This area offers a wide range of continuously updated news regarding both academic and cultural events together with academic calls and study programs
Conference venue: Paris, France
Period: January 23-25, 2014
Deadline for submitting abstracts: August 30, 2013
The Sorbonne Cold War History Project, in partnership with the Gorbachev Foundation (Moscow) and the François Mitterrand Institute (Paris) launched a Call for Papers for the Conference "France, the USSR and the end of the Cold War, 1975-1991", taking place in Paris on January 23-25, 2014.
Studying French-Soviet relations is important in many regards in order to understand the complex international dynamics that led to the end of the Cold War. Even before the beginning of the Cold War and despite their different social-political regimes, both states intended to build relations going beyond their ideological opposition, demonstrated, for instance, by the 1935 French-Soviet Pact or the Normandie-Niemen regiment, a bi-national air squadron created during World War II.
Later, their participation in opposite Cold War alliances did not prevent the emergence of a privileged relationship. Under General de Gaulle, these relations developed in the framework of a “détente” that, on the French side at least, sought to move beyond the opposition between the Soviet bloc and the West, and promote the idea of a Europe “from the Atlantic to the Urals”. Twenty years later, French-Soviet relations played a significant role in ending the Cold War, evidenced by the signing of the Charter for a New Europe in Paris in November 1990.
This initiative, taken by French President François Mitterrand, was supported by the Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, thereby ratifying the end of the “Yalta era”. Over the past 25 years, French-Soviet relations have been studied extensively, through the lens of primary sources. Their impact on the evolution of the European continent and their role in ending the Cold War, however, received limited attention. Therefore, rather than addressing the bilateral aspects of French-Soviet relations, this conference will focus on their international dimension and European implications from the signing of the Helsinki Accords in 1975 until the end of the USSR in 1991.
Contributions on the following topics are welcome:
The proposal (one page) and a resume (half a page), written in English, should be sent by August 30th, 2013, in PDF format and in a single email, to both:
Marie-Pierre Rey: Marie-Pierre.Rey@univ-paris1.fr
and Céline Marangé: celine.marange@univ-paris1.fr
Sorbonne Cold War History Project
Céline Marangé
e-mail: celine.marange@univ-paris1.fr
Marie-Pierre Rey
e-mail: Marie-Pierre.Rey@univ-paris1.fr