Kategoriarkiv: Föreläsningar

Gjesteforelesning: Forestillinger om New Englands fortid – Ved Shelburne friluftsmuseum i USA

Det kulturhistoriske leseseminaret ved Norsk Folkemuseum har gleden av å invitere til en åpen gjesteforelesning med John F. Moe.
Tid: Tirsdag 19. September 10.15–11.00 UTC+2
Sted: Auditoriet i Collett-bygningen på Norsk Folkemuseum
Påmelding til: audun.kjus(@)norskfolkemuseum.no

Forelesningen er på engelskShelburne museum er bygget opp rundt 25 historiske bygninger som er flyttet til et stort friluftsområde ca. ti minutter sør for Burlington i New England. Forelesningen handler om hvordan dette museet tolker og presenterer historiske, fysiske gjenstander og drøfter museets rolle i formidlingen av New Englands fortid.

John F. Moe er koordinator for museumsseksjonen til American Folklore Society. Han har undervist i litteratur og folkloristikk ved Ohio State Univeristy siden 1981 og har publisert en rekke tekster om kulturhistoriske tema. Den nyeste utgivelsen hans handler om den amerikanske diskusjonen om borgerkrigsstatuer og rasisme og bærer tittelen: “Ritual, myth and play in anti-racist protest demonstrations”

Third Annual Lecture in European Ethnology: Cultural Anthropological Perspectives on Europe

The third annual lecture in European ethnology will be held on Wednesday 16 November from 19:00-21:00  UTC+02. This is a hybrid event. If you would like to participate online, please contact Elisabeth Wolff at e.wolff(@)stud.uni-goettingen.de

About the lecture from the facebook page:

”The Third Annual Lecture in European Ethnology in Goettingen will be delivered by Professor Marie Sandberg with the title “With a view to temporary stay.” An ethnological perspective on Europe’s politics of exception after the “return turn”.

The significant “return turn” (Schultz 2020) of the Global North has replaced re-settlement and integration as core immigration values, resulting in prolonged uncertainty and intensified deterrence measures (DeGenova 2013). After the 2015 European refugee reception crisis, Denmark, for instance, announced a so-called Paradigm shift away from integration of newcomers and towards a focus on self-reliance and return policies. Hence, since 2019 all residence permits are issued “with a view to temporary stay” as the blanket approach for all refugees, regardless of protection status (Tan 2021). Based on preliminary research insights from the collaborative research-practice project “Boundary work. New interfaces between state and civil society: Volunteerism and refugees in a self-support and repatriation context”, I will focus on everyday life consequences of the permanent temporariness for both refugees and civil society volunteers. With inspiration from Georgina Ramsay’s (2020) critique of exceptionalizing displacement through the lens of “crisis”, I will discuss how we can make the European politics of exception into ethnological inquiry without reproducing logics of difference and othering. Further, I will reflect on what effect the enhanced deterrence measures might have on the future of Europe.

Marie Sandberg is Associate Professor, PhD, in European Ethnology, and the Director of the Centre for Advanced Migration Studies (AMIS) at the University of Copenhagen. Since 2021, she serves as the President for the International Society for Ethnology and Folklore (SIEF). Marie Sandberg was the joint editor-in-chief of Ethnologia Europaea – Journal of European Ethnology 2013–2020. As PI and co-PI she has a record of managing a range of research projects and networks. She has worked systematically with integrating teaching and research. Her publications have appeared in journals such as Journal of European Studies and Identities. She has held Visiting Scholar positions at the University of British Columbia and Radboud University, and she has been a Senior Fellow at University of Zürich. Marie Sandberg is engaged in discussions within international as well as Nordic fields of migration and border studies covering a research expertise in European borders, civil society initiatives and migration practices. She has conducted ethnographic studies of the ways borders in/of everyday life are continuously negotiated, overcome, and rebuilt in interactions such as volunteer work in support of refugees coming to Europe during the 2015 “refugee crisis”.

