15.11.2024 Events, History, News, Visual arts

International Conference: European Political Refugees in the UK from 1800 – “How Bitter the Savour is of Other’s Bread?”

The Polish Cultural Institute in London is proud to be among the sponsors of this engaging 1-day conference on the rich and surprising stories of European exiles in Britain, which will feature a talk on avant-garde Polish artist Franciszka Themerson by Art Critic and Curator Jasia Reichardt.

15th November, 10am – 5pm, Pigott Theatre, Knowledge Centre at the British Library, London

This exciting one-day in-person event will explore the rich history of political refugees from Europe who sought asylum in the UK from the 19th century onwards.

International academics, scholars, and curators will investigate how European diaspora communities have woven themselves into the fabric of British society, fostering intercultural exchange and contributing to the shaping of modern Britain.

The conference is organised by the European Collections section of the British Library in partnership with the European Union National Institutes of Culture (EUNIC) London. It will be accompanied by the exhibition ‘Music, Migration, and Mobility: The Story of Émigré Musicians from Nazi Europe in Britain’ and by events run by the conference partners.

The event is open to all and attendance is free, but registration is required.

Booking details can be found here:

The British Library – European political refugees in the UK from 1800 Tickets | Friday 15 November 2024, from 10am (seetickets.com)

10:00 Welcome


10:05 Session 1: Artists

Moderator: Olga Topol, British Library

“Leaving Home” – Franciszka Themerson and Her Artistic Community in the UK, Jasia Reichardt, Art Critic and Curator

Austrian Musicians and Writers in Exile in the 1930s and 1940s, Oliver Rathkolb, University of Vienna On the Rock of Exiles: Victor Hugo in the Channel Islands, Bradley Stephens, University of Bristol

Music, Migration & Mobility, The Story of Émigré Musicians from Nazi Europe in Britain, Norbert Meyn, Royal College of Music, London

12:00 The stone that spoke screening

Introduction by Gail Borrow, ExploreTheArch arts facilitated by EUNIC London;

12:15 Lunch

13:00 Session 2: Governments in Exile
Moderator: Valentina Mirabella, British Library

London Exile of the Yugoslav Government during the Second World War and its Internal Problems,

Milan Sovilj, Institute of History of the Czech Academy of Sciences, Prague

The Spanish Republican Exile in Great Britain: General Characteristics and the case of Roberto Gerhard,

Mari Paz Balibrea, Birkbeck, University of London

Fascism and anti-fascism in London’s ‘Little Italy’ and Giacomo Matteotti’s secret visit to London in 1924,

Alfio Bernabei, Historian and Author


14:30 Break

14:45 Session 3: Building Communities

Moderator: Katya Rogatchevskaia, British Library

Tefcros Anthias: poet, writer, activist, and public intellectual in Cyprus and the Cypriot Community in London, Floya Anthias, University of Roehampton, London

UniversityJewish emigration from Lithuanian territory to the UK via South Africa, Dovile Cypaite, Vilna Gaon Museum of Jewish History, Vilnius University

Political migration from Hungary, 1918-1956, Thomas Lorman, UCL’s School of Slavonic and East European Studies, London

16:15 Break

16:30 – 17:00 Session 4: Writing Diaspora

Moderator: Anthony Chapman-Joy, Royal Holloway, University of London/British Library

Newspapers published by 19th-century German political exiles in England, Susan Reed, British Library Clandestine WWII pamphlets, Marja Kingma, British Library

Register for your FREE place here:

The British Library – European political refugees in the UK from 1800 Tickets | Friday 15 November 2024, from 10am (seetickets.com)

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