Avdelningen för xxx - hum.gu.sePublication: Backward-looking Society, 1999); Presentation IPSA...
Transcript of Avdelningen för xxx - hum.gu.sePublication: Backward-looking Society, 1999); Presentation IPSA...
Humanistiska fakulteten
Box 200, SE 405 30 Göteborg
031 786 0000, 031 786 1144 (fax)
www.hum.gu.se
FÖRSLAG TILL BESLUT 1 / 1
2010-05-17 dnr E 5 1040/10
Humanistiska fakultetskansliet
Eva Englund
Humanistiska fakultetsnämnden
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Humanistiska fakulteten
Box 200, SE 405 30 Göteborg
031 786 0000, 031 786 1144 (fax)
www.hum.gu.se
INBJUDAN 1 / 1
2010-03-15 dnr E 5 1040/10
Humanistiska fakultetskansliet
Eva Englund
Prefekter
Viceprefekter för forskning
Inbjudan av internationella gästforskare Rektor har beslutat tillföra humanistiska fakultetsnämnden 4,5 miljoner kronor som en engångssatsning för ett internationellt gästforskarprogram i syfte att stärka och utveckla internationaliseringen vid universitetets forskningsmiljöer. Förmågan att attrahera internationella gästforskare är en viktig kvalitetsparameter, eftersom dessa tillför kvalificerade kunskaper och kompetens av betydelse för forskningen och utbildningen inom Göteborgs universitet. Humanistiska fakultetens institutioner bereds härmed tillfälle att nominera internationella forskare, gärna från lärosäten med vilka vi har samarbetsavtal. Forskarens forskning skall vara tvärvetenskaplig och intressant för flera av fakultetens institutioner. Forskarens kan anställas för en kortare eller längre tid. Anställningen skall dock vara avslutad 2011-12-31 då medlen skall redovisas i samband med återrapporteringen inför årsredovisningen för 2011. Förslagen skall förutom motivering innehålla CV för den nominerade, anställningstid, löneförslag och en aktivitetsplan. Aktivitetsplanen skall innehålla de aktiviteter som planeras under forskarens vistelse t.ex. fakultetsgemensam forskarutbildningskurs, seminarieserie, workshops m.m. Ärendet kommer att beredas i Forskningsgruppen och tas upp som beslutsärende i fakultetsnämnden den 27 maj 2010. Nomineringar skickas till [email protected] senast den 30 april. För Forskningsgruppen Lars Borin
Mihaela Miroiu
Institutionen för filosofi, lingvistik och vetenskapsteori
Box 200, SE 405 30 Göteborg
031 786 0000, 031 786 4945 (fax)
www.flov.gu.se
PROPOSAL 1 / 2
2010-04-28
Jan Lif
Head of Department
HFN
Proposal to invite guest researcher
Name and affiliation of the proposed guest: Mihaela Miroiu, Professor at the National School of
Political Studies and Public Administration (CV attached).
Website: http://www.mihaela.miroiu.snspa.ro/
Proposed dates and duration of stay: May 2011 (one month).
Motivation
Professor Miroiu has a background in philosophy (mainly), political science and sociology. She is
the initiator of gender studies in Romania (within a department of philosophy, and subsequently in
political science), as well of the first PhD programme in political science. She is also one of the
most prominent researchers in Eastern Europe on left conservatism, and the initiator of the first
“philosophy for children” programme in Romania. She is, in addition, an admirer of Scandinavian
culture.
Past and current collaboration with the proposed guest
Dr. Daniela Cutas at our Department have worked with Professor Miroiu while they were
colleagues at the NSPSPA. They taught Political Ethics together, and worked on a project on
ethics in the Romanian academia, within which they undertook empirical research in the
universities, and, based on the results, wrote a code of ethics which the universities could adopt
and adapt, or use as a model for creating their own codes. Stemming from this collaboration, Cutas
and Miroiu are currently preparing a volume on research ethics, which will include analysis of the
major values in research ethics, as well as an account of the empirical research undertaken during
the project, and of the experience of preparing and delivering the model. Professor Christian
Munthe has agreed to assist as a consultant in this work. By the time professor Miroiu would be
here, should this application be successful, Cutas and Miroiu would be in the final stages of
putting all the material together and preparing a final manuscript for the publishers.
2 / 2
Proposed activities
Research seminars in the Department of Philosophy, Linguistics and Theory of Science, 1. (shortly upon arrival) presenting herself and her research;
2. two more lectures/seminars on philosophy, gender and education, with an open invitation to students and researchers/teachers from the faculty.
Presentation in the Filosofiska Föreningen: Convenience: An attempt to reconciliate between
justice and care and between reason and empathy in moral philosophy.
Proposals for the Department of Political Science: a. Elections as an end in itself. On electoralist democracy and populism in
Eastern Europe b. Understanding ideologies in post-communism: left wing conservatism and
populism c. Beyond Angels and Devils: Ethics in politics after communism (the Romanian
case)
Daniela Cutas have already been in contact with the Department of Political Science, and they
confirmed their interest in collaborating with professor Miroiu during her stay in Gothenburg (see
attached email exchange).
Proposals for the Secretariat for Gender Research: a. Room-service feminism or the uneasy way to incorporate an equal
opportunities agenda without a second wave feminist political movement in Eastern Europe
b. Feminism as a road towards women’s autonomy: a political philosophy approach (alternatively to be presented in the Department of Philosophy, Linguistics and Theory of Science)
Professor Miroiu has declared her openness to collaborate with other departments as well, or to be
involved in other activities in the host department, should other opportunities arise (e.g.
workshops, courses, conferences to which she could contribute). If this proposal is accepted, as the
date of arrival approaches, her CV will be distributed among colleagues with similar interests,
both from our and other departments, with an invitation to suggestions for other activities.
Mihaela Miroiu Professor of Political Science, Political Science Faculty, National School of Political Studies and Public Administration (NSPSA), Bucharest, Romania
Date and place of birth: March 10, 1955, Hunedoara, Romania Address: Faculty: Povernei Street, 6-8, Sector 1
Bucharest, Romania Tel: 402 1320 10 42 Fax 402 1 650 62 29 www.snspa.ro; www.politice.ro
E-mail: [email protected]; [email protected] Academic education
PhD in Philosophy, Bucharest University, 1994 BA in Philosophy, Bucharest University, 1978
Postdoctoral studies and research grants
Visiting Fellow, Institute for Advanced Studies, Indiana University, Bloomington, March-April, 2007
Fulbright research grant, Department of Political Sciences, Indiana University, Bloomington, September, 2003 February, 2004: Conservatism and Emancipation Strategies in Contemporary Romania
St. Hilda’s College, Oxford University, September 2002 (Research): Feminist Political Theories
Institute for Advanced Studies, Indiana University, Bloomington, April 2001 (Visiting Fellow)
New Europe College, Bucharest, 1998-1999: Left conservatism Tempus: Public Policies, Warwick University, November-December-1998:
Gender and public Policies Central European University, Gender and Culture, 1995-1996: Feminist Ethics Central European University, 1994-1995: Towards a Philosophical Ecofeminism
Professional activity Current positions:
Professor, Faculty of Political Science, NSPSA, Bucharest, Political Theories (Doctoral School in Political Science), Feminist Political Theories, (MA in Gender and European Politics), Political Ethics, Gender and Politics (undergraduates)
Academic Coordinator of the MA Gender and European Politics PhD Supervisor in Political Theory Director of the Department of Academic Quality Assurance, NSPSA
Other professional positions: Dean, Political Science Faculty, NSPSA-Bucharest, from March 1997 until July
2001
Professor: Feminist Philosophy (MA Gender Studies), Feminist Political Theory (MA Gender Studies, MA Political Science), Political Ethics (undergraduates, Political Science) (since 1999)
Associate Professor (Reader) in Political Ethics, Feminist Political Theory, Feminist Philosophy, Political Science Faculty, NSPSA (1996-1999)
Associate Professor (Reader) in Philosophy, Normative Analysis, Political Ethics, Political Science Faculty, National School for Political Studies and Public Administration, Bucharest, since 1996 (NSPSA)
Associate Professor in Feminist Philosophy, Philosophy Faculty, Bucharest University, 1994-1997
Lecturer in Political Psychology and Philosophy, Political Science Faculty, National School for Political Studies and Public Administration, Bucharest, 1994-1995
Philosophy teacher, Alexandru Ioan Cuza High School, Bucharest, 1985-1994 Philosophy teacher, Nichita Stanescu High School, Bucharest, 1978- 1985
Main Contributions to: Political Science, Gender Studies and Gender Politics
I. To the Evolution of Political Science in Romania: Political Theory and Political Analysis:
The first guide for political concepts (1990) The initiation of the analysis concerning The Left Conservatism in Post communism
(Publication: Backward-looking Society, 1999); Presentation IPSA Congress, Quebec, August, 2000) International Congress of Political Science Association, 2000.
Feminist Political Theories: The concept of “room-service feminism”; a comparative approach of the theoretical frameworks of political feminism; gender politics in post-communist transition; in the volume: Drumul catre autonomie (The Road to Autonomy), 2004, and State men market women, 2004
Political Analysis: illiberal democracy as show-room democracy; the obstacles of the reconstruction of public sphere Romania. Starea de fapt (Romania: Matter of Facts) (with Vladimir Pasti si Cornel Codita.), 1997
Institutional contributions for the development of Political science in Romania:
The management and the development of the Faculty of Political Science, NSPSPA as Dean: 1997-2001
The coordination of the first PhD Program in Political Science (2000) The evaluation and the institutional development of Political Science in Romania as
expert for quality assurance CNEAA (since 1997, CNATDCU (1999-2003): the curriculum development post-Bologna (CNEAA)
The dissemination of the research within international and national congresses and conferences.
International relations within the field with Indiana University, Bloomington, USA. II. Gender Studies and Gender politics:
The initiation of Gender Studies in Romania, 1993 The first classes in Feminist Philosophy, Philosophy Faculty, Bucharest University, 1994 The first Romanian book in Feminist Philosophy Gandul umbrei (The Shadow’s
Thought), 1995 The first book on Feminist Ethics (Convenio, despre natura, femei si morala (Convenio.
On Nature, Women and Morals), 1996: convenience theory
The first book on Feminist Political Theory: Drumul catre autonomie (The Road to Autonomy), 2004
The first dictionary on the topic: Lexicon Feminist (Feminist Lexicon) 2002, as co-editor with Otilia Dragomir
The initiation of the first MA in Gender Studies in Romania, 1998 The initiation and coordination of the first collection series in Gender studies, Polirom
Publishing House, since 1999 The first Guide for Gender Equity in Higher Education in Eastern Europe, UNESCO,
2003 Participation in ATHENA European Network for Gender Studies, since 2002 Projects on Gender politics in education for the Ministry of Education and Research,
2005 III. Ethics
The first handbook on Professional ethics with Gabriela Blebea, 2001 The first course on Ethics in Politics, 1997 The coordination of the first national research on Ethics in Romanian Universities and
the Project of Ethical Code for Universities, adopted by MER, 2005 IV. Education and Educational Policies
The first program and handbook for Civic Culture in High Schools, 1995 The coordination of the reform in teaching Philosophy in High Schools, 1993 Political analysis applied to education, 1998 Analysis of Gender Politics in Education, UNESCO, 2001, 2003.
Membership:
International Association for Philosophy Teachers International Association of Political Sciences International Association of Women Philosophers ANA Society for Feminist Analysis Romanian Society of Political Sciences "FILIA", Curriculum Development Center and Gender Studies
Expert: - National Council for Academic Evaluation, Commission for Political Science,
Journalism and Public Relations, 1997-2005 - Council of Europe, Department for Education, Gender and Education, 2000-2002 - National Commission for Academic Titles in Political Science, Ministry of
Education and Research, since 2006
Courses and seminars attended abroad Cornell University, USA, January - February, 1995 (Feminist Ethics and Political
Ethics) Lodz University, Poland, July - August, 1993 (Gender Studies, Summer School) Geneva University, Swiss, September, 1992 (The Pedagogy of the Philosophers) Montclair State College, N.J. USA, June - July, 1991 (Philosophy for Children) Central European University, Dubrovnik, Croatia, June, 1990 (specialization:
Philosophy for Children)
Lectures abroad
Department of Political Science, Indiana University, Communist Feminism is a Contradictio in Terminis. Matters of principals and matter of fact, Public lecture, Bloomington, November, 24, 2008
New Europe College and Donau University, Vienna, MA Program, Intercultural Studies, “Understanding Romanian Transition and Integration”, June, 2007
University of Santander, Spain, Summer School, European Peripheries, Political Peripheries, July, 2006
Open Society Foundation, Republic of Moldavia, Gender and politics, Training session, Chisinau, Republic of Moldavia, June, 2004
University of New York, Centre of European Studies, State Men, Market Women. The Effects of Left Conservatism on Gender Policies in Romanian Transition, January 30, 2004
Department of Political Science, Indiana University, Bloomington, State Men, Market Women. The Effects of Left Conservatism on Gender Policies in Romanian Transition, January 30, 2004
Open Society Foundation, Republic of Moldavia, Gender Policies in Education, Training session, Chisinau, Republic of Moldavia, July, 2003
Open Society Foundation, Republic of Moldavia, Gender Conservatism in Mass-media, Training session, Chisinau, Republic of Moldavia, March, 2003
Department for Government and Politics, University of Maryland, The Evolution of Political Science in Romania, April, 2002
Central European University, Budapest, Cross-Border Identities in Eastern Europe, Summer School, August, 2001
Institute for Advanced Studies, Indiana University, Bloomington, The Long Way through Autonomy, Public conference, May, 2001
Warwick University: Globalization Politics: Post-Totalitarian and Post-Patriarchal Policies, Warwick, November, 1998
Manchester University: On Post-communist Conservatisms, November, 1998 Gender Studies, Central European University, Budapest, May, 1997, Feminist
Ethics (summer school) Gender and Culture, Central European University, Budapest, July, 1996
(Feminist Philosophy) (summer school) New School for Social Research, New York, February, 1995 (Feminism and
Political Theories in Eastern Europe) Gender Studies, Cornell University, February, 1995 (How to Deal with Cultural
Differences)
International congresses and conferences
American Association of Slavic Studies Conference, Ten Years After: Gender and Politics in NSPSPA, Philadelphia, November, 20-23, 2008
Department of History, Indiana University, Workshop: Gender and Citizenship, Bloomington, November, 24, 2008
European Social Science History Conference (ESSHC), University of Lisbon, Engendering Socialism (Chair), February, 26th-31, Lisbon. 2008.
