September 2024 Issue
In the September issue, José Vergara, Sara Karpukhin, and Hannah Brooks-Motl discuss AI-narrated audiobooks, Sarah Sokhey calls for a greater diversity of voices in post-Soviet studies, and Alex Averbuch proposes a new lens on the study of Ukraine. The Working Group on Disability Studies presents its guide on accessibility at the Convention.
ASEEES announces the results of the annual board election, the 2024 Prize Winners; the NEW pilot initiative Managing Mid-Career Milestones, and key updates on the 56h Annual Convention.
Articles in This Issue
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September 16, 2024
The Value of More Voices: Frameworks and Resources for Studying Ukraine After 2022
The full-scale invasion of Ukraine on February 24, 2022 renewed calls to diversify post-Soviet studies. In the field of political science, there has also been renewed attention to studying Ukraine. […]
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September 16, 2024
Speak, AI: A Conversation about Publishing, AI-Narrated Audiobooks, and Vladimir Nabokov
José Vergara: For all his iconoclastic views, Vladimir Nabokov, at heart, believed in human connection and collaboration. As Sara Karpukhin points out using a moment from the novel Pnin, individual […]
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September 16, 2024
Expanding Ukrainian Studies through Contemporary Relevance: Photographs of Ukrainian Forced Laborers in Nazi Germany
Over the past two years, Ukrainian studies has not only gained popularity as a subject of research and teaching, but also emerged as a methodological focal point for practical and […]