“Boundary work. New interfaces between state and civil society: Volunteerism and refugees in a self-support and repatriation context” is developed in collaboration with the Danish Red Cross, Danish Refugee Council (DRC), University College Absalon, and the Centre for Advanced Migration Studies (AMIS), University of Copenhagen. The project is funded by the VELUX Foundations 2021‒2024, and led by Marie Sandberg.”

ISFNR online lectures

The international Society for Folk Narrative Research organizes free online lectures every month. There are two different lecture series, the ISFNR Lecture Series Voices from around the Globe and the ISFNR Belief Narrative Network Online Lectures. These lectures are freely available on their website for anyone that is interested.

Some information about the lectures from the website:

About Voices from Around the Globe:

”The International Society for Folk Narrative Research is pleased to announce the start of a new lecture series entitled The ISFNR Lecture Series: Voices from Around the Globe, which will be open to not only our global network of international folk narrative scholars but also the general public. The lectures will take place online at 5 pm UTC, on the third Friday of every alternate month, beginning April 15, 2022, each of them coordinated by a member of the Executive Committee of the Society. The plan is for the Vice Presidents of the ISFNR to invite particular members of the Society (and other scholars to present their research in any language in which they wish to speak (bearing in mind the need to communicate to an international audience). The papers not presented in English will be made available in English translation.”

Previous lectures can be watched here.

About The ISFNR Belief Narrative Network Online Lectures:

”The  ISFNR Belief Narrative Network Online Lectures deal with folk beliefs of all kinds, and the narratives that are used to pass them on. The idea is that in the first week of each month, various international scholars present pre-recorded lectures on the subject of their choice which will later go on to be freely available on the ISFNR web site to anyone who wishes to make use of them as part of their research or in their teaching. The initial on-line showing is  nonetheless always followed by a half an hour live on-line zoom meeting in which those who attend will be able to ask the speaker questions.

The lectures take place on the first Friday of each month at 17.00 Central European time, except during the summer months of July and August. ”

Previous lectures can be watched here.

Humlab Talk: Which histories reside in the study of web archives?

Humlab talk: Richard Rogers, University of Amsterdam

When? Thursday June 2nd 2022, 15:15-17:00 CET/UCT +1
Where? On zoom – registration required

Read more and register here.

The talks discusses how different historiographical ways of thinking are embedded in the four dominant approaches to web archiving to date: single-site, events, national and the self. It also discusses approaches that critique but also enliven each historiography. Special attention is given to the tension between the single-site (‘everything’) tradition of the Internet Archive and the national library turn, especially how the past web has become enfolded into the traditions of archival culture and ’old media’, while it still may seek to maintain itself as exceptional, or as novel digital culture. In exploring this tension, the talk examines how particular ideas of how the web is constituted, novel or less so, have effected its capture and recording and will affect its study.

Public lecture: Migrantour – Intercultural urban routes

Migrantour – Intercultural urban routes
Speaker: Nadine T. Fernandez

Dear all,
We are delighted to invite you to a public lecture with professor Nadine T. Fernandez.

Date: Tuesday 17 May 2022
Time: 10-12 am
Location: Hörsal (Lecture hall) 11, house F, Södra husen, Campus Frescati,
Stockholm, Sweden

This is a public event so please feel free to share this invitation widely.

Nadine T. Fernandez is a professor in Cultural Anthropology at State University of New York, Empire State College. Her research investigates gender, race, sexuality and couple relationships in relation to transnational mobility, tourism and national migration policy. The book Revolutionizing Romance (2010) analyzes younger ”interracial couples” in 1990s post-Soviet Cuba. Intimate Mobilities: Sexual Economies, Marriage and Migration in a Disparate World (2018), which Fernandez co-edited with Christian Groes (Roskilde University, Denmark), deals with transnational mobility and couple relationships across national borders. Fernandez’s own contribution to the book is about Cuban men in Scandinavia. She is involved in a European project at the intersection of migration, heritage and tourism, called Migrantours. And she is also working on a book project on gender in a global perspective, how gender and gender issues must be contextualized and understood in relation to specific places.

More information about Migrantours: http://www.mygrantour.org/en/

Kind regards,

Magnus Öhlander