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University of Graz, Dimensions of Europe Brown Bag Seminar: "Modernism on the Margins: A Transnational Fellowship of Southeast European Women Intellectuals, 1923-1939"

In 1923, representatives from Yugoslavia, Czechoslovakia, Romania, Bulgaria, Greece and Poland set up the Little Entente of Women, which sought to coordinate responses on a number of key issues including women’s suffrage, the protection of children and minorities, the abolition of the death penalty, and education reform. By 1930, the first Balkan conference convened in Athens to evaluate the possibility of forming a Balkan union, calling women activists into the fold. The interwar women’s movement intersected with efforts at greater region-wide integration. Hence, my aim is to retrace the national networks of women’s movements outward toward the circles they collaborated with in neighboring states, especially around social-democratic reform and pacifism, namely in the work of the Albanian Emine Toptani, leader of the most radical women’s association in the country, and editor of Shqiptarka (The Albanian Woman) from 1929-1931; Greek pianist, music teacher and women’s activist Avra Theodoropoulos (1880-1963), who founded the League for Women’s Rights in Greece and served as its president from 1921-1958; and Serbian philosopher Ksenija Atanasijević (1894-1981), editor of the first Serbian feminist journal, and the country’s first Serbian woman to earn a doctorate and a professorship at the University of Belgrade. All of these women took part in the Balkan conferences of the early 1930s, which called for political, economic and intellectual union of Yugoslavia, Greece, Romania, Bulgaria, Turkey and Albania, following a moment of great optimism for European integration. The questions I will address are as follows: how did women build a sense of fellowship that transcended national borders, and on what grounds? Which contemporary debates did women enter into and how?

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October 30

Albania on the World Stage: Ismail Kadare's Essays on World Literature and the Chain of Literary Influence