Instytut Socjologii Uniwersytetu Gdańskiego i
Oddział Gdański Polskiego Towarzystwa Socjologicznego zapraszają na wykłady
gościnne Profesora Józsefa Böröcza z Rutgers University, USA dnia 6 i 7 listopada na Wydziale Nauk
Społecznych UG
Professor József Böröcz
Department of Sociology, Rutgers, The State University
of New Jersey
to wielokrotnie
nagradzany socjolog węgierski pracujący w USA w obszarze struktur globalnych i
europejskich, połączeń mikro-makro, socjologii ekonomicznej i politycznej,
badacz postsocjalizmu, skrajnej prawicy i mikrohistorii nie tylko na Węgrzech, profesor
wizytujący m.in. w Niemczech, w Indiach i w Chinach, obecnie przebywa w Polsce
(Uniwersytet Warszawski) na stypendium Fulbrighta
Autor m.in. książek: A New World Order? Global Transformations in the Late Twentieth Century
(red. Z D. Smith) 1995; Leisure
Migration: A Sociological Comparison 1996; Empire’s New Clothes: Unveiling Eastern Enlargement (red. Z K.
Melinda) 2001; The European Union and
Global Social Change 2009.
§ 6 listopada godz.
11.30 S207 WNS UG
§ On Socialisms—Without Apologies? For Historical Sociologies of the
Possible and the Actual
o
One feature of the post-state-socialist
ideological condition is the difficulty of talking about the state socialist
past in a non-extreme, balanced and properly comparative-historical, in other
words, scholarly, fashion. This talk proposes to discuss state socialist experiences,
applying tools developed by scholars in the critical dependency, world-systems
and postcolonial traditions (many of whom have also tended to shy away from
specifically addressing state socialism).
§ 7 listopada godz. 16.30 C211-212 WNS UG
§ The Global Middle: History, Socialisms and the Future
§ Much
has been said about the two extreme positions in the capitalist world-economy—the
core and the periphery—and gross inequalities between the two, undercutting any
notion of the moral unity of humanity. This paper turns attention to the
„global middle”—societies clustered around the world mean per capita
income—a location often absent from global conversations (incidentally, a
category that most post-state-socialist states of east-central Europe,
including Poland and Hungary, find themselves in). The global middle is of great conceptual and
political significance for a more sustainable future. This paper examines what
we can learn from the historical experiences of the societies that have
occupied that position in the longue durée.
§
§ Dodatkowo 8 listopada godz. 9.45 na
Wydziale Historycznym w 1.46 o profesor Böröcz z wygłosi
wykład metodzie mikrohistorii
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