Institute of Social Sciences, Lisbon, International Feminism in Historical Comparative Perspective, 19th -20th Century, "Dealing with Room Service: State Feminism when the Second Wave Political Movement is Missing", February 25, 2008
International Federation for Research in Women's History Women, Gender and the Cultural Production of Knowledge keynote speaker: Priceless Women, a
Timeless Story, St. Kliment Ohridski University of Sofia, 2007 Institute for Advanced Studies, Indiana University, Bloomington, public lecture:
“Morality in Politics and the Politics of Morality”, April, the 7th, 2007 Russian and East European Institute, Indiana University, Bloomington, Hour of
Romania, March, 2007. European Universities Association Vienna University, Educational Policies and
European Competition, March, 2006 ATHENA European Network for Gender Studies, Barcelona, Spain, workshop:
Cross research and join topics, June, 2005. Department for Russian and East-European Studies, Indiana University,
Bloomington, Studies of Post-communism: The Costless State Feminism, March, 2005
Institute for Parliamentarians of Southeastern Europe, WIN BALKANS: Domestic Violence against Women and the Inequalities in Romanian Transition, and “Comments on Gallup Survey on Domestic Violence”, Bucharest, May, 2003
Department for Russian and East-European Studies, Indiana University, Bloomington, “Inequalities in Eastern Europe”, Round-table, May, 2002
Department for Russian and East-European Studies, Indiana University, Bloomington “The New Right in Romania”, Workshop, April, 2001
Indiana University, Bloomington, “The Left in Europe”, Roundtable, April, 2001 Council of Europe, “A New Contract between Women and Men”, Strasbourg,
December, 2000 International Political Sciences Association (IPSA): The XVIII World Congress
for Political Science, chair, panel Authority after Authoritarianism, paper: “Poverty, Authority and Leftist Conservatism”, Quebec, Canada, August 1-5, 2000
Women European Foundation and Dublin University: Women Building Democracy in 2000 and After, Dublin, June, 2000
Central European University, Budapest and European Consortium for Political Research, Building Professional Institutions in Central and Eastern European Political Sciences, Essex University, May 2000
International conference European Liberalism, Old and New, paper: Liberalism in Contemporary Romania, Erasmus of Rotterdam and Institute for Human Sciences, Vienna, Warsaw, May, 1999
Fundatia Culturala Romana, International conference 1989-1999. Ten Years After, September, 1999
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International Association of Women Philosophers, A Feminized Society at the Conference Lessons from the Gynaeceum: Women Philosophizing, Boston, USA, August 1998
The 20th World Congress of Philosophy Paideia, Feminist Philosophy in Romania, Boston, August, 1998
Central European University, State of the Art, Gender Studies Workshop, CEU, Budapest, March, 2000
Pittsburg University and Fundatia Culturala Europeana, International Conference Culture and politics of Identity in Modern Romania, “Antifeminism as Conservatism”, Bucharest, May, 1998
UNDP, Geneva, Brainstorming meeting, Equal Opportunities for Women, May, 1998
Gender and Culture, Central European University, Conference, Budapest, May, 1996 (" Epistemological approaches on gender")
Gender and Culture, Conference, Essex University, November, 1995 ("Nationalism, gender and identity")
Helsinki Citizens Assembly, Conference, December, 1993, Ankara ("Thinking Differences in Feminist Studies")
AIPPh. Congress, November, 1995, Kloster-Banz, Germany ("Convenience as an ethical value")
AIPPh. Seminars, October 1994, April, 1995, Peritzch, Germany ("Moral Philosophy in curriculum")
AIPPh. Conference, March, 1993, Manchester ("When Power is meaningless") AIPPh. Conference, Vienna, May, 1992 ("Reform strategies in teaching
philosophy") AIPPh. Conference, Bechine, Czech Republic, May, 1991 (Paper: "A Chance for
Changing")
Awards: National Diploma of Excellence in Teaching, Ministry of Education: 1987 First National Prize for the Contribution in Preventing and Combating the
Discrimination and Promoting Equal Opportunities, National Council for Preventing and Combating the Discrimination, October, 2005
The Prize for the Defense of Women’s Rights, The Review Avantaje and Avon, March, 2006
Publications A. Books:
1. Gândul Umbrei. Abordari feministe în filosofia contemporana (The Thought
of the Shadow. Feminist Approaches in Contemporary Philosophy), Alternative Publ. House, Bucharest, 1995
2. Convenio. Despre natura, femei si morala (Convenio. On Nature, Women and Morals), Alternative Publ. House, Bucharest, 1996, reed. Polirom, Iasi, 2002, translated in Macedonia, Skopje, 2005
3. România. Starea de fapt (Romania. Matter of Facts), Nemira, Bucharest, 1997 (co-author with V. Pasti and Cornel Codita)
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7 4. Invatamantul romanesc azi (The Romanian Education Today) (co-author with Gabriel Ivan, Vladimir Pasti, Adrian Miroiu), Polirom, Iasi, 1998 5. Societatea Retro (The Backward-Looking Society), "Trei" Pub. House, Bucharest, 1999 6. Intoducere în etică profesională (Professional Ethics. An Introduction), “Trei” Bucharest, 2001 (co-author with Gabriela Blebea) 7. The Gender Dimension of Education in Romania, SOCO Project Paper No. 83 Vienna www.iwm.at/publ-spp/soco83pp.pdf 8. Guidelines for Promoting Gender Equity in Higher Education in Central and eastern Europe, CEPES, UNESCO, Bucharest, 2003: The Romanian version: Politici ale echitatii de gen. Ghid pentru invatamintul universitar din Europa Centrala si de Est. Politeia, Bucharest, 2003. Translated in Bulgaria, 2008 9. Drumul către autonomie. Teorii politice feministe. (The Road to Autonomy. Feminist Political Theories) Feminist Political Theories), Polirom, Iaşi, 2004 10. R’Estul şi Vestul (The R’East and the West), Polirom, Iasi, 2005, (co-author with Mircea Miclea/ autobiographical novel) 11. Nepretuitele femei (Priceless Women), Polirom, Iasi, 2006: (articles in reviews and journals)
12. Dincolo de ingeri si draci. Etica in politica romaneasca. (Beyond Angels and Devils. Ethics in Romanian Politics), Polirom, Iasi, 2007 (articles in journals and volumes)
Editor:
1. Ghid de idei politice (Guide of Political Ideas), co-editor with Adrian Miroiu, Pan-Terra, Bucharest, 1990
2. Sophia, Reader for the Philosophy Faculty, Universitatea Bucharest, 1995 3. Jumatatea anonimă (The Anonymous Half. Anthology of Feminist Philosophy),
Sansa, Bucharest, 1995 4. Gen si Educatie (Gender and Education), co-editor with Laura Gruenberg
ANA, Bucharest, 1997 5. Gen si societate (Gender and Society), co-editor, with Laura Grunberg,
Alternative, Bucharest, 1997 6. The Gender Dimension of Education in Romania, SOCO project Paper No.83,
IWN Policy Project, Vienna, 2000 7. Gender Barometer, Open Society Foundation, and Gallup Organization,
Bucharest, 2000 (with Renate Weber) 8. Lexicon feminist (Feminist Lexicon), Polirom, Iasi, 2002 (co-editor with Otilia
Dragomir) 9. Patriarhat si emancipare in gandirea politica romaneasca (Patriarchy and
Emancipation in the Romanian Political Thought), Polirom, Iasi, 2002 (co-editor with Maria Bucur)
B. Publications for students (handbooks):
1. Filosofie. Manual pentru licee (Philosophy. Handbook for High Schools), Editura Didactica si Pedagogica, 1986-1989, "The Theory of Knowledge"
2. Lectii de filosofie (Philosophy Lessons), Humanitas, Bucharest, 1990,
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8„Humanisme"
3. Filosofie. Manual pentru licee (Philosophy, Handbook for High Schools), Editura Didactica si pedagogica, Bucharest, 1991, 1992, "The human condition"
4. Filosofie. Teme de studiu pentru licee (Philosophy. Study Topics for High Schools), Editura Didactica si pedagogica, Bucharest, 1993-1998, "Happiness", "Philosophy” (author and co-coordinator)
5. Cultura civica. Democratie, Drepturile Omului. Toleranta (Civic Culture, Democracy, Human Rights, Tolerance), Editura Didactica si Pedagogica, Bucharest, 1995, "Tolerance", "Prejudices" (author and coordinator)
6. Filosofia, fericirea, dreptatea (Philosophy, Happiness, Justice), All, Bucharest, 1995, 1997 (co-author)
7. Filosofia, fericirea, dreptatea, Dumnezeu (Philosophy, Happiness, Justice and God), All, Bucharest. 1999
8. Etica politica, distance learning, (Political Ethics, Handbook for Students and Reader), electronic format, www.politice.ro. Political Science Faculty, NSPSA, Bucharest, 2002/2005
9. Teorii politice feministe, Curs IDD (Feminist Political Theories. Handbook for Students and Reader), electronic format, www.politice.ro. Political Science Faculty, NSPSA, Bucharest, 2002/2005
Papers in journals and volumes 1. " Un program umanist exemplar" (An exemplary humanist program"), Revista
de pedagogie, Bucharest, no. 1, 2, 3, 1992 2. "Iesirea din vraja" ("Breaking the spell"), Revista de cercetari sociale, no 2,
1994 3. "From Pseudo-Power to Lack of Power", European Journal of Women's
Studies, Sage Publications, no. 1, spring, 1994 4. "The Vicious Circle of the Anonymity", Thinking, Montclair, USA, no. 1, 1994 5. "Oamenii cetatii si cetatea oamenilor" (" Men of fortress and the city of men"),
Democratia locala in România, Grigore Leu, Bucuresti, 1995 6. "Ana's Land. The Right to be Sacrificed", in Ana's Land, Westwiew Press
Publications, Boulder, Colorado, 1996 7. "Experientele femeilor si "pericolul feminist"" ("Women's experiences and
"the feminist danger"") Secolul 20, no. 7-9, 1996 8."Democratia de vitrina" (The Showroom democracy), Secolul 20, 10-12, 1996 9. "Antifeminism si conservatorism" (Antifeminism as Conservatism), Sfera
Politicii, no. 2, 1997, Bucuresti 10. “Intre autobiografie si CV”, Secolul 20, nr. 8, 1998
11 “Feminismul ca politica a modernizarii” (Feminism as a Modernization Policy), Doctrine Politice Comtemporane (Contemporary Political Doctrines), coord. Alina Mungiu Pipidi, Polirom, Iasi, 1998
12. “Istoria traita, istoria regasita (on Gail Kligman's The Politics of Duplicity. Controlling Reproduction in Ceausescu's Romania) in Sfera Politicii, 1998 13. “Despre intelegerea de sine” (About self-understanding) and “Istorii traite” (Living histories), AnALize, 1-2, 1998 14. “Imaginea noastra cea de toate cotidianele” (Our image in all dailies), AnALize, nr. 3, 1998 15. “Conservatorism si sexism in presa” ("Conservatism and Sexism in Media),
9
9Minoritati in mass-media, Center for War, Peace and the News Media, International federation of Journalists, 1999 16. “Sources of Contemporary Romanian Conservatism”, New Europe College Yearbook, 1998-1999, Bucharest, 1999
18. “And-And Strategy, A Romanian Experience”, in Good Practice in Promoting Gender Equity in Higher Education in Central and Eastern Europe, Studies on Higher Education, UNESCO, CEPES, Bucharest, 2001, Ed. Laura Grunberg 19. “A nok helyzete Romaniaban: Hagyomany es modernizacio valasztovonalan” (The Feminism as Modernization Strategy in Romania), with Liliana Popescu, in the Review Regio, Budapest, 2002 20. “Feţele Patriarhatului”, (The Faces of Patriarchy) in Journal for the Study of Religins and Ideologies , 2003, http://hiphi.ubbcluj.ro/JSRI
21. „Despre politica Ultimei inegalităţi” (Prefaţă) în vol. Ultima inegalitate. Politicile de gen în România, Polirom, Iaşi, 2003
22. “All in One: Fairness, Neutrality and Conservatism – A Case Study of Romania”, Prospects, vol. XXXIV, no. 1, March 2004
23. “Post-Totalitarian Pre-Feminism”, in Romania since 1989. Politics, Economics and Society, (Henry F. Carey Ed.), Lexington Books, Maryland, 2004 (with Liliana Popescu)
24. State Men, Market Women in the review Feminismos, Muyer y participation politica, Universita Alicante, Numero 3, juno de 2004
25. “A Mayflower turned Titanic: The Metamorphosis of Political Patriarchy’, Femina Politica, Zeitschrift fur feministische Politik-Wissenschaft, 15.Jg. Nr. 1/2006
26. “Communism was a State Patriarchy, not a State Feminism”, Aspasia. International Yearbook of Central, Eastern and Southeastern European Women’s and Gender History, Volume I, New York, 2007.
