Guest lectures and seminars - Page 2
Bernhard Hollick (IAKH, UiO)
Synnøve des Bouvrie (professor emerita, UiT Norges arktiske universitet)
Anastasia Maravela (Universitetet i Oslo) - Már Jónsson (Háskóli Íslands)
Gender Expansive Philosophy (GEP) invites all philosophy students and staff to a seminar!
In this lecture, Fred Moten (New York University) will discuss the question of observation in the context of violence and mourning.
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.
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.
Philosophical Seminar with Kristin Gjesdal
Philosophical Seminar with Endre Begby (Simon Fraser University)
In this talk, Stuart Earle Strange, assistant professor of anthropology at Yale-NUS College, Singapore, will explore the contradictions between law, sovereignty, animal agency, and the sacred in Singaporean wildlife conservation.
Erlend Myklebust (University of Oslo)
In the fourth and last Welcome to the Anthropocene lecture, Dr. Stephanie Roe, a WWF’s Global Climate & Energy Lead Scientist, will discuss the technical, economic, political, and social approaches for mitigating climate change and other key challenges of the Anthropocene.
Christopher Siwicki (The Norwegian Institute in Rome)
In this talk, professor of philosophy, Alejandra Mancilla, asks who should be the political representatives in a place with no human inhabitants, namely, Antarctica. While the Antarctic Treaty has been celebrated as a successful legal instrument for the protection of the continent, some have criticized its elitist nature and demanded a more democratic system of governance. But, should only humans be part of this arrangement? Why not penguins and maybe icebergs too?
Giuliano Sidro (Center for the Tebtunis Papyri, UC Berkeley)
Valentina Orrù (University of Pavia)
Isak Hærem (University of Oslo)
Book launch for Temporal Experiments: Seven Ways of Configuring Time in Art and Literature (eds. Bruce Barnhart and Marit Grøtta).
Nikoletta Kanavou (National and Kapodistrian University of Athens)
The third Welcome to the Anthropocene lecture will be given by Jason Allen-Paisant, Senior Lecturer in Critical Theory and Creative Writing, and will address the challenge of a just ecological transition by exploring how ideas and praxes of ‘cultivation’ might foster an awareness of deep time in mainstream political consciousness.
David Grimaldi (University of Oslo)
In this DynamiTE lunchtime seminar, Teea Kortetmäki will be presenting her paper on ‘Cohabitability and land use’.