månadsarkiv: juli 2022

CFA: European Ethnology and Baltic, Central and Eastern European Studies: Where do we come from and where are we going?

Call for abstracts:

Panel at the CBEES Annual Conference, Södertörn University: Where are we now? Perspectives on East European Area Studies today

1-2 December 2022, Stockholm, Sweden

DEADLINE for abstract 22 August 2022

Panel description:

European Ethnology and Baltic, Central and Eastern European Studies: Where do we come from and where are we going?

The discipline of Ethnology has, for as long as it has existed, been inextricably intertwined with national and regional politics. In the wake of romantic nationalism, its role in documenting, analysing and even reconstructing ‘authentic’ national culture was seen as essential. Already from its ‘founding period’ in the first half of the 20th century, however, international connections were central for establishing European Ethnology as a scholarly discipline, not least with regards to formulating common scientific theories, central concepts, and scientific ways of working. Before the Second World War and during the Cold War, international cooperation was also significant for maintaining scholarly work, despite political limitations posed by dictatorships.

For a few decades now, ethnological knowledge about the region has been produced against the geopolitical backdrop of the end of the Cold War, often labelling it post-socialist (e.g. Burawoy 2000; Chari & Verdery 2009; Hann, Humphrey & Verdery 2003). Ethnographic thick descriptions and the focus on everyday culture were regarded the discipline’s advantages in order to capture the real-life consequences of the economic transformation, compared to quantitative and macro-approaches. More recently the conceptualisation of the region as postsocialist has been criticised for, among other things, reproducing the epistemic hegemony of the West, for orientalising the region, for its inherent connection to the economic transformation, and for situating very different societies in the past and exaggerating the impact a common socialist past has had on the region (e.g. Cervinkova 2012; Müller, 2019).

Against this background, and considering the vast geopolitical changes and crises Europe is undergoing – including the massive impact of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and the ongoing war – this panel seeks to explore the changing face of European Ethnology, paying particular attention to geopolitical context, both historically and in the present – and to discuss its future. A central question of the panel is how ethnological knowledge is produced and how this knowledge production is related to the political frameworks and to the current geopolitical ‘backdrop’. With what can European Ethnology contribute to increase the knowledge and understanding of the consequences of current political polarisations, multiple crises and ongoing war in Europe? After February 24: How can we continue to work together scholarly if we are once again politically divided – and what can we learn from the discipline’s past about the conditions for, and advantages and potential pitfalls of such collaborations?

We welcome papers on topics such as:

  • Collaboration, exchanges, and power relations in the region and in academia beyond Cold War geographical imaginaries and the West-East axis
  • Critical interventions on the usage of postsocialism in ethnographic theory and applied research
  • Critical examinations of – and power relations connected to – the way scholars conceptualise the region
  • New ways of defining and conceptualising the region, in particular related to ethnographic Area Studies
  • Discussions on the past and future relationship between European Ethnology and Area Studies, considering current geopolitical events
  • Discussions on current and future impact of European Ethnology and ethnographic Area Studies post-24 February 2022

Conveners:

Associate Professor Petra Garberding (Department of Historical and Contemporary Studies, Södertörn University)

Professor Jenny Gunnarsson Payne (Department of Historical and Contemporary Studies, Södertörn University)

Dr. Florence Frölich (Department of Historical and Contemporary Studies, Södertörn University)

PhD-student Aleksandra Reczuch (Department of Historical and Contemporary Studies, Södertörn University)

 

We welcome contributions that address one or more of the themes outlined above.

The proposals should include the title of the paper, an abstract (max. 400 words), and a short bio of the author(s) including the contact details (name, email address, affiliation). Please send your proposal to jenny.gunnarsson.payne(at)sh.se by 22 August 2022. The accepted proposals will be announced by 27 August 2022.

Glad sommar!

I och med att det är semestertider kommer sidan inte att uppdateras i samma takt som den vanligtvis gör.  Ni får ändå gärna  skicka in förslag och information till mailadressen etnofolk@abo.fi, så återkommer vi till er och uppdaterar vi sidan så fort vi är tillbaka efter sommarpausen i augusti.

Vi på Etnologi och folkloristik i Norden önskar er alla en riktigt glad sommar!

 

Because of vacation time there will be less updates on this page than normally. You can still send in your suggestions and information to the email etnofolk@abo.fi, and we will get back to you and update the page in August.

We at Ethnology and folkloristics in the Nordic countries wish you all a very happy summer!

QUEERDOM: Researching queer domesticities and intimacies in Norway 1842–1972

The research project QUEERDOM will investigate how women and men with same-sex desires – about whom we use the term ‘queer’ – lived and organized their everyday lives across a complex domestic terrain in ways that unsettles customary understandings of private life and family organization in modern Norway (1842–1972). These ‘queer domesticities’ will be investigated through the intersecting lenses of time, space, class, and gender.

One of our central hypothesis is that it was not until after WWII that Norway became truly immersed in the increasingly universal modern discourse on ‘sexuality’.

QUEERDOM shifts the focus of queer historical research firmly from the global metropolises to rural regions of Europe, from the cities to the rural districts, from the courtrooms and asylums to the mundane and everyday, and from activism to domesticity and intimacy. The project will highlight the changing dynamics of societal norms and expectations, change and stability, processes of exclusion as well as of inclusion through the period 1842–1972.

Read more about the research project here.