27. Morality in Politics and the Politics of Morality. The Neo-purification in Romania, Institute for Advanced Studies, Indiana University, Bloomington, 2007: http://www.indiana.edu/~ias/plecture/text/mihaela_lecture.pdf
28. An Exotic Island: Feminist Philosophy in Romania, in Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society, Winter 2009, Vol. 34, No. 2: pp. 233-239 ISBN 10.1086/590438
29. Not the Right Moment. Politic of the Delay, Women's History Review, Routledge, Issue 1, Vol. 18, 2009
30. Priceless Women and Room-service feminism, in Journal Chronique Feministe, Univerisite des Femmes, Belge, No. 102-103, 2009
About 120 articles on Feminism, Political analysis, Ethics in politic in the
reviews; 22, Dilema, Observatorul Cultural, Contrapunct, Avantaje and in the dailies Curentul and Romania Libera.
Participation at many roundtables and interviews on the TV channels as: TVR 1 and TVR 2, Pro TV, Realitatea TV, Antena 1.
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Subject: SV: SV: guest researcher at GU From: "Ulf Bjereld" <[email protected]> Date: Mon, April 26, 2010 10:07
To: "Daniela Cutas" <[email protected]> Priority: Normal Options: View Full Header | View Printable Version | Download this as a file
Dear Daniela, I hereby verify that Mihaela is very welcome to present her research/paper at theDepartment of Political Science, Universtiy of Gothenburg, as outlined below. Best regards Ulf Bjereld Professor, Head of Department Statsvetenskapliga institutionen/Department of Political Science Göteborgs universitet/University of Gothenburg Box 711, SE 405 30 Göteborg, Sweden 031 - 786 12 40, +46 31 786 12 40 070 230 46 03 [email protected] -----Ursprungligt meddelande----- Från: Daniela Cutas [mailto:[email protected]] Skickat: Monday, April 26, 2010 5:12 AM Till: Ulf Bjereld Ämne: Re: SV: guest researcher at GU Hej Ulf, Can you please let me know if you agree with the plan below, in principle, so that I can quote this exchange of emails in my application, as an expression of interest from your department? Tack så mycket! Daniela > Hi again Daniela, > I've checked with some of my collegues and Mihaela is very welcome to > present her research/paper at - at least - two of our seminars (political > theory and CERGU/VOD?). I'm sure we will be able to help her with more > opportunities both at the department and/or at the faculty if she is > interested. > > Our Head of Department (Ulf Bjereld) will be the formal inviter, so take > the formal contact with him. > > Regards > Marie Demker > > > Marie Demker > Professor i statsvetenskap > > Göteborgs Universitet > Statsvetenskapliga institutionen > Box 711, 405 30 Göteborg, Sverige
X-IronPort-AV: E=Sophos;i="4.52,294,1270418400"; d="scan'208";a="105641309" Date: Thu, 29 Apr 2010 09:38:50 +0200 From: Jan Lif <[email protected]> User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 6.0; sv-SE; rv:1.9.1.9) Gecko/20100317 Thunderbird/3.0.4 To: Eva Englund <[email protected]> Subject: Re: Gästforskare Löneförslaget är 45 000 SEK. Vänliga hälsningar Jan Lif Eva Englund skrev 2010-04-28 16:33: Tack Jan. Har bara hunnit kasta en snabb blick, men ser inte något löneförslag... /eva englund At 16:21 2010-04-28, you wrote: Bifogar nominering. Vänliga hälsningar Jan Lif -- Jan Lif, Prefekt GÖTEBORGS UNIVERSITET Institutionen för filosofi, lingvistik och vetenskapsteori Box 200, 405 30 Göteborg Tel 031-786 4575 Mobil 070-72 82 672 www.flov.gu.se
EVA ENGLUND Fakultetssamordnare GÖTEBORGS UNIVERSITET, Humanistiska fakultetskansliet Renströmsgatan 6 Box 200, 405 30 Göteborg Tel 031-786 1003 http://www.hum.gu.se
-- Jan Lif, Prefekt
Page 1 of 2Jan Lif, 09:38 2010-04-29, Re: Gästforskare
2010-04-29Printed for Eva Englund <[email protected]>
McKay Jenkins
X-IronPort-AV: E=Sophos;i="4.52,302,1270418400"; d="scan'208,217";a="131441992" From: Ken Benson <[email protected]> To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>, Mats Mobärg <[email protected]> CC: Gunhild Vidén <[email protected]>, "[email protected]" <[email protected]> Subject: SV: nominering internationell gästforskare Thread-Topic: nominering internationell gästforskare Thread-Index: AQHK5ws4aWwejU28SUa1m4pxgU7FHJI40qmAgAIxNoI= Date: Fri, 30 Apr 2010 14:02:54 +0000 Accept-Language: sv-SE, en-US X-MS-Has-Attach: X-MS-TNEF-Correlator: Bekräftar härmed att att nomineringen enligt nedan är institutionens förslag. Jenkins kan hålla kurser på avancerad och forskarnivå inom institutionens litteraturvetenskapliga profilområden men även på fakultetsnivå och, även nu denna satsning gäller humaniora, även inom journalistik. Denna kompetens är dock relevant även inom vårt område då det klart ligger inom "Cultural Studies". Jenkins kompetens ligger väl förankrat inom forskningsområdena Cultural movements and European/Global studies based on inter- and transcultural theory samt Academic Writing som vi särskilt lyfter fram i vår redogörelse för Red 10 (Description of Research activities and Strategic research aspects). Vi skulle vilja bjuda honom att vistas hos oss under ht 2011, 6 månader. Kostnad. Lön 288t (exkl. LOP och OH). Boende och resor 82t. Sa. 370t (exkl. LOP/OH). Ken Benson viceprefekt forskning och utb. på forskarnivå
Från: Eva Englund [[email protected]] Skickat: den 29 april 2010 07:59 Till: Mats Mobärg Kopia: Ken Benson; Gunhild Vidén Ämne: Re: nominering internationell gästforskare Hej Mats, Tack för nomineringen. Formellt sett är det institutionen som nominerar och inte enskilda anställda. Detta av två skäl. Dels för att det är ett åtagande för institutionen dels för att vi önskar institutionens nomineringar samlade. Så jag vore tacksam om Ken eller Gunhild kunde bekräfta att detta är Institutionen för språk och litteraturers nominering. Vi en snabb genomläsning kan jag inte se hur länge det är tänkt att Jenkins skall stanna. Ungefärlig antal månader vore bra att veta samt även lönekostnader. Vi måste göra en kostnadsberäkning. Med vänliga hälsningar Eva Englund Till registrator vid Göteborgs universitet (Ken Benson, Gunilla Florby, Hans Löfgren för kännedom) Jag får härmed nominera följande person till det internationella gästforskarprogrammet enligt inbjudan 2010-03-15, dnr E 5 1040/10 (såväl personen ifråga som viceprefekten för forskning vid institutionen för språk och litteraturer, professor Ken Benson, är vidtalade): Mckay Jenkins
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X-IronPort-Anti-Spam-Filtered: true X-IronPort-Anti-Spam-Result: AvYCAFYt2Es+f8IUhmdsb2JhbACBP4FYmQdbFQEBAQoJCgcTIoglpH2RQIIVXYEvbQQ X-IronPort-AV: E=Sophos;i="4.52,289,1270418400"; d="doc'32?scan'32,208,217,32";a="105604308" X-SMTPAUTH-B2: [1036077u8s] X-SENDER-IP: [81.224.97.136] X-IronPort-Anti-Spam-Filtered: true X-IronPort-Anti-Spam-Result: AukRAFYt2EtR4GGIPGdsb2JhbAAHgTiBWJkHZgEBAQE1iFKkfZFAghVdgS9tBA X-IronPort-AV: E=Sophos;i="4.52,289,1270418400"; d="doc'32?scan'32,208,217,32";a="512916543" To: [email protected] Cc: [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], Mats Mobärg <[email protected]> Subject: nominering internationell gästforskare From: Mats Mobärg <[email protected]> Date: Wed, 28 Apr 2010 21:44:13 +0200 X-Mailer: Apple Mail (2.753.1) Till registrator vid Göteborgs universitet (Ken Benson, Gunilla Florby, Hans Löfgren för kännedom) Jag fÃ¥r härmed nominera följande person till det internationella gästforskarprogrammet enligt inbjudan 2010-03-15, dnr E 5 1040/10 (sÃ¥väl personen ifrÃ¥ga som viceprefekten för forskning vid institutionen för sprÃ¥k och litteraturer, professor Ken Benson, är vidtalade): Mckay Jenkins Mckay Jenkins är Tilghman Professor of English vid University of Delaware. Jag träffade honom i samband med en vistelse där under vÃ¥ren 2006. I det sammanhanget framkom att han gärna ville tillbringa en tid vid ett svenskt universitet. Jag bifogar hans snabba svar pÃ¥ min nÃ¥got senkomna frÃ¥ga om huruvida han var intresserad av att bli nominerad. Av det svaret framgÃ¥r de uppgifter som inbjudan efterfrÃ¥gade, men han är säkert beredd att förtydliga om sÃ¥ skulle behövas. Hans mycket digra CV, av vilken bl.a. framgÃ¥r ett synnerligen omfattande författarskap, finns ocksÃ¥ bifogad. För kortfattad information om honom, se hans websida vid University of Delaware: http://www.english.udel.edu/content/index.php? option=com_content&task=view&id=74 Här hans svar av 2010-04-28: . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Hi, Mats -- This is a very intriguing idea -- many thanks for thinking of me. Given the late notice, I can't give this the attention it deserves, but I've attached my CV in the hopes that we might be able to work something out. As I may have mentioned, my wife's extended family (lots of aunts and uncles and cousins) is from
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Goteberg, so visiting there would be a genuine pleasure. We've been a half dozen times over the last ten years or so. I would be happy to teach graduate or undergraduate courses, seminars or workshops on a wide variety of topics, including American Studies; American Literature; Southern LIterature; Journalism; Creative Nonfiction Writing; Literature and Race; African-American Literature; Literature and the Environment; The Journalism of Genocide; The Journalism of Terrorism; The Literature, Music and Film of Hurricane Katrina. I have taught all of these courses a number of times here at Delaware, and they work well. As for when we could visit, the easiest would be over the summer or in the winter, perhaps December-January, though I could be flexible. If we could work out a way for my kids to go to school over there for a semester (they will be in 4th and 1st grade next year) we could conceivably come during the fall or spring. As for pay, again I'm flexible. I'm sure we could work something out. Thanks again for thinking of me, and let me know what comes of this. If it doesn't work out for next year, I'd be very interested in trying again another time. Peace, mckay jenkins  -------- mckay jenkins tilghman professor of english director of journalism university of delaware 130 memorial hall newark, de 19716 302-831--4869 302-831-1586 (fax) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Göteborg den 28 april 2010 Mats Mobärg Docent i engelska Göteborgs universitet Institutionen för språk och litteraturer Box 200 40530 Göteborg Tel. 031-7861778
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Mobil 070-3496515 E-post: [email protected] Till registrator vid Göteborgs universitet (Ken Benson, Gunilla Florby, Hans Löfgren för kännedom) Jag får härmed nominera följande person till det internationella gästforskarprogrammet enligt inbjudan 2010-03-15, dnr E 5 1040/10 (såväl personen ifråga som viceprefekten för forskning vid institutionen för språk och litteraturer, professor Ken Benson, är vidtalade): Mckay Jenkins Mckay Jenkins är Tilghman Professor of English vid University of Delaware. Jag träffade honom i samband med en vistelse där under våren 2006. I det sammanhanget framkom att han gärna ville tillbringa en tid vid ett svenskt universitet. Jag bifogar hans snabba svar på min något senkomna fråga om huruvida han var intresserad av att bli nominerad. Av det svaret framgår de uppgifter som inbjudan efterfrågade, men han är säkert beredd att förtydliga om så skulle behövas. Hans mycket digra CV, av vilken bl.a. framgår ett synnerligen omfattande författarskap, finns också bifogad. För kortfattad information om honom, se hans websida vid University of Delaware: http://www.english.udel.edu/content/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=74 Här hans svar av 2010-04-28: . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Hi, Mats -- This is a very intriguing idea -- many thanks for thinking of me. Given the late notice, I can't give this the attention it deserves, but I've attached my CV in the hopes that we might be able to work something out. As I may have mentioned, my wife's extended family (lots of aunts and uncles and cousins) is from Goteberg, so visiting there would be a genuine pleasure. We've been a half dozen times over the last ten years or so. I would be happy to teach graduate or undergraduate courses, seminars or workshops on a wide variety of topics, including American Studies; American Literature; Southern LIterature; Journalism; Creative Nonfiction Writing; Literature and Race; African-American Literature; Literature and the Environment; The Journalism of Genocide; The Journalism of Terrorism; The Literature, Music and Film of Hurricane Katrina. I have taught all of these courses a number of times here at Delaware, and they work well. As for when we could visit, the easiest would be over the summer or in the winter, perhaps December-January, though I could be flexible. If we could work out a way for my kids to go to school over there for a semester (they will be in 4th and 1st grade next year) we could conceivably come during the fall or spring. As for pay, again I'm flexible. I'm sure we could work something out. Thanks again for thinking of me, and let me know what comes of this. If it doesn't work out for next year, I'd be very interested in trying again another time. Peace, mckay jenkins
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CV1.doc -------- mckay jenkins tilghman professor of english director of journalism university of delaware 130 memorial hall newark, de 19716 302-831--4869 302-831-1586 (fax) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Göteborg den 28 april 2010 Mats Mobärg Docent i engelska Göteborgs universitet Institutionen för språk och litteraturer Box 200 40530 Göteborg Tel. 031-7861778 Mobil 070-3496515 E-post: [email protected]
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McKay Jenkins English Department 203 S. Tyrone Rd. University of Delaware Baltimore, MD 21212 Newark, DE 19716 410-377-6590 302-831-4869 fax: 302-831-1586 email: [email protected] University of Delaware Cornelius Tilghman Professor of English, Fall 2004-present Director of Journalism, 2009-present Associate Professor of English, 2000-2004 Assistant Professor of English, 1996-2000 Member, Journalism Program, 1996-2009
Education: Ph.D, English, Princeton University, 1996. MS, Journalism, Columbia University, 1987. High Honors. BA, English, Amherst College, 1985. Honors. Other Education International Diploma in Humanitarian Assistance. Completed 200 hours of training in refugee assistance course jointly sponsored by the University of Geneva, The Royal College of Surgeons in Dublin, and Hunter College in New York, Summer, 2000. University of Grenoble, France. Studied French language and literature, Spring, 1984. Books What We’re Made Of: Living in (and Surviving) A Toxic World. A narrative nonfiction account of the role of toxic chemicals in American culture. Under contract with Random House. Expected publication: Fall, 2010 Bloody Falls of the Coppermine: Madness, Murder and the Collision of Cultures in the Arctic, 1913(Random House, January, 2005). A narrative account of two Catholic priests killed by Eskimos near the Arctic Ocean, and the landmark trials in 1917 that followed their deaths. Published in Spain by Oceano, 2007. ). (xvi plus 278 pp.) The Last Ridge: The Epic Story of the U.S. Army's 10th Mountain Division and the Assault on Hitler's Europe. (Random House, 2003. A narrative history of the 10th Mountain Division in World War Two, their training and wartime experience fighting the Germans in Italy. Main selection of the Military Book Club. Published in the Czech Republic by Jiri Buchal. (xviii plus 294 pp.) The White Death: Tragedy and Heroism in an Avalanche ZonE (Random House, 2000). A narrative account of avalanches and high mountain rescu,. Published in the United Kingdom by Fourth Estate and in Italy by Piemme. (xxi plus 228 pp.) The Peter Matthiessen Reader, an anthology of the author's nonfiction writing, Vintage, 2000. (xxix plus 359 pp.) Introductory essay reprinted in Contemporary Literary Criticism, Fall, 2007. The South in Black and White: Race, Sex and Literature in the 194s. University of North Carolina Press, 1999. (215 pp.)
