日韩精品

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Russian Studies Conference

Macalester students and faculty have organized the annual Russian, Eastern European, and Central Asian Studies Conference conference each spring since 1992. Events include talks by nationally recognized speakers, community members engaged in human rights work, and alums sharing their experiences post-graduation, as well as an undergraduate research competition in which top participants receive cash prizes.

Student Research Competition 2022: Virtual Edition

In 2022, we held a virtual version of the Russian Studies Student Research Competition for the third year in a row. Mac students along with fellow scholars from other colleges and universities presented and discussed their work in real time on three panels. We are very grateful that we were able to host this celebration of knowledge, and we learned so much from our presenters!

Panel I (Power, Dissent, and Resistance): The first prize was awarded to Sophia Barkoff from the University of Chicago (鈥淪ocial Ties as Tools of Resistance: The Collective Action Problem and Nonviolent Civil Action in Eastern Europe鈥)the second prize  was awarded to Kyle Tucker from Indiana University (鈥淭he Evolving Nature of Russia鈥檚 Nuclear Weapons Doctrine鈥)

Panel II (Us vs. Them): The first prize was awarded to Katherine Mansourova from the University of Notre Dame (鈥淩ussia鈥檚 Half Measure: Evaluating the Effectiveness and Outcomes of Russia鈥檚 Digital Sovereignty Policy鈥)the second prize was awarded to Alyssa Wiley from the University of Oklahoma (鈥淧olitical and Ideological Biases in the Rankings and Country Descriptions of the Trafficking in Persons Report鈥)

Panel III (Understanding Across Difference): The first prize was shared by David Katz from 日韩精品 (鈥溞⌒盒拘残靶叫窖嬓 芯写薪芯泄 褑械锌褜褞: Contemporary and Historical Policies of Language and Identity in Ukraine and Georgia鈥) and Maryam Moghaddami from the University of Oregon (鈥淐rimean Tatars: Through Conquest, Deportation, and Russian Reincorporation鈥); the second prize was awarded to Marie-Michelle Ivantechenko from Carnegie Mellon University (鈥淭he Role of Cultural Values in Shaping Mental Health Related Attitudes: A Cross-Cultural Study鈥)

Winning projects from 2021:

Interdisciplinary Studies I: The first prize was awarded to Emma Larson from Williams College (鈥淭he Making of Mothers in the Motherland: Pravda and The Soviet Family Code of 1936鈥)the second prize was awarded to Natalia San Antonio from Bryn Mawr College (鈥淭he Impact of Politics on the Progression of Natural Science in the Soviet Union鈥)

Interdisciplinary Studies II: The first prize  was awarded to Ana Gvozdi膰 from 日韩精品 (鈥淢emorialization of Children in War in Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, and Kosovo鈥); the second prize was awarded to Zoe Fruchter from Grinnell College (鈥淩eturning the Gaze, but Not the Gift: Warsaw鈥檚 Palace of Culture in Contemporary Polish Film鈥)

Literature: The first prize was awarded to Amelia Parkes from the University of South Carolina (鈥淩ussian and Soviet Identities as Seen in Mikhail Zoshchenko and the Billancourt Tales by Nina Berberova鈥); the second prize was awarded to Rachel Liebherr from Macalester (鈥淟esbian Muses as Avenues for Connection in Sophia Parnok鈥檚 Poems to Marina Tsvetaeva鈥)

For an archive of past winning projects, visit our archive page.

Past speakers

In 2022, Alexandra Sakurets and Mariana Semeniuk led a conversation about the plight of Ukrainian refugees. Alexandra, a Twin Cities resident and registered nurse originally from Ukraine, provided humanitarian aid to refugees in Poland; and Mariana, herself a refugee, spent time in Poland caring for others who had fled the war before coming to Minneapolis, where she now lives.

In 2019, Professor Ann Komaromi (University of Toronto) presented a talk titled ““, in which she explored Kabakov鈥檚 reaction against Malevich鈥檚 avant-garde utopian vision and analyzed his re-imagination of the Gogolian 鈥渓ittle person鈥 located amidst the rubbish of Soviet everyday life.

In 2018, our conference featured two sports-related talks in honor of the 2018 World Cup that took place for the first time in Russia! Mac alum Chris Pascone ’01 presented on ““; and Tim Harte, Professor of Russian literature at Bryn Mawr College, gave a talk titled “” about the significance of sports for the arts and literary culture in Russia.

In 2017, Brian Johnson, Professor of Russian literature at Swarthmore College and Mac alum, gave a talk titled , in which he discussed his research and how studying Russian at Macalester shaped his career. This year’s conference was concluded with , accompanied by Brian and other Russian faculty members.

In 2016, Kevin Rothrock, editor @RuNetEcho and co-manager @RuNetMemes, gave a talk titled and Emily Baran 鈥03, Assistant Professor of History at Middle Tennessee State University, spoke on

In 2015, Eliot Borenstein, Professor of Slavic Languages and Literatures at NYU, discussed 鈥溾 and Krista Goff 鈥04, Assistant Professor of History at the University of Miami, gave a talk titled

In 2014, artist Yevgenii Fiks gave a talk introducing his exhibit at Macalester鈥檚 Law Warschaw Gallery; and Cassandra Hartblay 鈥06, PhD Candidate in Anthropology, UNC-Chapel Hill, spoke about

In 2013, economist Rick Erickson presented on Russia’s transition to capitalism, and diplomat Tom Hansen discussed the relationship between Russia and the U. S. In 2012, Professor Marc Robinson of St. Olaf College introduced and led a post-screening discussion of the new documentary film, Putin’s Kiss, about the sinister side of the Nashi youth movement in contemporary Russia. In 2011, Rachel May, Coordinator of Sustainability Education at Syracuse University, spoke about what environmental scientists and literary scholars can learn from one another. In 2010, postmodernist performer Psoy Korolenko accompanied the 1927 silent film Bed and Sofa with a live soundtrack combining piano and rhymed scholarly discourse.

Paper contest guidelines

For information, please contact

Journals that Publish Undergraduate Research