Fellowship at Warsaw University, 2025

Queer Epistemes in State-Socialist East Central Europe: A Comparative Analysis of Cultural Policy and Representation in Hungary, Czechoslovakia, and Poland

The primary aim of Katalin Benedek's fellowship at Warsaw University is to expand upon her ongoing research and develop her forthcoming studies, focusing on a transnational understanding of queer epistemes within the state-socialist East Central European politico-cultural fields, specifically through Hungarian, Czechoslovak, and Polish contexts

During her fellowship, Katalin Benedek will build upon her recently defended dissertation at the Freie Universität Berlin, particularly its second chapter titled "Queer Lives and Queer Cultural Representation in the Hungarian People’s Republic: Deconstructing the Imagined Censorship - Queer Matter in the Kádár-era (1956-1989/90)." This research will be further enriched with insights gained from her recent two month research residency in the Czech Republic, and now, she will incorporate relevant Polish aspects and cases.

Katalin Benedek’s 8-week Fellowship Activities in Warsaw will include:

  1. Drafting a Comparative Research Paper: Queer Epistemes in State-Socialist East Central Europe: A Comparative Analysis of Cultural Policy and Representation in Hungary, Czechoslovakia, and Poland

    • Writing up a comprehensive comparative paper that combines her original chapter with her new findings from the Czech Republic and  Poland, to be reviewed and refined with input from the  colleagues of the Art History Department at the University of Warsaw: Prof. Dr. Hab. Agata Jakubowska and Dr. Wojciech Szymański.

  2. Exploring Late Socialist Polish Art and Culture:

    • Conducting library research and visiting key collections, including national art collections and queer-specific archives such as the Lambda Archives, Karol Radziszewski's Queer Archives Institute, and Pismo Widok.

    • Gaining insight into the trends, actors, and operational structures within the broader cultural field of late socialist Poland.

  3. Examining Cultural Policy and Censorship:

    • Focusing on the correlation between cultural policy, censorship structures, and queer themes and imagery in arts and culture of the state socialist time.

  4. Research at the National Film Archives (FINA):

    • Conducting quantitative research on film releases during the late socialist period to compile a credible data set for comparison with Hungarian and Czechslovak databases on queer films screened during the same era.

  5. Engaging with Scholarly and Public Narratives:

    • Meetings and consultations with prominent figures, including faculty members of the Art History Institute of the University of Warsaw.

    • Collaborating with scholars and activists across institutions

  6. Presentation of Research Findings:

    • At the conclusion of her residency, Katalin Benedek will present her research findings in a special lecture at the faculty, providing an opportunity for academic exchange and discussion.


Public presentation: Deconstructing the Imagined Queer Censorships in the State Socialist East-Central European Cultural Fields. The Hungarian Case and How to Move Forward?

Proving non-existence is challenging, especially when the supposed existence of the entity isn't explicitly asserted but merely believed, and the belief can only be deduced from the questions and conclusions drawn on it. In such cases, it is insufficient to simply find the rare instances where the belief was explicitly stated; instead, we must identify patterns in the practical manifestations of the belief to make it visible. Such an example is the alleged politico-ideologically motivated censorship of queer representation under state-socialist regimes that enables us to think about queer cultural visibility as a part of a complex means of discourse.
While no evidence supports the socialist queer censorship, there is no comprehensive argument to the contrary has been published either. In my research, I attempt to systematically challenge the notion of state socialism as a period of systematic queer censorship through the example of the post-Stalinist Hungarian People's Republic. Using transdisciplinary mixed-methods research, I focus on finding eligible empirical evidence to establish a new premise: some state socialist countries did not censor or hinder queer content from their public sphere but actively supported it. What then? How do we move forward if it is true?
28 października 2024 (poniedziałek), godz. 17.00
Instytut Historii Sztuki UW
ul. Krakowskie Przedmieście 26/28
Tzw. gmach porektorski, sala 010
Prowadzący: dr hab. Marcin Lachowski prof. ucz, prof. dr hab. Agata Jakubowska



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