Other Book Projects Rough Music: A Novel (in progress; completion date: Summer, 2011) Operation Homecoming: Iraq, Afghanistan, and the Home Front, in the Words of U.S. Troops and Their Families (Random House, 2006). Served on editorial board for anthology organized by the National Endowment for the Arts. Memoirs of Freddie Botur – A collaboration with a refugee from Nazi- and Soviet-occupied Czechoslovakia who became one of the world’s leading tennis professionals. Scholarly Articles and Essays “New Frontiers in Faculty-Student Research Projects in Literature and Journalism,” an essay on undergraduate research (written with Professors James Dean, Heyward Brock, Kevin Kerrane, and Chris Penna), in Undergraduate Reearch in English Studies, Urbana, IL: National Council of Teachers of English, 2010 " Dramatizing The Member of the Wedding," a 5,000-word essay, published in Twentieth-Century Amrican Fiction on Screen. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007. "Nature Writing," a 2,000-word essay published by the National Association of Science Writers (New York: Oxford University Press, 2005) "Encounters with John McPhee," a 500-word review of a new book of criticism on McPhee, in ISLE, the journal of the Association for the Study of Literature and the Environment, Fall, 2005. "Womb With a View: Proust's Magical Mindfulness" in Modernity in East-West Literary Criticism , Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 2001 (pp. 158-168) "Rushdie's Midnight's Children, Meditation, and the Postmodern Conception of History," in Postmodernity and Cross-Culturalism. Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 2001. (pp. 62-75) "Metaphors of Race and Psychological Damage in the 1940s American South: The Writings of Lillian Smith," in Racing and (E)racing Language, Ellen Goldner and Safiya Henderson-Holmes, eds. Syracuse University Press, Fall, 2001. (pp. 99-123) "Water Boundaries," published in "Proceedings of 'Drinking Water 2001: The Issues Concerning Delaware's Most Precious Natural Resource," Institute for Public Administration, University of Delaware, 2001. (pp. 13- 18) "David Thompson, 17th-century Surveyor of North American West," a biographical essay for The Literature of Travel and Exploration," published by Fitzroy-Dearborn, UK, Fall, 2003. "The Evolution of the Canoe," an essay for The Literature of Travel and Exploration," published by Fitzroy- Dearborn, UK, Fall, 2003. "Thinking Like a Mountain: Buddhism, Death and Deep Ecology in Peter Matthiessen's The Snow Leopard," in Reading Under the Sign of Nature, John Tallmadge and Hank Harrington, eds. University of Wisconsin Press, Fall, 2000. (pp. 265-279) "Arthur Ashe," a biographical essay, for American National Biography, Oxford University Press, Fall, 1999. (pp. 671-673) Magazine Nonfiction "Canoeing the South's Flatwater,"Outdoor Explorer, Summer, 2001. "Swamp Thing: A Season of Recovery in the John Heinz Wildlife Refuge,"Philadelphia Magazine, March, 2001. (pp. 55-63) "Visiting the Underworld,"Outdoor Explorer, Spring, 2001. (pp. 90-92) "Winter Camping in the South," Outdoor Explorer, December, 2000. “The Do-It-Yourself Bike Tour,” Outdoor Explorer ,June, 2000. (pp. 64-68) Profile of Eustace Conway, Orion, Winter, 1998. "New York Harbor Kayak Cruise," Northeast Offshore, July, 1987. Book Excerpts Reprinted in Magazines.
"The White Death," Readers Digest, March, 2000 (pp. 179-212) "And None Came Back," Outside Magazine, February, 2000. (pp. 40-47; 97) "White Death," Independent (UK) Magazine, January, 2000 Book Excerpts Reprinted in Books "And None Came Back,” an excerpt from The White Death, published in On the Mason-Dixon Line: An
Anthology of Contemporary Delaware Writers, Billie Travelini and Fleda Brown, eds; Newark: University of Delaware Press, 2008.
Op-Ed Essays “Return to Italy,” about the 10th Mountain Division Skiers in WW2, Rocky Mountain News(Denver), Feb. 18, 2006 "The Danger of Avalanches," London (UK) Express, January, 2000 Book Reviews: The Baltimore Sun The Genius Factory: The Curious History of the Nobel Prize Sperm Bank, by David Plotkin, 12 June 2005 The Philadelphia Inquirer The Summer Wind: Thomas Capano and the Murder of Anne Marie Fahey, Sept. 1999 "Wallace Stegner: Conversations on History and Literature, by Richard Etulain and Wallace Stegner; Wallace Stegner: A Biography, by Jackson Benson; Geography of Hope: A Tribute to WallaceStegner, edited by Mary and Page Stegner," a 1,200-word review essay in Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature and Environment, (Vol. 4 No. 1, Winter, 1998, pp. 144-147). Newark (NJ) Star-Ledger, 1996-1998 Huckleberry Finn, by Mark Twain, 1996 Random House edition But Beautiful: A Book About Jazz, by Geoff Dyer Lush Life: A Biography of Billy Strayhorn, by David Hajdu The Raven, by Peter Landesman The Collected Letters of Frank O’Connor and William Maxwell The Winter’s Hero, by Vassily Askyonov Eagle’s Plum, by Bruce Beans Where Peachtree Meets Sweet Auburn, by Gary Pomerantz Ansel Adams: A Biography, by Mary Street Alinder Setting the Tempo: An Anthology of Jazz Liner Notes, by Tom Piazza Pushing the Bear: A Novel of the Trail of Tears, by Diane Glancey Prophet of Rage: A Biography of Louis Farrakhan, by Arthur Magida The Open Sore of a Continent, by Wole Soyinka The Cattle Killing, by John Edgar Wideman The Joy of Writing Sex, by Elizabeth Benedict Wallace Stegner: A Biography by Jackson Benson Selected Poems, by Allen Ginsberg The Collected Short Stories, by Langston Hughes Epitaph, by Gordon Lish The Collected Poetry of Allen Ginsberg Color Blind by Ellis Cose The Short Stories of Langston Hughes A New Name for Peace, Philip Shabecoff In Search of Nature, EO Wilson Love Invents Us by Amy Bloom
The Dictionary of Global Culture. Henry Louis Gates and Anthony Appiah, eds. Native American History, by Judith Nies Thirteen Ways to Look at a Black Man, by Henry Louis Gates Jr. American Aurora, by Richard Rosenfeld The Coming Conflict with China, by Richard Bernstein and Ross Munro The Autobiography of LeRoi Jones, by Amiri Baraka The Catbird's Song, by Richard Wilbur The Myth of the Welfare Queen, by David Zucchino Man Crazy, by Joyce Carol Oates The Art of Fact, edited by Kevin Kerrane and Ben Yagoda King Suckerman, by George Pelecanos Meeting the Minotaur, by Carol Dawson Restoring Hope: Conversations with Cornel West The Dark Side of Camelot, By Seymour Hersh Many Years From Now: A Biography of Paul McCartney What Jazz Is: An Insider's Guide to Understanding and Listening to Jazz by Jonny King Panther in the Basement, by Amos Oz Lost Man's River, by Peter Matthiessen Politics on the Nets, by Wayne Rash Jr All of Nothing at All: A Biography of Frank Sinatra by Donald Clarke Rachel Carson: Witness For Nature, by Linda Lear Pillar of Fire, by Taylor Branch All Over But the Shoutin', by Rick Bragg The Ghost of Medgar Evers, by Willie Morris. Invited Lectures Universidad de Sagrado Corazon, Puerto Rico, January, 2010. Taught week-long course in environmental literature to college and university professors organized by New York University. Philadelphia Free Library. Interviewed Peter Matthiessen before 250 people, April 17, 2008 Distinguished Writer in Residence, The Park School, Baltimore, MD, Gave lectures and workshops on The White Death I and The Last Ridge. March, 2006. “The 10th Mountain Division: A History: Mt. Washington Observatory Annual Dinnner, Boston, MA, June 6, 2006. Poynter Institute, Wilmington Writers Workshop. Spoke to 50 professional journalists about making the move from periodical journalism to book writing, March, 2006 National Endowment for the Arts "Operation Homecoming." One of 16 writers invited to participate in international program teaching writing to soldiers returning from Iraq and Afghanistan., June, 2004. "The 10th Mountain Division in Colorado History," delivered to the Colorado Historical Society, February, 2004. Environmental Writing Retreat, Unity College, Unity, Maine. Four-day writing workshop focused on producing literary nonfiction about the environment, July, 2004. "Finding Your Voice, Practicing Your Craft: A Nonfiction Writer at Work," a four-day workshop conducted at Deerfield Academy, Deerfield, MA, August, 2003 and July, 2004. "Fractured Mind, Fractured Mirror: W.J. Cash and The Mind of the South, keynote address given to South Carolina Council on the Humanities, Spartanburg, SC, April 7, 2003 "The Enemy and The Mountain," lecture delivered to Eastern Regional reunion of the 10th Mountain Division, Valley Forge, PA, 8 November 2002. "Moving From Daily Journalism into a Career in Academia and Book Writing." Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism, April 2002. "We Are What We Drink: Seeing Ourselves in the Water," a keynote address to "Drinking Water 2001," a public policy conference sponsored by the Institute for Public Administration, University of Delaware, October 2001. "The Dumpster Baby Case: A Study of the American Press" presented to international scholars for the US Information Agency, University of Delaware, January, 1997. "Benjamin, Jameson, and Oliver Stone: A Theoretical Look at Natural Born Killers," Princeton University, Fall, 1996.
