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DTSTART:20201101T020000
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UID:3817-5a4e629c980d682bbe92a4bae75a99a6@events.la.psu.edu
DTSTAMP:20260601T182513Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221109T143000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221109T153000
SUMMARY:Teach-In on Russia’s War in Ukraine: Svitlana Shlipchenko, “Liberated Hi
	stories and Imperial Afterlives: The Changing Faces of Ukraine’s Cities”
DESCRIPTION:\n&ldquo\;Liberated Histories and Imperial Afterlives: The C
	hanging Faces of Ukraine&rsquo\;s Cities&rdquo\;\n\nSvitlana Shlipchenko
	\, Senior Researcher\, National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine and Direc
	tor\, Center for Urban Studies in Kyiv\n\nSvitlana Shlipchenko is one of
	 Ukraine&rsquo\;s foremost experts in architecture and urban planning. S
	he has written extensively on the use of public space in the USSR\, on U
	kraine&rsquo\;s efforts to desovietize its cities and monuments\, and on
	 architectural cultural preservation.\n\nEmpires are rarely content to s
	eize the future of colonized peoples. They also seek to conquer their pa
	st. When identity and heritage become targets\, architectural history be
	comes one of many battlefields. The process of recovering local identiti
	es in a post-colonial condition is complicated by the historical traces 
	of empires that often remain\, and at times become interwoven with a pla
	ce and its peoples. Ukrainian cities are changed significantly in the la
	st decade\, and surely will again after the war ends.\n\nSponsored by th
	e College of the Liberal Arts\n\nMeeting ID: 325 783 1800\n\nFor more de
	tails: https://events.la.psu.edu/event/svitlana-shlipchenko/
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<html><head></head><body><p><b>&ldquo;Liber
	ated Histories and Imperial Afterlives: The Changing Faces of Ukraine&rs
	quo;s Cities&rdquo;</b></p><p><b>Svitlana Shlipchenko</b>, Senior Resear
	cher, National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine and Director, Center for U
	rban Studies in Kyiv</p><p>Svitlana Shlipchenko is one of Ukraine&rsquo;
	s foremost experts in architecture and urban planning. She has written e
	xtensively on the use of public space in the USSR, on Ukraine&rsquo;s ef
	forts to desovietize its cities and monuments, and on architectural cult
	ural preservation.</p><p>Empires are rarely content to seize the future 
	of colonized peoples. They also seek to conquer their past. When identit
	y and heritage become targets, architectural history becomes one of many
	 battlefields. The process of recovering local identities in a post-colo
	nial condition is complicated by the historical traces of empires that o
	ften remain, and at times become interwoven with a place and its peoples
	. Ukrainian cities are changed significantly in the last decade, and sur
	ely will again after the war ends.</p><p><i>Sponsored by the College of 
	the Liberal Arts</i></p><p>Meeting ID: 325 783 1800</p><p>For more detai
	ls: <a href='https://events.la.psu.edu/event/svitlana-shlipchenko/'>http
	s://events.la.psu.edu/event/svitlana-shlipchenko/</a></p></body></html>
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