measuring-the-balkans-or-mission-possible-dead-reckoning

The Balkans: Mission Possible | IWM Lectures in Human Sciences with Maria Todorova

Part III: Framing Balkan Biographies or Mission Possible: Rogue Nation

Datum: October 25, 2024, 6:00 p.m

Art: Lectures and discussions

Ort: Institute for Human Sciences

Spittelauer Lande 3

1090 Wien

Austria

URL: https://www.iwm.at/event/part-iii-framing-balkan-biographies-or-mission-possible-rogue-nation

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