"Ecology and Epiphany in Peter Matthiessen's The Snow Leopard," Princeton University, Spring, 1995, Fall, 1996. National Media Interviews Bloody Falls of the Coppermine was featured in national and regional newspapers and radio programs in both the United States (USA Today) and throughout Canada. The Last Ridge was featured on NPR "Weekend Edition," and in dozens of local and regional newspapers. The White Death has been the subject of extensive programs on DatelineNBC; NPR's "Talk of the Nation;" The History Channel; and in dozens of local and regional newspapers and magazines. Readings of Creative Nonfiction I have conducted five national book tours for Bloody Falls of the Coppermine,The Last Ridge, and The White Death, during which I presented my work more than 200 times in 20 states. Conference Papers Delivered: The Association for the Study of Literature and Environment, Univ. of Western Michigan, Kalamazoo, Michigan, June, 1999: Presented excerpt from The White Death for panel on literary nonfiction. The American Literature Association, Baltimore, May, 1999: Moderated “The Literature of Natural Disaster” panel and presented excerpt from The White Death. The North American Interdisciplinary Conference on Environment and Community, University of Nevada-Reno, February, 1998: "Nurturing the Old Ways: A Profile of Eustace Conway." The Association for the Study of Literature and the Environment, Univ. of Montana, July 1997: "Death and Nature in Peter Matthiessen's The Snow Leopard and The Tibetan Book of Living and Dying The American Literature Association, Baltimore, May, 1997: Moderated panel on the Literature of the Environment. Modern Language Assoc., Chicago, Dec., 1995: "Existentialism and Buddhism in the Writings of Kenzaburo Oe." Modern Language Assoc., San Diego, Dec. 1994: "Meditation and Postmodern Conceptions of History in Rushdie's Midnight's Children. Rutgers University, "Negotiating Identities in the Americas: Race, Gender, Nation," April, 1995: "Metaphors of Race and Psychological Damage in the 1940s American South: The Writings of Lillian Smith." Princeton University, "The Negro Problem, 1895-1995," March, 1995: Moderated panel on the literature of the Harlem Renaissance for graduate student conference. Wyoming Conference on English: Multicultural Literacies, University of Wyoming, July, 1994: "Meditation and Postmodern Conceptions of History in Rushdie's Midnight's Children." University Teaching Experience: University of Delaware: Undergraduate Courses: Journalism:; Introduction to Journalism; Advanced Nonfiction Writing; Reporter’s Practicum; The Journalism of Genocide; The Journalism of the War on Terror; Literature: The Literature of the Land; Inter-Disciplinary Honors Course in American Studies; African-American Literature 1900-1990 Graduate Courses: The Literature of the pre-Civil Rights Era; The South and the North: Commerce, Religion and Race in the Early 20th Century Princeton University: Spring, 1996: American Literature from the Civil War to World War One. Instructor for survey course. Fall, 1995, Global Postmodernism. Instructor for upper-level course on global exchange of culture and technology. Fall, 1995: Contemporary Drama. Instructor for upper-level course on post-Beckett theater.
Spring, 1995: Literature and the Environment. Instructor for upper-level course on American nature writing Fall, 1994: Global Postmodernism. Instructor for upper-level course on global exchange of culture and technology. Young Scholars Institute, Trenton, NJ (weekly classes conducted for inner-city high school students) Fall, 1994: African-American Autobiography Created course tracing line from Frederick Douglass to Arthur Ashe. Spring, 1995: African-American History and Literature. Created multi-media course surveying slavery to present. Adult Education (weekly classes conducted at Nature Centers in New Jersey and Delaware) 1995-1997 Created course tracing tradition of nature writing from John Muir to John McPhee, with strong emphases on fiction as well as nonfiction, women writers, and the canon of Native American writing. Professional Journalism Experience: The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, (Circ. 600,000) 1988-1992: Wrote more than 700 pieces on race, politics, the environment, and higher education for the South's largest circulating newspaper. The Seattle Times, (Circ. 300,000) 1988: Covered local government and the environment for Washington State's largest circulating newspaper. Hired after two-months by the Constitution. The Annapolis Capital, (Circ. 50,000) 1987-1988 : Wrote more than 500 newspaper pieces on science and medicine and local and presidential politics for Maryland's capital-city newspaper. The MacNeil-Lehrer NewsHour, Fall, 1985 Production assistant for nightly news program. WNBC-TV, New York, Summer, 1985 Production assistant for weekly newsmagazine. Scholarly Organizations International Association of Genocide Scholars Association for the Study of Literature and the Environment Society of Environmental Journalists Awards: Teaching: University of Delaware Excellence in Teaching Award Nominated, 2005, 2006 University of Delaware Excellence in Advising Award Nominated, 2006 Global Citizenship Faculty Fellows Award, a $1,000 grant and seminar given to support creation of course “The Journalism of Genocide.” Spring, 2006. College of Arts and Sciences Outstanding Teaching Award, University of Delaware, 2002. McCosh Teaching Award, Princeton University: Outstanding graduate student teacher, 1996. Research: General University Research, University of Delaware: $6,000 summer research grant for anthology of memoirs written by international humanitarian relief workers, 2001. General University Research, University of Delaware: $6,000 summer research grant to explore archives in Library of Congress containing letters of Walter White, former head of the NAACP, 1997. Association of Princeton Graduate Alumni: $500 for field research in Mississippi, Summer, 1995. Writing: Lambert Writing Fellow, Deerfield Academy, Deerfield, MA, 2002 Advising: Awarsded $500 grant to serve as advisor for Katie Bennett Awarded $500 grant to serve as advisor for Jaime Vermaat, who studied the influence of Eastern philosophy on Beat Generation Writers, as a Summer Research Scholar in the Arts, Summer, 2001. Awarded $500 grant to serve as advisor for Jordan Green, who studied four American nature writers as a Summer Research Scholar in the Arts, Summer, 2000. Awarded $500 grant to serve as advisor for Maren Hubbard, who studied Tibetan Buddhism, environmental ethics and human rights as a Summer Research Scholar in the Arts, Summer, 1999.
Journalism: Human Service Award, 1990, for series of stories on suburban homelessness, Cobb County, GA. Runner-Up, Science Category, 1988, Md.-Del.-Washington, D.C. Press Assoc. Best Science Story of the Year, 1987, Md.-Del.-Washington, D.C. Press Assoc. Academic: Presidential Fellowship, Princeton University: Four Years of Graduate School Support Service University of Delaware English Department Executive Committee, 2002-2004; 2006-; Co-authored departmental guidelines on workload policy, merit review; co-authored departmental self-study to be used during periodic external review. Promotion and Tenure Committee, 2000-present. Member of first-ever team of professors teaching the Pathways/General Education American Studies course, an interdisciplinary class within the Honors Program. Spring, 2000. Undergraduate Committee, 1996-1997; 1999-2001. Writing Committee, 1997-1998. Advisor for The Review, the national-award winning student newspaper. College of Arts and Sciences Awards Committee, 2003-present. University Committee on Faculty Welfare and Privileges, 1998-2002. Princeton University Advised undergraduate Fulbright applicants on essay writing, Princeton University, 1995, 1996 Conducted alumni seminars on environmental literature, Fall, 1995. Association for the Study of Literature and the Environment (1997-present) National secretary from 1997-1999, responsible for maintaining membership and correspondence for 1,000-member group of writers and scholars.
GÖTEBORGS UNIVERSITET
Institutionen för språk och litteraturer Humanistiska fakulteten
Professor McKay Jenkins, nominerad till internationell gästforskare
Aktivitetsplan ht 2011 Workshops: • Writing literary non-fiction about the environment Workshop för lärare/forskare och doktorander vid hum fak (även av intresse för universitetets forskare med fokus på miljö och interantionell publicering) • Finding your voice, practising your craft: A nonfiction writer at work Workshop för studenter/doktorander/forskare vid hum fak (även för andra fakulteter som vill utveckla förmåga att publicera interantionellt) Föreläsningar: • Moving from daily journalism into a career in Academia and book writing (hum och samfak, särskilt journalistutbildningen) Fakultets- och fakultetsövergripande kurser/seminarieserier: • The South and the North: Commerce, religion and race in the early 20th century Fakultetskurs för doktorander (motsv.) vid hum fak (t.ex. engelska, religion, historia, idéhistoria) • 20th century African-American Literature Fakultetskurs för Masterstudenter samt för Engelska C-nivå, inom ramen för valfri kurs 7,5p • Gemensamma forskarseminarier för hum och sam fak i "environmental literature" och "literature and race"
Michael Rowlands
Hej Eva Her kommer nominering af professor Michael Rowlands, UCL, en fremstående anthropolog og arkaeolog, som arbejder med historisk antropologi og kulturarv. Han er en international topfigur som gerne vil komme under 2 måneder under 2011, hans løn får du senere, men som professor må du sikkert regne med 5000 per måned under 2 måneder. Han vil være en stærk inspiration for både arkeologer og historikere, men også for etnologer og kulturvidenskab, og de der arbejder med kulturarv. CV attached.
CVMR.latest summary2008doc.doc mvh Kristian On Apr 29, 2010, at 8:03 AM, Eva Englund wrote: Tack för nomineringen. Kan direkt se att det saknas uppgift om lönekostnade. Vi måste på något sätt kunna göra en kostnadsberäkning. Med vänliga hälsningar Eva Englund At 00:09 2010-04-29, you wrote: Institutionen for historiska studier nominerer hermed Dan Hicks fra Oxford til at komme som gæsteforsker under hösten 2011, 2-3 måender. Han har givet sit tilsagn, og jeg attacher hans CV som taler for sig selv. Han har tidligere besøgt institutionen som forelæser på Masterkurset 'Modernitet og kulturarv, hans specieale er historisk arkæologi, hvilket betyder at han er relevant for både arkæologer og historikere. Han representerer således en vigtigt tværfalig inspiration. mvh Kristian Kristiansen PS VI kommer med et forslag mere, men har endnu ikke fået cv.
To: Eva Englund <[email protected]> Subject: Re: nominering af Mike ROwlandds UCL
Sida 1 av 2
2010-04-30file://C:\DOCUME~1\KANEE~1.HUM\LOKALA~1\Temp\eudC.htm
CURRICULUM VITAE
Name: Michael John ROWLANDS Nationality: British Date of Birth 2nd November 1944 Educational and Professional Qualifications BSc Honours in Anthropology, University of London. PhD Anthropology, University of London. Appointments 1973-1982 Lecturer in Anthropology, University College London 1982 - 93 Reader in Anthropology, University College London 1993- present Professor of Anthropology and Material Culture, UCL. Other Appointments 1992-1996 Head of Department, Dept of Anthropology, University College London 1980-1986 Graduate Tutor, Faculty of Social and Historical Sciences, UCL. 1996- Co-editor of Journal of Material Culture, Sage Publications 1997 2006 -2010 Visiting professor in Anthropology , University of Beijing,Beida. Professional Affiliation Council of the Royal Anthropological Institute European Association of Social Anthropologists African Studies Association; American Anthropological Association Director of World Archaeological Congress Teaching Activity !975- 1981 - Responsible for developing the Undergraduate teaching of Material Culture studies at UCL Anthropology dep[artment 1976 – Initiated the teaching of a Postgraduate Diploma in Material Culture studies at UCL.Anthropology. 1982 –Converted Diploma to MA in Material Culture Studies.
