[cid:image002.jpg@01D06635.2B8990C0]Decoding the Periodical: A Workshop in Slavic, East European and Eurasian Periodical Studies Princeton University, Friday March 27, 2015 All events in 245 East Pyne http://seeeps.princeton.edu<http://seeeps.princeton.edu/> 11am-12:30pm / Panel 1: Seeing Readership Yelizaveta Raykhlina (Georgetown University) - The Expanded Readership of Two Early 19th-century Russian Periodicals Colleen Lucey (University of Wisconsin-Madison) - The Portrayal of Prostitutes and Courtesans in Russian 19th-century Periodicals Karla Huebner (Wright State University) - Gentleman: An Interwar Czech Consumer Magazine Discussant / Jindřich Toman (University of Michigan) 1:30-2:30pm / Panel 2: Mediations of Russian Modernism Jon Stone (Franklin & Marshall College) - Between Little Magazine and Thick Journal: Approaches to Russian Modernist Periodicals Sarah Krive (University of North Carolina at Greensboro) - Periodic(al) Parody: Akhmatova’s Fate in the Post-Revolutionary Press Discussant / Olga Peters Hasty (Princeton University) 2:45-4:15pm / Panel 3: Regional Circulation, Global Exchange Meghan Forbes (University of Michigan) - ReD, Pásmo and Disk: The Interwar Czech Periodical as Platform for International Exchange Ksenia Nouril (Rutgers University) - Production-Reproduction: Modernist Photography and its Circulation through the Lens of the Thomas Walther Collection Alex Moshkin (University of Pennsylvania) - Israeli-Russian Periodicals 1995-2015: Networks, Aesthetics and Ideologies Discussant / Katherine Hill Reischl (Princeton University) 4:30pm Keynote Lecture: Nicholas Sawicki (Lehigh University) Avant-Garde Fissures in the Modern Czech Art Press: Traces in the Printed and the Digital For a detailed schedule & more information, see: http://seeeps.princeton.edu<http://seeeps.princeton.edu/> The event is sponsored by the following departments and centers at Princeton: the Center for Digital Humanities, the Library, the Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures, the Program in Russian and Eurasian Studies, and Interdisciplinary Doctoral Program in the Humanities (IHUM).