Seminar: “Winning Women’s Hearts and Minds: Selling Cold War Culture in the US and the USSR” by Diana Cucuz

Author
Diana Cucuz holds a PhD in history from York University (Canada) and specializes in American, women’s and cultural history, and the intersections of foreign and domestic policy with society and culture. Her research focuses on the ways in which the U.S. government and media politicized women, traditional gender roles, and consumer culture during the early Cold War. Dr. Cucuz teaches at Toronto Metropolitan University, the University of Toronto, and The Life Institute in the areas of 20th-century American foreign, social, and cultural policy.
Discussant
Katarzyna Stańczak-Wiślicz is an assistant professor at the Institute of Literary Research of the Polish Academy of Sciences and a member of the Committee of Women’s History (a section of The Polish National Historical Committe). She has a doctorate in literary studies and an M.A. in history. Her interests range from gender and women’s history in post-war Poland to the history of popular culture and popular discourse analysis. She is the author of the book Real-life Stories. Confession Narratives in Polish Popular Women’s Magazines in XX century (Warsaw 2010), and co-author (with Małgorzata Fidelis, Barbara Klich-Kluczewska and Piotr Perkowski) of a monograph “Women in Poland 1945-1989. Modernization, Equality, Communism”/ Kobiety w Polsce 1945-1989. Nowoczesność, równouprawnienie, komunizm, Warszawa 2020). She is currently working on a personal narratives written in Poland during the crisis of the 1980s.
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