Thursday, October 5 Friday, October 6 Saturday, October 7 *In German 19.30 - 21.00 Panel discussion 100 Jahre Russische Revolution (Literaturhaus Zurich) Chair: Ulrich Schmid (St.Gallen) mit Julia Kissina (Berlin), Karl Schlögel (Frankfurt/O.), Sylvia Sasse (Zurich) * Panel 5: The Revolution Expands: Now and Then (01-308) Chair: Sandra King-Savic (St.Gallen) Francesco Campagnola (Ghent): Revolution and Renais- sance in Interwar Japan | Tatjana Jukic (Zagreb): Revolu- tion in Yugoslavia as the October Redux for British Politi- cal Subjectivation | Yves Partschefeld (St.Gallen): Disrup- tion and Restart: The Formation of the Republic of Esto- nia in the Context of the Russian Revolutions of 1917 Panel 6: Revolutionizing Everyday Life (01-U126) Chair: Olena Palko (Basel) Grzegorz Krzywiec (Warsaw): The ‘Jewish Revolutions’: A Reconsideration of the 1905 and the Russian Revolution in East Central and East European Rightist Imagination | Ibrahim Mirzayev (Eichstätt-Ingolstadt): Revolution and Alphabet: Reform of the Arabic Script in 1921-1937 | Philipp Casula (Zurich/Manchester): The Revolution Goes On: The Soviet Union and the Third World 17.30 - 18.00 Coffee Break 18.00 - 19.15 Keynote 3: Christoph Menke (Frankfurt/M.): Is a Revolution (Still) Possible? (09-011) Chair: Dieter Thomä (St.Gallen) 19.30 Reception (09-FOY) 09.30 - 10.45 Keynote 4: Donatella Della Porta (Florence): ‘Like a House of Cards’: Time Intensity in Revolutions (52-7024) Chair: Thomas Telios (St.Gallen) 11.00 - 13.00 Panel 7: The Philosophical Discourse on Revolution (52-5120 ) Chair: Federica Gregoratto (St.Gallen) Marie-Josée Lavallée (Montreal): The Future of Revolu- tion after the Russian Revolution: The Reconceptualiza- tions of Arendt, Adorno and Marcuse | Jacob Dahl Rend- torf (Roskilde): The Phantom of Stalin: Jean-Paul Sartre's Philosophy of the Russian Revolution | Oliver Flügel- Martinsen (Bielefeld) / Franziska Martinsen (Hannover): What’s Left? Is There a Post-Marxist Concept of Revolu- tion? Panel 8: Founding Revolutionary Practices (52-6120) Chair: Sergey Kozin (Newcastle, AU) Sigrun Bielfeldt (Tübingen): Andrey Belyi’s Epistemology of the Russian Revolution | Vanessa Rampton (Zurich): The Idea of Progress in History, or the Relationship between 1905 and 1917 | Josette Baer Hill (Zurich): ‘I Did Not Want To Lie’: Thomas Garrigue Masaryk and the Intellectual Failure of the Russian Revolution Panel 9: Revolutionary Law: Between Peace and Violence (52-7024) Chair: Carl David Mildenberger (St.Gallen) Monika Kareniauskaite (Vilnius): The Criminal Justice System in Soviet Russia during October Revolution and Civil War: Chaos, Experiment, or Model for Communist Transformations in 20th-Century Europe? | Irina Gordeeva (Moscow): The ‘Tolstoian’ Origins of the Idea of ‘Peaceful Revolution’ in Russia | Aleksander Milosz Zieliński (Fribourg): Is Thinking a Peaceful Revolution a Contradiction in Itself? 13.00 - 14.00 Lunch Break 14.00 - 16.00 Panel 10: The Revolution’s Sex and Gender (52-5120) Chair: Josette Baer (Zurich) Olga Baranova (Vienna): The Role of Bolshevik Revolu- tion for Women's Emancipation in Russia 13.15 - 15.15 Panel 1: Revolutionary Philosophy (01-113) Chair: Marie-Josée Lavallée (Montreal) Naveen Kanalu (Los Angeles): Law, Absolute Will, and the Withering of the State: Sovereignty at the Limits of Lenin’s Dictatorship of the Proletariat | Sushila Ramas- wamy (Delhi): Insights of Critics of Lenin: Why Were They on the Right Side of History? | Gregor Schäfer (Basel): Philosophy at the Moment of its Realization: On Lukács’ Concept of the Revolution Panel 2: Commemorating the Revolution and the Politics of Remembrance (01-308) Chair: Martin Mühlheim (Zurich) Oksana Klymenko (Kiev): Soviet Politics of Memory about the October Revolution (1920s-1930s) | Tora Lane (Södertörn): The Memory of the Revolution, and the Revolution as Memory | Stephan Rindlisbacher (Tbilisi): The Legacy of the ‘October Revolution’ in Russia: Between Commemoration and Silencing Panel 3: Religion and/as Revolution (01-U126) Chair: Jesse Ramírez (St.Gallen) Jack Coopey (Durham): Blessedness: Lenin and the Event of Empirico-Criticism as Praxis | Sergey Kozin (Newcastle, AU): A Religious Revolution? Accessing Lunacharsky’s Religion and Socialism from the Early 21st Century Context | Christian Schmidt (Leipzig): Revolution and Salvation 15.30 - 17.30 Panel 4: On Mass(es), the Party, and the Collective(s) (01-113) Chair: Federica Gregoratto (St.Gallen) Julia Christ (Paris): A Drive for Revolution? Freud’s Analy- sis of Revolutionary Movements in the Era of the Individual | Till Hahn (Frankfurt/M.): Can There Be a Philosophy After the Cultural Revolution? Reflections on the Dialectics of Theory, Organization and Action | Thomas Telios (St.Gallen): Learning from October: Collec- tives Unbound 09.00 - 09.15 Registration (09-FOY) 09.15 - 09.30 Opening Statement (09-011) Dieter Thomä (St.Gallen) 09.30 - 10.45 Keynote 1: Karl Schlögel (Frankfurt/O.): Beyond the Horizon: The Russian Revolution, Far, So Far Away (09-011) Chair: Dieter Thomä (St.Gallen) 11.00 - 12.15 Keynote 2: Sylvia Sasse (Zurich): Reenact Revolution? Theatre and Politics of Repetition (09-011) Chair: Ulrich Schmid (St.Gallen) 12-15 - 13.15 Lunch Break