Back

Dr. Jared N. Warren

Research associate


Jared Warren studied history, Eastern European studies, and French literature in Michigan, Kansas, and Kraków. He received his PhD from New York University in 2021 with a thesis on multi-confessionalism and Polish independence between 1795 and 1865. After his doctorate, he worked as a Max Weber Postdoctoral Fellow at the European University Institute in Florence and as a research assistant in the Department of Eastern and Southeastern European History at LMU Munich between 2021 and 2024. Together with Tomasz Hen-Konarski (Institute of History of the Polish Academy of Sciences), he has been organising the online initiative Assemani Seminar for Eastern Catholic History since 2022. He has been a research associate at the Leibniz Institute of European History (IEG) in Mainz since March 2024.

  • Modern and Contemporary History of East-Central Europe
  • Multi-confessional societies; Catholicism and the Eastern Catholic Churches
  • Intellectual and cultural history and history of the natural sciences

  • In the Shadows of the Commonwealth: Catholicism, Religious Tolerance, and Nineteenth-Century Polish Independence, in: East European Politics and Society 38, no. 2 (2024), https://doi.org/10.1177/08883254231203332
  • Co-editor (with Eliza Kącka and Christian Zehnder), eds.: An Archeology of Modernity: Cyprian Norwid Revisited, in: Zeitschrift für Slavische Philologie, vol. 78, no. 2 (2022), pp. 239–334. Co-authored: Introduction, pp. 239–249.
  • Cyprian Norwid and Slavic Race Theory, in: Zeitschrift für Slavische Philologie, vol. 78, no. 2 (2022), pp. 293–214
  • Appelé à prendre la parole: Adam Mickiewicz, George Sand, and Parisian Romanticism, in: Rocznik Komparatystyczny / Comparative Yearbook: Civilized /  Barbaric? Intercultural Dialogue on Poetry, vol. 4 (2013), pp. 25–38, https://wnus.usz.edu.pl/rk/pl/issue/1182/article/18754/

Ongoing
April 2024 - March 2029
Gesellschaft

A Place for Plants: The Politics of Botanical Geography in East Central Europe, 1850–1930

This project studies the emerging science of botanical geography in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries in the Habsburg Monarchy and its successor states, bringing together approaches from cultural history, political history, and the history of science.
learn more