WEDNESDAY, 8 May 2019
Workshop – Historisches Kolleg, Kaulbachstraße 15, 80539 Munich
12.00-13.00: Arrival at the venue
13.00-13.30: Welcome by Roland Wenzlhuemer (Munich)
13.30-15.00: Panel 1 – Chair: Benedikt Stuchtey (Marburg)
Madeleine Herren-Oesch (Basle): On missing links in Global History
Sebastian Conrad (FU Berlin): Global History and the Specter of Centrisms
Stefanie Gänger (Cologne): Flowing in Circles. Notes on the Language of Global History
Comment: Cyrus Schayegh (Graduate Institute Geneva)
15.00-15.30: Coffee break
15.30-17.00: Panel 2 – Chair: Julia Angster (Mannheim)
Tonio Andrade (Emory): New Directions in Old Fields: Global History and Military and Diplomatic History
Angelika Epple (Bielefeld): Family constellations: global microhistory and its big siblings
Juliane Schiel (Vienna): Global Labour History: Achievements and New Challenges
Comment: David Motadel (LSE)
17.00-18.00: Break
18.00: Informance
Jazz – The Classical Music of Globalization by Reinhold Wagnleitner and Günter Wagnleitner (Salzburg)
Followed by dinner in a nearby restaurant
THURSDAY, 9 May 2019
Workshop – Historisches Kolleg, Kaulbachstraße 15, 80539 Munich
9.00-10.30: Panel 3 – Chair: James Livesey (Dundee)
Anne Gerritsen (Warwick): Materiality and Global History
Michael Goebel (Graduate Institute Geneva): Crossroads and Loggerheads: On Cities and Global History
Giorgio Riello (Warwick): The Root of the Problem: Global History and the European “Rust Belt”
Comment: Richard Drayton (King’s College London)
10.30-11.00: Coffee break
11.00-12.30: Panel 4 – Chair: Matthias Middell (Leipzig)
Ulrike Lindner (Cologne): Global History and Empire
Harald Fischer-Tiné (ETH Zurich): Marrying South Asian History and Global History: Potential and limits of a Global Microhistory
Kiran K. Patel (Maastricht): Positioning Europe in Global History
Comment: Valeska Huber (FU Berlin)
12.30-13.00: Closing comments by Johannes Paulmann (Mainz) and Sujit Sivasundaram (Cambridge)
Afternoon programme – Seidlvilla, Kulturzentrum, Nikolaiplatz 1B, 80802 Munich
Introduction of the Munich Centre for Global History’s transfer projects: “Children’s exhibition: A History of Globalization in the 19th Century” and “App-based City Tour GLOBAL MUNICH”
Opening of the Munich Centre for Global History – Historisches Kolleg, Kaulbachstraße 15, 80539 Munich
18.30-19.00: Welcome
19.00-20.00: Keynote speech
Sunil Amrith (Harvard): Rethinking the Port City in Global History
Followed by a reception at the Historisches Kolleg
Please register via email (globalhistory@lmu.de) or phone (+49 89 2180 2960) as space is limited at the Historisches Kolleg both for the workshop and the evening ceremony.