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Tidligere arrangementer - Side 4

Tid og sted: , Auditorium 2, Georg Sverdrups hus

The Department for Archaeology, Conservation and History (IAKH) cordially invites you to its first Digital Humanities Day, which will take place on 14 September 2023. This event will bring together a range of experts in the Digital Humanities to discuss the possibilities of using digital tools for historical research. Registration below.

Tid og sted: , Seminarrom 1, Blindernveien 11

Arkeologisk seminar med Dr. Lisbeth Skogstrand, forsker på prosjektet Gendering the Nordic Past ved IAKH

Tid og sted: , Room 3, Georg Sverdrups hus, Blindern campus

These papers explore examples of environmental storytelling, and asks what environmental storytelling can do. How does such initiatives tap into our imaginaries, or offer re-imaginations?

Tid og sted: , Room 1, Georg Sverdrups hus, Blindern campus

This panel approaches interdisciplinarity from a broad range of perspectives, including environmental governance,  climate politics, botanics, cybernetics, and science history. Are there commonalities in how we engage interdisciplinarity, and how do we consider its methodological challenges?

Tid og sted: , Room 2, Georg Sverdrups hus, Blindern campus

This panel will address long-term aspects of interactions between ecological and material foundations of societies, forms of biological and cultural coexistence, and the interdependence of people and the non-human world, specifically in the shores and oceans of the world, through the lens of the arts and the humanities, aiming at pluralizing and un-disciplining the established paradigms of marine science and conservation.

Tid og sted: , Room 2, Georg Sverdrups hus, Blindern campus

In this panel we ask, how to read science through fiction, and can such readings provide us a way to understand the relationship between literature and environment?

Tid og sted: , Room 3, Georg Sverdrups hus, Blindern campus 

In this panel, six doctoral scholars from varied disciplines present their research and discuss how generating oceanic knowledge for action requires transdisciplinary engagement.

Tid og sted: , Auditorium 2, Georg Sverdrups hus

What are some of the potentials and pitfalls of transdisciplinary research? In this keynote lecture Kate Rigby will be drawing on her own more recent experience of the kinds of synergies, surprises and snags that might be encountered along the way, and the sorts of virtues that need to be cultivated to facilitate positive outcomes.

Tid og sted: , Room 1, Georg Sverdrups hus, Blindern campus

In this session, we invite participants working across environmental humanities and other disciplines to reflect on their experiences of ‘soiling’ different areas of research. What happens when soils are brought into the research arena as agential, as consequential? How can healthy soil become not only a metaphor but a driver for transdisciplinary action for social change?

Tid og sted: , Sogndal

How to write a high-quality PhD dissertation in history? In small groups, students present and discuss their own PhD writing with peers and faculty. This workshop is held in conjunction with the Norwegian History Days 2023.

Tid og sted: , Room 3, Georg Sverdrups hus, Blindern campus

Academics are looking for possible combinations of methodological interventions which could be helpful in devising solutions and strategies for survival and healing in the global environmental crisis. In this panel the researchers will share their paths towards combining, extending and shifting their research methods. Through the discussion, the presenters of the panel are looking for new methodological possibilities for facing the unknown known.

Tid og sted: , Room 2, Georg Sverdrups hus, Blindern campus

This panel brings together junior researchers working in different parts of the globe and on diverse maritime issues, with the aim to discuss new interactions and underappreciated entanglements between humans and non-human inhabitants of the ocean.

Tid og sted: , Foredragssalen, 3rd floor, Museum of Culture History

In this keynote by Dolly Jørgensen, she argues for the need to recognize and discuss three different types of transdisciplinary research in the humanities: the many, the one, and the collective.

Tid og sted: , Seminar room, St Olavs gate 29

This panel explores how transdisciplinary artistic practice, history and theory can contribute to the environmental humanities through aesthetic modes of visualization of planetary information. What is the visual art’s role and contribution to new perspectives for the environmental humanities?

Tid og sted: , Foredragssalen, 3rd floor, Museum of Culture History

What is an artistic intervention in environmental humanities? What can art offer as a site for exploration? In this panel, performative artists, museologists and film makers discuss uses of art, objects, and the making of an issue.

Tid og sted: , Kilden, 2nd floor, Museum of Culture History

Plants co-shape the places in which they dwell, and the lives and desires of those dependent upon them. This panel discusses literary explorations of cultural, material, and spiritual human-plant relations in localities within Japan, Scandinavia, and Australia.

Tid:

Come and join us on 6 & 7 September for a NoRS-EH Symposium on "Transdisciplinary in the Environmental Humanities"! 

Tid og sted: , Møterom 1116 Niels Treschows hus

Workshop with guest researcher Dr Joana van de Löcht (University of Freiburg) and Dr Ada Arendt (University of Oslo) welcomes students wishing to engage with Early Modern literary sources to study past human-environment entanglements.

Tid og sted: , Oslo Botanical Gardens & The University of Oslo

In this PhD Course, hosted and organised by members of the Oslo School of Environmental Humanities (OSEH) as part of the Norwegian Researcher School in Environmental Humanities (NoRS-EH), we will explore key contemporary questions around plants that are arising in the field.

Tid og sted: , Historisk museum

This artist’s talk focuses on how humans and animals are connected, as well as how such connections may affect societies in different, and perhaps surprising ways. At this event, artist Sakura Koretsune will be talking with anthropologist Marius Palz about different encounters between humans and animals in their work in Japan and in Norway.

Tid og sted: , Møteroom 424, NT 4.floor

A talk by guest researcher Joana van de Löcht about weather perception in various literary genres at the beginning of early modern print production.

Tid og sted: , Zoom (University of Agder)

What is a high-quality peer review in a historical journal? How do we write one, and how do we work with peer review reports when improving our article manuscripts? This PhD workshop will be held digitally on Zoom. Course credits: 1 ECTS

Tid og sted: , Georg Sverdups hus, Auditorium 2

In the aftermath of the Chernobyl explosion, a great divergence appeared between the medical opinions of the East and West on the long-term consequences on public health. In this keynote lecture, Kate Brown, Professor in the History of Science at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, gives us insight on what these conflicting stories can tell us about how Western and Soviet scientists understood humans and the ecologies in which they lived.

Tid og sted: , Georg Sverdrups hus, UiO

Come join us on 1-2 June for the workshop "Ecologies of Health and Disease in Eurasia: New Perspectives in the Medical-Environmental Humanities and History".

Tid og sted: , Eilert Sundts hus, Auditorium 5

This lecture has unfortunately been cancelled. 

What would it mean to tell the stories of trees? How can we represent them in ways that do not rely on problematic forms of ventriloquism, which reinscribe inequalities, and which do not rely on various forms of empathy or sympathy? This talk by Dalia Nassar, Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of Sydney, aims to outline a theory of representation that aims to respond to these questions in relation to trees.