1989 Initiated an MA in Anthropology of Art
1996 Initiated the development of an MA in Museum Ethnography !998 – have collaborated with staff in Institute of Archaeology in developing teaching in the field of Cultural Heritage and Museum Studies
Research Experience and Current Research I teach and do research in the broad socio-cultural fields of anthropology with a special interest in Material Culture and Cultural Heritage studies both present and past. 1968-1972 My Doctoral research was concerned with the use of archaeological data and anthropological theory to interpret Middle Bronze Age metalworking industries in Southern Britain. Postdoctoral research 1972-1976 – studies of prehistoric and early early historic colonialism in later European prehistory and precolonial West Africa. 1976 – 1980 ESRC funded field study on Precolonial Material Culture and Archaeology of West Cameroon .Fifteen months fieldwork on technology, specialisation and exchange in the Grassfields of Cameroon. 1982-4 Central Research Fund London funded study of precolonial iron working in the Cameroon Grassfields 1986 – 1988 ESRC funded study of consumption and contemporary material culture in Bamenda, Cameroon. 1990-1994 co-holder of a major research initiative from the ESRC on Global Environmental Change contributed to field research on the social impact of conservation agencies and multinational timber companies in the Cameroon rainforest. 1998 Sustasoma Trust Fund . Study of World Heritage sites in Mali, West Africa In particular I participated in the four year restoration programme of architecture in Djenne and I have supervised three PhD studies of world heritage sites in Mali. My concern has been to use this to develop an understanding of how ‘heritage’ and cultural property have come to figure in conceptualising cultural heritage theory in a globalising world . 2001-2004) of a major grant from the J-P Getty Trust ‘Bamum Art Worlds: a history of innovation and change in the Cameroon Grassfields since 1700AD. 2003 –2005 I co-ordinated an EU funded programme (Framework 5) on the digitising of ethnographic collections in Europe . UCL hosts a Centre for Museums., Heritage and Material Culture Centre for innovations in digitising museum archives and collections . 2006 - 2008 West African Museum Programme (Dakar) concerned with revitalising Cultural
Heritage in post conflict societies in West Africa. In particular I have been advising the Minister of Culture in the Liberian government on the possibilities of establishing a museums and heritage programme for local communities in Liberia. 2006-2009 Visiting Professor , University of Beijing,Beida – long term studies of
‘civilisation’in China. Most recent Publications 2001 The future of Mali’s past Antiquity 75:872-876 2002a Cultural Heritage and the role of intellectuals in Mali and Cameroon . In C. Shore and S. Nugent Cultural Elites. Berg,Oxford 2002b Cultural Heritage and Cultural property in Buchli.V. ed The Material Culture Reader 2003a The Unity of Africa in David O’Connor and Andrew Reid eds Ancient Egypt in Africa ch 4 pp 39-55 London, UCL Press 2003 b The Local and the National in Architecture in Djenne in Bedaux,R. Diabey,B. and Maas,P. eds L’Architecture de Djenne: la perennite d’un patrimoine mondial Snoeck, 2004a Relating Anthropology and Archaeology. In Bintliffe,J ed A Companion to Archaeology. Ch 25 pp 473-489. Oxford: Blackwell. 2004b Cultural Rights and Wrongs in Verdery,K and Humphreys C. eds Property In Question . ch 9 pp 207-227 Oxford , Berg. 2005 A Materialist Approach to Materiality in Miller,D. ed Materiality Duke University press 2006a A Handbook of Material Culture . eds with C.Tilley et al. London. Sage 2006b Monuments and Memorials in Handbook of Material Culture eds Tilley,C. et al Ch 31 pp 500-516 London:Sage 2006c Value and the Cultural Transmission of Things in van Binsbergen ,W. and Geschiere,P. eds Commodification:Things,Agency and Identities. Ch 12 pp 267-288 Munster: LIT Verlag 3-8258-8804-5 2006d The Man who would be Moses in Layton,R,Shennan,S. and Stone,P. eds A Future For Archaeology London: UCL Press. pp 97-105 2007a Reclaiming Heritage co-ed with Ferdinand.de Jong Left Coast Press, Walnut Creek,Ca. 2007b Reconsidering Heritage and |memory in de Jong F.and Rowlands M.op cit. pp 13-31 2007c Entangled memories and parallel heritages in Mali in de Jong F.and Rowlands M. ed op cit :pp 127-145 2007d The Elderly as Curators in North London .In Elizabeth .Pye (ed) The Power of Touch Left Coast Press, California. 2007e The Sound of Witchcraft:noise as mediation in religious tradition. In Berliner,D. and Sarro,R. (eds) Learning Religion ch 12. Oxford: Berghahn
2008a Civilisation,Violence and Heritage Healing in Liberia. Journal of Material Culture 13.2:135-153 2008b Postconflict Heritage. Journal of Material Culture 13:2: 131-134 2008c Aesthetics of Touch among the Elderly. In Helen Chatterjee (ed) Touch in Museums Chapter12.pp187-197Oxford ,Berg. 2009a Africa on Display: Curating Postcolonial Pasts in the Cameroon Grassfields.
Schmidt,Peter ed.Postcolonial Archaeologies in Africa SAR Press, New mexico 2009a Towards a long-term macro-geography of cultural substances:food and sacrifice traditons in East,West and South Asia. Chinese Review of Anthropology vol 12:1-37
X-IronPort-AV: E=Sophos;i="4.52,361,1270418400"; d="doc'32?scan'32,32,217,208";a="132206204" From: Kristian Kristiansen <[email protected]> To: Eva Englund <[email protected]> Subject: Re: internationella gästforskare - Anhållan om komplettering Date: Mon, 10 May 2010 13:11:05 +0200 X-Mailer: Apple Mail (2.936) Hej Her kommer Mike Rowlands forslag til forelæsninger/seminarer. Det består af en forelæsningsrække om 'Cultural Heritage adn Critical Museology' (attachment), samt nogle temaer for forelæsninger/seminarer.: One suggestion would be 1. to teach the course outline attached - if there is interest - It could be done as a 2-3 hour lecture/seminar format once a week .- maybe a bit more compressed . 2. In addition 3-4 lectures or seminars on relevant topics to the general course eg 1. Re-evaluating the long term: concepts of civilisation and temporalities 2. Heritage Healing and Post conflct Resolution in Liberia. 3. Materialising the Nation : Heritage Cultures in Cameroon and Mali, West Africa. . 4. ‘Making’ and ‘Doing’ the Material World: Anthropology of Techniques Revisited Her findes tydelige koblinger til kulturarv i bred mening, og materiel kultur (etnologi, historie, arkeologi), samt museuin (forelæsningsrækken). Vil endvidere kunne indå i MA kurset om Modernitet og kulturarv (historie, etonologi og arkeologi) mvh Kristian On May 6, 2010, at 11:45 AM, Eva Englund wrote: Angående: Inbjudan av internationella gästforskare Anhållan om komplettering
Page 1 of 4Kristian Kristiansen, 13:11 2010-05-10, Re: internationella gästforskare - Anhållan
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Humanistiska fakultetens forskningsgrupp har sammanträtt 2010-05-05 för att behandla de inkomna förslagen om inbjudan av gästforskare inom ramarna för Rektors engångssatsning. Forskningsgruppen är i princip positivt inställd till institutionens ansökan om att bjuda in Michael Rowlands, men finner den i sin nuvarande form ofullständig. För att kunna rekommendera fakultetsnämnden att bifalla ansökan, behöver den kompletteras med den i utlysningen 2010 03 15 (dnr E 5 1040/10) begärda aktivitetsplanen. Aktivitetsplanen ska innehålla en översiktlig redogörelse för de aktiviteter som planeras under forskarens vistelse, t.ex. fakultetsgemensam forskarutbildningskurs, seminarieserie, workshopar. Av planen bör framgå hur gästforskarens vistelse kommer att vara till gagn för flera av fakultetens institutioner. Det bör också framgå av planen hur hela den angivna vistelsetiden kommer att disponeras. Aktivitetsplanen ska vara inlämnad senast tisdag 2010-05-11 kl 16.00 om den ska ingå i forskningsgruppens underlag till fakultetsnämnden. Den skickas till <[email protected]>. För forskningsgruppen Lars Borin EVA ENGLUND Fakultetssamordnare GÖTEBORGS UNIVERSITET, Humanistiska fakultetskansliet Renströmsgatan 6 Box 200, 405 30 Göteborg Tel 031-786 1003 http://www.hum.gu.se
Hej Her kommer Mike Rowlands forslag til forelæsninger/seminarer. Det består af en forelæsningsrække om 'Cultural Heritage adn Critical Museology' (attachment), samt nogle temaer for forelæsninger/seminarer.: One suggestion would be 1. to teach the course outline attached - if there is interest - It could be done as a 2-3 hour lecture/seminar format once a week .- maybe a bit more compressed . 2. In addition 3-4 lectures or seminars on relevant topics to the general course eg
Page 2 of 4Kristian Kristiansen, 13:11 2010-05-10, Re: internationella gästforskare - Anhållan
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1. Re-evaluating the long term: concepts of civilisation and temporalities 2. Heritage Healing and Post conflct Resolution in Liberia. 3. Materialising the Nation : Heritage Cultures in Cameroon and Mali, West Africa. . 4. ‘Making’ and ‘Doing’ the Material World: Anthropology of Techniques Revisited Her findes tydelige koblinger til kulturarv i bred mening, og materiel kultur (etnologi, historie, arkeologi), samt museuin (forelæsningsrækken). Vil endvidere kunne indå i MA kurset om Modernitet og kulturarv (historie, etonologi og arkeologi) mvh Kristian
Cultural Heritage and Critical Museology.doc On May 6, 2010, at 11:45 AM, Eva Englund wrote: Angående: Inbjudan av internationella gästforskare Anhållan om komplettering Humanistiska fakultetens forskningsgrupp har sammanträtt 2010-05-05 för att behandla de inkomna förslagen om inbjudan av gästforskare inom ramarna för Rektors engångssatsning. Forskningsgruppen är i princip positivt inställd till institutionens ansökan om att bjuda in Michael Rowlands, men finner den i sin nuvarande form ofullständig. För att kunna rekommendera fakultetsnämnden att bifalla ansökan, behöver den kompletteras med den i utlysningen 2010 03 15 (dnr E 5 1040/10) begärda aktivitetsplanen. Aktivitetsplanen ska innehålla en översiktlig redogörelse för de aktiviteter som planeras under forskarens vistelse, t.ex. fakultetsgemensam forskarutbildningskurs, seminarieserie, workshopar. Av planen bör framgå hur gästforskarens vistelse kommer att vara till gagn för flera av fakultetens institutioner. Det bör också framgå av planen hur hela den angivna vistelsetiden kommer att disponeras. Aktivitetsplanen ska vara inlämnad senast tisdag 2010-05-11 kl 16.00 om den ska ingå i forskningsgruppens underlag till fakultetsnämnden. Den skickas till <[email protected]>. För forskningsgruppen Lars Borin EVA ENGLUND Fakultetssamordnare GÖTEBORGS UNIVERSITET, Humanistiska fakultetskansliet Renströmsgatan 6 Box 200, 405 30 Göteborg Tel 031-786 1003 http://www.hum.gu.se
Page 3 of 4Kristian Kristiansen, 13:11 2010-05-10, Re: internationella gästforskare - Anhållan
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CULTURAL HERITAGE AND CRITICAL MUSEOLOGY
AIMS
The fundamental aim of this course is to equip students with an
understanding and a working appreciation of both theoretical and practical
approaches to key issues in the field of cultural heritage and museum
anthropology. The contested nature of current critical museum and cultural
heritage theory and their critical examination through case studies constitute
the bedrock of the course.. As such, the course is taught in a lecture‐seminar
format and will be accompanied by visits to museums and sites that, whilst
optional, are seen as essential elements of the course.
OBJECTIVES ‐ On successful completion of this course a student should:
Explore different critical approaches to the analysis of museums and
collections in the past and present.
understand heritage as a cultural construct and as a conceptual,
epistemological and intellectual concern.
be familiar with, but be capable of thinking and acting beyond, routinised
‘Eurocentric’ accounts and definitions of cultural heritage and museum
practice and be able to critically appreciate ‘alternative’ conceptualisations
and understand the complexities involved in the globalisation of
heritage/museological practices.
be able to debate the contested nature of cultural heritage , focusing on
such issues as authenticity, identity, ideology, ownership,
commodification, culture and conflict, trauma and memorialisation,
cultural/ indigenous rights, hybridity and cosmopolitanism, human
decency and human dignity.
to able to discuss the public role of museums and policy‐orientated issues
in their fullest social and political contexts
understand the role of heritage agencies at international (UNESCO/ICOM/
Getty/ World Bank etc...) and local, regional levels in heritage
development and agendas of citizenship and poverty reduction.
1
CONTENT
The focus is upon examining heritage and museums in conceptual,
epistemological and intellectual terms. A stress is placed on the
interdisciplinary nature of the field and upon the utilization of diverse
theoretical sources and methodological approaches. Different notions of
cultural heritage are explored using models taken from, amongst others,
anthropology, archaeology, psychoanalysis, memory‐studies, post‐colonial
theory and law. An emphasis is placed upon anthropology and
anthropological perspectives vis‐à‐vis addressing emergent heritage issues.
These issues are subsequently grounded and problematised in a series of
global case‐study contexts. A central objective here is to align with a wider
scholarship committed to disrupting the ‘Eurocentrism’ which continues to
dominate museum/cultural heritage theory/ practice and also with a
contemporary ‘politics of recognition’ which is bound up in articulating new,
alternative or ‘parallel’ characterisations of heritage value. We highlight
current debates and contestations by focusing in on issues such as
authenticity, identity, ideology, ownership, commodification, culture and
conflict, trauma and memorialisation, cultural rights, hybridity and
cosmopolitan flows, human rights and human dignity. By the end of the
course students should be capable of thinking beyond mainstream
museum/heritage concepts, categories and texts and engage with alternative
intellectual and methodological frame‐works orientated towards the
fundamental re‐conceptualisations and reconstruction of core heritage values,
practices and ethics.
COURSEWORK
You will be asked to make 2 seminar contributions during the course.
Week One: Approaches to Cultural Heritage ‐ Pilgrims, Tourists and
Theorists
2
‘At its best, heritage fabrication is both creative art and act of faith. By means of it we
tell ourselves who we are, where we come from, and to what we belong’
(Lowenthal 1996: xiii)
How should we approach the critical study of cultural heritage? We begin our
search for answers by picking up on a powerful analogy made by heritage
critics between the ‘motives’ of the ‘tourist‐pilgrims’ engaged in ‘heritage
crusades’ and those of practitioners and theorists engaged in defining the
heritage culture. We take as our case‐study context Trafalgar Square, a
heritage site that has been described as London’s most ‘patriotic’ monument,
which almost since its creation, has also been the favoured arena for political
demonstrations. This lecture introduces students to the idea of cultural
heritage as a site for the construction of ‘official’ pasts – in this case the
construction of a celebratory ‘national’ past ‐ which are continually
challenged and shaped by contestation, change and by alternative, often
competing, accounts of identity and belonging. We trace these construction of
heritage pasts in Europe to debates on modernity and social change.
Essential Reading
*Bell,D. 2003 Mythscapes|:memory,mythology and national identity
British J. of Sociology 54:62‐81
*Butler,B 2006 Heritage and the Present Past in Tilley,C. et all ed Handbook of
Material Culture ch 29
Hall, S, 2000 Whose heritage? Un‐settling ‘The Heritage’, Third Text, 49:1‐12
[TC]
Message,K. 2009 New Directions for civil renewal in Britain:social capital and
culture for all? International J.of Cultural Studies 12:257‐278 Samuel, R, 1994, Theatres of Memory: Past and Present in Contemporary Society , esp. Semantics and Heritage Baiting.
• Seminar Questions: ‐ i. What are the benefits and limitations of
applying religious metaphors and analogies and theories of
pilgrimage and ritual behaviour to the domain of cultural heritage?
How do these dynamics relate to architectural scripts?
• ii. How is Trafalgar Square re‐presented as heritage ‘mythscape’ and
as a ‘sacralised’ site? Critically discuss its relationships to nation/
post‐nation?
3
Supplementary Reading
Anderson, B, 1983, Imagined Communities. Introduction
*Barthes, R, 1992, Mythologies, The Blue Guide Anthropology D 115 BAR /
Art BG BAR / Literature A 42 BAR. Science TC 1021.
Coleman,S. and Eade,J. 2004 Reframing Pilgrimage –cultures in motion.
Introduction. Anth D100 col
*Duncan, C.1995, Civilizing Rituals: Inside Public Art Museums Inst Arch MG 7
DUN / Art 4.9 DUN
Duncan, C and Wallach, A, 2004 [1980], The Universal Museum Survey,
Carbonell, B M, (ed), 2004, Museum Studies – An Anthology of Contexts, 51‐71.
Flinn,A. 2008 Whose memories,whose archives?Community archives
,autonomy and the mainstream ICHORA 4 Fourth International Conference
on History of Records and Archives 3‐5 August 2008. (TC)
Hewison, R, 1987, The Heritage Industry, Methuen, London, introduction,
chapter one. Inst Arch MB HEW/ Geography J 44 HEB
Hoelscher,S. 2006 Heritage In S.MacDonald ed A Companion to Museum
Studies
ch 13
Horne, D, 1984, The Great Museum: The Re‐presentation of History Inst
Arch MB 2 HOR / History 6a HOR
Lowenthal, D, 1996, The Heritage Crusade and the Spoils of History, Intro
and Chapter One, ‘Heritage Ascendant’ 1‐30 Inst Arch AG LOW
Mace, R, 1973, Trafalgar Square, introduction, chapter one. Architecture B 1: 11
MAC / London History 96.860 MAC
Samuel, R, 1994, Theatres of Memory: Past and Present in Contemporary Society ,
esp. Semantics and Heritage Baiting. Inst Arch AG SAM/ History 26g SAM/
Geography H 26 SAM
Merriman, N, 1992, vol 2, Defining Heritage, Material Culture Journal Inst
Arch Pers
Selwyn, T, 1996 (ed) The Tourist Image: Myths and Myth Making in Tourism
[introduction] Inst Arch AG SEL
Turner,V. and Turner,E 1978 Image and Pilgrimage in Christian Culture .
Introduction
*Urry,J. 1996 How Societies remember the Past . In MacDonald and Fyffe
Theorising Museums pp45‐65
Walsh, K, 1992, The Representation of the Past, chapter six, heritage
reconsidered. Inst Arch MG 2 WAL/ Anthropology D 9 WAL
Wright, P, 1985, On Living in an Old Country, introduction and chapter one.
Science Library SLC WR
Week 2 Chartering Heritage – the Rise of Heritage and Global Agencies,
4
In this seminar we focus on the categorising of cultural and natural heritage –
what gets included and what is left out.in the history of Heritage Charters.
What lies behind the creation of heritage archives, world heritage lists and the
definition of heritage as ‘natural’. ‘Heritage, widely defined as the use of the
past as a resource for the present, emerged in the 19th century as the ideal of
the nation having a single and unique past. Inseparable from ideas of
modernity and progress, the possession of heritage was to become one of the
key resources identifying the metroplitan cores of European empires Unesco
was formed to define heritage as a ‘universal cultural value’ and to preserve
cultural heritage from destruction and preserve human rights to cultural
identities. Conservation and preservation of cultural pasts is a major global
industry,serving to clasasify and define ‘heritage value’
Essential readings
Byrne, D, 2004, Chartering Heritage in Asia’s Postmodern World, in Getty
Conservation Institute Newsletter, Conservation, 19:2 [pdf‐online]
Cleere, H, 2001, Uneasy Bedfellows: Universality and Cultural Heritage,
Layton, R, Stone, P and Thomas, J 2001, Destruction and Conservation of
Cultural Property, 22‐29.
I.McNiven and L.Russell 2005 Appropriated Pasts Ch 6 Subjectation :
appropriation through science.
Seminar Questions:– i. Do you consider cultural heritage to be
‘Eurocentric’? What does this say about global agencies and concepts of
‘world heritage’?
ii. Critically examine definitions of cultural and natural heritage. What are
the assumptions underpinning such categorisations. Should these be
transformed? iii. Criticially discuss the relationships of two of the
following to cultural heritage: a. ‘redemptive’ formula, b. nostalgia, c.
authenticity, d. temporality, e. cosmopolitanism, f. universalism, g. gender.
General Reading
Barthel‐Bouchier and Ming Min Hui 2007 Places of Cosmopolitan memory
Global Studies Journal No. 5, March 7,
Beck, Ulrich. 2000. “The Cosmopolitan Perspective: The Sociology of the Second Age of
Modernity.” British Journal of Sociology 51(1): 79‐105.
Blake, J. 2000. ‘On Defining the Cultural Heritage’, International and
Comparative Law Quarterly 49(1):61–85.
5
*Cleere, H. 2006. The World Heritage Convention: Management by and for
whom?. In (eds) R. Layton and S Shennan, A Future for Archaeology.
London: UCL Press. 65‐74
*deJong and Rowlands, M. 2008 Reclaiming Heritage chs by Rowlands and
Joy
Friedman,J. 2001 Museums, the State and Global Transformations:from
Temple of the Muses to Temple of Amusements. Folk:Journalof the Danish
Ethnological Society vol 43. (Anth Per)
*Eriksen, T. Hylland‐ 2001. Between universalism and relativism: a critique of
the UNESCO concept of culture. In J. Lowen, M.B. Dember and R. Wilson
(eds) Culture and Rights, 127‐148 [TC]
*Graham,B Ashworth G.J. and Tunbridge J.E 2000 A Geography of Heritage.
Kirshenblatt‐Gimblett,B 2004 Intangible Heritage as metacultural production
Museum International vol 56.1: 52‐65 (Arts per)
Levi‐Strauss c. 1963 History and Anthropology in his Structural Anthropology
Lowenthal, D, 1985, The Past is a Foreign Country
Merriman, N, 1992, Understanding Heritage, Journal of Material Culture vol 1
pp377‐387
Shelton 2001 Museums in the age of cultural hybridity. In Folk. Journal of the
Danish Ethnographic Society vol 43:221‐249.
*Prosler,M. 1996 Museums and Globalisation . In Macdonald,S. and
Fyfe,Gordon eds Theorising Museums:representing identity and diversity in a
changing world. Oxford:Blackwell. / also The Sociological Review pp21‐44.
Phillips,R. 2000 APEC at the Museumof Anthropology: the politics ofSite and
the Poetics of Sight Bite Ethnos, vol 65.2: 172‐194
Phillips,R. 2002 Where is Africa? Reviewing Art and Artifact in the age of
globalisation American Anthropologist 104.3: 944‐952
Phillips,R. 2003 Introduction. In Peers,L. and Brown,A. (eds) Museums and
Source Communities.pp155‐170 London :Routledge
Schildkrout,E. 2004 Ambiguous messages and ironic twists:into the Heart of
Africa and the Other Museum. In Carbonell ed Museum Studies :An anthology
of contexts.pp 181‐192 Oxford:Blackwell
*Prott, L, V, 1996, Saving the Heritage ‐UNESCO’s Action Against Illicit
Traffic in Africa, in Schmidt, P and McIntosh, R, (eds), Plundering Africa’s Past;
29‐44.
*Titchen, S. M. 1996. ‘On the Construction of ‘Outstanding Universal Value’:
Some Comments on the Implementation of the 1972 UNESCO World Heritage
Convention’, Conservation and Management of Archaeological Sites 1(4):235–42.
6
Turtinen, J. (2000). Globalising heritage – on UNESCO and the transnational
construction of a world heritage. Stockholm: Stockholm Center for
Organizational Research.
Week 3 Museums and Cultures of Collecting .
We are What We Collect,We Collect What We Are (Kaplan 2000)
‘Empire is a collection of countries and of populations; a country is a collection of
regions and peoples; each given people is a collection of individuals, divided into
governed and governors ‐ that is, collectables and collectors’.
(Elsner and Cardinal 1994: iv)
In this weeks seminar we begin with a short history of the Euro‐American
idea of the collection/collector and the museum as an institution.‐ from the
cabinets of curiousity of the 16th century to traveller –collectors of the 18th and
19th centuries and the creations of museums as national institutions and as
centres of Enlightenment views of Science. In the second part, we will explore
the role of ethnographic collections and museums as a colonial and
postcolonial practice, do postcolonial museums have a future ? and some
current debates on new museums in the 21st century.
Recommended reading:
*Bennett,T. 1995 The Birth of the Museum :History,Theory,Politics . Ch 1 The
Formation of the Museum ; als try to do Ch 2 Exhibitionary
Complex
Krauss,R. 1990(2004) The Cultural Logic of the Late Capitalist Museum,
reprinted in D.Preziosi and C.Farago eds Grasping the World pp600‐611
Message,K.2006 New Museums and the Making of Culture ch 1 Theorising
New Museums
MacDonald,S. 2006 Collecting Practices . In her A Companion to Museum
Studies ch 6
Zolberg,Vera 1994 An Elite Experience for Everyone:Art Museums,the Public
and Cultural Literacy in Sherman,D &Rogoff I. (eds) Museum Cultur Ch 3 e
pp49‐65
Isaac,Gwyneira 2005 Mediating knowledges: Zuni negotiations fpr a
culturally relevant museum .Museum Anthropology 28:3‐18.
General Reading:
7
*Adorno, T, 1981, The Valery‐Proust Museum, in Prisms [TC]
*Bal,Mieke 2005(1996) The Discourse of the Museum . In
Greenberg,R.Ferguson,B.W. and Nairne,S. (eds) Thinking about exhibitions
pp201‐218. London:Routledge
*Baudrillard,J. 1994 The System of Collecting in Elsner,J. and Cardinal,R. eds
The Cultures of Collecting Reaktion Books Anth D9 ELS
Bazin, G.2004(1967) The Museum Age . Forward in Carbonell,B. ed Museum
Studies Ch 1. Oxford:Blackwell.
*Benjamin, W, 1968vThe Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction,
Illuminations. [ TC]
Elsner,J and Cardinal,R. (eds.) 1994 The Cultures of Collecting. Introduction
Reaktion Books cf chapter by Mieke Bal Anth D9 ELS
*Clifford, J. 1987 “On Collecting art and Culture” (pp.215‐251) in his The
Predicament of Culture. Ch 8.
Cole, Douglas1985 Captured Heritage:the scramble for North West Coast Artifacts
espec ch 5 Museums, Expositions and their specimens Vancouver:: UBC press.
*Coombes, A. (1994) Chapter 6 ‘Temples of Empire: The Museum and its
Publics’, pp 109‐128, and Chapter 7 ‘Containing the Continent: Ethnographies
on Display’, pp 129‐161 in her Re‐Inventing Africa: Museums, Material Culture
and Popular Imagination in Late Victorian and Edwardian England New Haven &
London: Yale University Press. Inst Arch DC 200 COO/ Art ME 8 COO
Findlen,P. 2004 (1989) The Museum: its classical etymology and renaissance
genealogy . in Carbonell,B. ed Museum Studies Ch 2.
Greenhalgh, P. (1988) Emphemeral Vistas: The Expositions Universelles, Great
Exhibitions and World Fairs, 1851‐1939 Manchester: Manchester University
Press, especially Introduction. Inst Arch MB3 GRE/ Anthropology D9 GRE/
Art A4.9 GRE
*Greenhalgh, Paul (1989) ‘Education, Entertainment and Politics: Lessons
from the Great International Exhibitions’, pp 74‐98 in P. Vergo (ed) The New
Museology London: Reaktion Books Inst Arch M6 VER/ Art A49 VER
8
Impey,O. and MacGregor, A. eds 1985 The origins of Museums :The Cabinet of
Curiousity in the 16th and 17th centuries . Especially chapter by Olmi
Oxford.OUP Inst Arch.lib. MB4 IMP
Karp I. & Lavine, S. 1991 Exhibiting Cultures:The Poetics and Politics of Museum
Display. Washington: Smithsonian Institution Press]
*Christina Kreps, 2003, Liberating Culture: Cross‐Cultural Perspectives on
Museums, Curation and Heritage Preservation, Routledge
Levell, Nicky (2000) ‘Reproducing India: International Exhibitions and
Victorian Tourism’, pp 36‐51 in Michael Hitchcock and Ken Teague (2000)
Souvenirs: The Material Culture of Tourism Ashgate: Aldershot Anthropology
C9 HIT
*MacDonald,S. 2003 Museums,national,postnational and transcultural
identities In Museum and Society 1(1): 1‐16
O’Hanlon M. 2001 Hunting the Gatherer. Introduction
Olmi.G. 1985 Science, Honour‐metaphor: Italian cabinets of curiousity of the
16th and 17th centuries ,in The origins of Museums eds Oliver Impey and Arthur
MacGregor. Oxford :Clarendon Press. Also reprinted in Presiozi and Farago
Grasping the World pp 129‐143
Pearce,S.M. Collecting reconsidered pp 135‐153 in G.Kavanagh (ed) Museum
Languages:Objectys and Texts Leicester University Press. Anth D9 KAV
Pearce,S.M. 1995 The Poetics of Collecting pp 159‐272 in her On Collecting: an
investigation into Collecting in the European Tradition London: Routledghe
Anth D9 PEA
*Phillips,Ruth 2005 Re‐placing objects: historical objects for the Second
Museum Age , in The Canadian Historical Review 86.1 pp83‐110
Pomian,K 1990 Collectors and Curiousities: Paris and Venice 1500‐1800 .in
particular pp. 6‐25 London, Polity Anth D9 POM
Press
Price, Sally, 1989 Primitive Art in Civilized Places. (esp. Intro &chaps 2‐3&5‐6)
U Chicago Press.
Pearce, S. M. (1991) ‘Collecting Reconsidered’, pp 135‐153 in G. Kavanagh
(ed.) Museum Languages: Objects and Texts, Leicester: Leicester Inst Arch M6
KAV/ Anthropology D9 KAV
Poulot, D. 1994 Identity as self‐discovery: the ecomusuem in France , in
Sherman,D. and Rogoff,I. (eds) Museum Culture ch 4
*Prosler,M. 1996 Museums and Globalisation . In Macdonald,S. and
Fyfe,Gordon eds Theorising Museums:representing identity and diversity in a
changing world. Oxford:Blackwell. / also The Sociological Review pp21‐44.
9
Schildkrout,E and Keim,C.1998 The scramble for art in Central Africa. Especially
Intro. and papers by Mack and Fabian. Cambridge:CUP.
Schulz, Eva (1990) ‘Notes on the history of collecting and of museums’, Journal
of History of Collections 2 (2): 205‐218 Arts Pers/ www
Shelton, A. (2000) ‘Museum ethnography: an imperial science’ in E. Hallam
and B. V. Street (eds) Cultural Encounters: Representing ‘Otherness’ London:
Routledge Inst Arch MG3 HAL/ Anthropology D26 HAL
*Shelton,A. 2006 Museums and Anthropologies:practices and narratives . In
MacDonald,S. (ed) A Companion to Museum Studies ch 5
Shelton,A,2009 The public sphere as wilderness: La Musee du Quai Branley,
Museum Anthropology 32(1): 1‐16
Stocking,G. ed Objects and Others: Essays of Museums and Material Culture.
Madison .University of Wisconsin.
Thomas N. 1991 Entangled Objects: Exchange, Material Culture and Colonialism.
(esp. Chapt.4) Harvard U.P.
Thomas,N. 1994 Licensed Curiousity: Cook’s Pacific Voyages in Elsner and
Cardinal op cit.
Week 4 ,Exhibitions and Politics of Representation
. We look at how museums and heritage centres have responded to the
demands of those wanting to participate in their own representation. Through
a critical review of literature on exhibitions/archives and the politics of
representation, the lecture highlights problems with the application of this
literature to practical attempts to transform heritage practices and museums
into more democratised/ ‘community‐based’ settings that relate to cultural
differences and senses of belonging. One particular facet of the post‐
colonial,late capitalist age is the growing democratisation of the museum
space and the recognition and empowerment of diverse publics,cultural
groups and ethnicities. Another is the healing or therapeutic ideals of heritage
practice in conditons of deprivation,loss and conflict.
Essential Reading
Ruth Phillips 2007 Exhibiting Africa after Modernism: Globalisation,
Pluralism,and the persistent paradigms of Art and Artfact in Griselda Pollack
and Joyce Zemans Museums after Modernism
Either Kreps, C. 2003. Liberating Culture. Intro and Ch 3. indigenous models
(TC)
10
Or Kreps, C.F. 2006 Non –Western models of Museums and Curation in
Cross‐cCultural perspective in S.MacDonald (ed) A Companion to Museum
Studies. Pp 457‐476
Pieterse, J Nederveen 1997 Multiculturalism and Museums: discourse about
others in the age of globalisation , in Theory,Culture and Society vol 4:123‐146.
Reprinted, Corsane,G.2005 ed Heritage, Museums and Galleries ch 13
Nelia Dias 2008 Cultural Difference and Cultural Diversity:the case of the
Musee du Quai Branley in Daniel Sherman ed Museums and Difference pp 124‐
155
Rassool ,C. 2006 Community Museums, memory Politics and Social
Transformatuion in South Africa in I.Karp et al (eds) Museum Frictions: Public
Cultues/Global Transformations pp286‐321
Srinivasan,R.Enote ,J.Becvar,K.M. and Boast,R. 2009 Critical reflective uses of
new media technologies in tribal Museums . Museum Management and
Curatorship 24(2): 161‐181
Seminar Questions: i. What alternative ‘postcolonial’ approaches can be
pursued by cultural heritage and museological discourse in the ‘re‐
presentation’ of self and other? What are the relationships of museums to
public spheres,citizenship and ‘heritage wellbeing?’
ii. Critically evaluate the impacts of two of the following: a. ‘new‐
museology, b.‘post‐museums’, c. ecomuseums, d. ‘comparative museology’,
e. ‘cross cultural heritage approaches’ f. indigenous models of museums,
curation and heritage preservation.
Background Reading
Ames, Michael (1991) ‘Cannibal tours, glass boxes and the politics of
interpretation’, pp 139‐150 in his (ed) Cannibal Tours and Glass Boxes: the
Anthropology of Museums Canada: University of British Columbia Press Inst
Arch MB2 AME/ Inst Arch Issue Desk AME
Ames 199 How to redecorate a House: the re‐negotiation of cultural
representation at the University of british Columbia Museum of
Anthropology, Museum Anthropology 22.3:44‐51
Ashworth, Graham and Tunbridge 2007 Pluralising Pasts ch 2 Culture and
Plural Identities.
Barker, Emma 1999, Contemporary Cultures of Display, Yale UP
Clifford, J. (1999) Chapter 5 ‘Four Northwest Coast Museums: Travel
Reflections’ pp 107‐146, and Chapter 7 ‘Museums as Contact Zones’ pp 188–
11
219 in Routes: Travel and Translation in the late Twentieth Century Cambridge
MA: Harvard University Press Inst Arch MB3 CLI/ Geography H26 CLI/
Anthropology D5 CLI/ Science SLC CLI
Coombes,A. 2003 Visual Culture and Public memory in a Democratic South Africa
Durham: Duke Univ.Press
Fladmark,J.M. ed 2000 Heritage and Museums :Shaping National Identity
Guha‐Thakurta,T. 2004 Monuments,Objects,Histories:Institutions of Art in
Colonial and Postcolonial India. Columbia Univ Press.
Anita Herle 2000 Torres Strait islanders: stories from an exhibition Ethnos
65.2: 253‐274
Handler, R. (1985) ‘On Having Culture: Nationalism and the Preservation of
Quebec’s Patrimonie’, pp 236‐246 in G. Stocking (ed) Objects and Others: Essays
on Museums and Material Culture Madison: University of Wisconsin Press Inst
Arch MG3 STO/ Anthropology D7 STO
Hooper‐Greenhill, E. (2000) Chapter 7 ‘The Rebirth of the Museum’, pp 151‐
162 in Museums and the Interpretation of Visual Culture Inst Arch MB2 HOO
Hudson, K. 1991. ‘How misleading does an ethnographic museum have to
be?’. In Karp & Lavine (eds.) Exhibiting cultures. Smithsonian.
Karp, I., C. Kreamer and S. Lavine (eds) (1992) Introduction to Museums and
Communities: The Politics of Public Culture Inst Arch M 6 KAR/ Anthropology
D 9 KAR
Karp,I. el eds 2006 Museum Frictions:Public Culture/Global Transformations.
Durham:Duke University Press
Jacobs, J. M. (1996) ‘Authentically Yours: Detouring the Map’ pp 132‐163 in
Edge of Empire: Postcolonialism and the City London: Routledge Town Planning
A30 JAC/ Geography JZ58 JAC
Kreps,Christina 2003 Liberating Culture espec ch4 Reclaiming the spirit of
ulture:native Americans and cultural restitution. London,Routledge.
MacDonald, S 2002 Behind the scenes at the science Museum .
MacKenzie,J.M. 2009 Museums and Empire: Natural History,Human
Cultures,Colonial Identities. Manchester:Manchester Univ Press.
*Mitchell,T. 1989 Orientalism and the Exhibitionary Order. Comp Studies in
Sosc. History (CSSH) Also in Pesiozi and Farago Grasping the World 442‐461.
Phillips,R. 2000 APEC at the Museum of Anthropology: the politics of Site
and the Poetics of Sight Bite Ethnos, vol 65.2: 172‐194
12
Putnam, James2001, Art and Artifact: The Museum as Medium, Thames &
Hudson
Poulot,Dominoique 1994 Identity as self –discovery:the ecomuseum in
France. In Sherman,Daniel and Rogoff,Irit (eds) Museum
Culture:Histories,discourses ,Spectacles London:Routledge
Schildkrout,E. 2004 Ambiguous messages and ironic twists:into the Heart of
Africa and the Other Museum. In Carbonell ed Museum Studies :An anthology
of contexts.pp 181‐192 Oxford:Blackwell
*Shelton,AA 2009 The Public Sphere as Wilderness:La Musee du Quai
Branley. Museum Anthropology 32.1: 1‐16
Stanley,Nick 2007 The future of indigenous museums : perspectives from the
southwest Pacific / edited by Nick Stanley..
New York ; Oxford : Berghahn Books, .
Gaspar de Alba,A. 2003 Chicano Art Inside/Outside the Masters House. Aesthetics
and the Politics of Exhhibition . Austin:Univ of Texas Press.
*Weibel,P. and Latour ,B. 2007 Experimenting with representation: Iconoclash
and Making Things Public. In MacDonald,S and Basu,P. Exhibition
Experiments 94‐109
Also visit the ‘Advice’ section of the former Museums and Galleries
Commission Website (http://www.museums.gov.uk/advice/index.html) and
its section on ‘Restitution’, which contains case studies, links to repatriation
websites and downloadable information. Other mainstream sites include
unesco.org and icom.org websites. These can be compared to smaller action
groups, such as indigenous activist groups, by browsing the web for their
sites.
Week 5 Repatriation debates , copyrighting culture: new notions of
ownership and possession in cultural property debates.
13
‘Cultural rights remain the ‘Cinderella’ of the human rights family.’ (Niec 1998:176)
In this session, we consider new notions of ownership to emerge in cultural
property debates that are concerned with not only the tangible but also the
intangible or intellectual aspects of ‘cultural property’. Problematic concepts
such as cultural copyrights and patents that define, authenticate and lay claim
to objects and designs as cultural property add a further complex dimension
to the already hotly debated and politically contentious topics of ownership,
the restitution of cultural property and redress – areas in which museums are
directly implicated. As museums and other heritage and visitor sites devote
increasing attention to the marketing of products to visitors – often selling
objects in their shops that are reminiscent of objects in their collections – as
part of domestic and international tourism industries, discourses of
authenticity and aesthetic quality enter into debates about the ownership of
‘cultural property’, and the impact of commodification upon cultural
property.
Essential Reading
Brown, Michael (2004) ‘Heritage as Property’, pp 49‐68 in K. Verdery and C.
Humphrey (eds) Property in Question: Value Transformation in the Global
Economy Oxford: Berg also read Introduction Anthropology D85 VER
Hubert,J and Fforde,C 2005 The reburial issue in the twenty first century. In
Corsane,G(ed) Heritage, Museums and Galleries.pp 107‐121 Arch M5 Cor [TC].
Simpson, M. (1996) Making Representations: Museums in the Post‐Colonial Era,
Especially Chapter 3 ‘Voices of Authorship’ pp 51‐67; Introduction to Part 2
‘The ‘new’ museum Paradigm’ pp 71‐80; Chapter 5 ‘From Treasure House to
Museum and Back’ pp 107‐133 and Chapter 8 ‘Cultural Artefacts: A Question
of Ownership’ pp 191‐214. Inst Arch MG 3 SIM/ Anthropology D 9 SIM
Srinivasan,R.Enote ,J.Becvar,K.M. and Boast,R. 2009 Critical reflective uses of
new media technologies in tribal Museums . Museum Management and
Curatorship 24(2): 161‐181
cf http://www.stripes.com/article.asp?section=104&article=64313 Saipan families seek the return of WWII-era remains By David Allen and Chiyomi Sumida, Stars and Stripes Pacific edition, Sunday, August 23, 2009
Seminar Questions – i. How does the concept of ‘ownership’ operate within
discourses of cultural rights, repatriation and land rights? ii. What threats
and what opportunities do agendas of repatriation and of copyright have
for the museums and heritage culture? How does this relate to concepts of
authenticity?
14
ii. What do the debates over reburial say about: (a.) the philosophies that
underpin the museum culture? And (b.) indigenous concepts of identity
and tradition?
General Reading
Also important to read * Singh, K, 1998, UNESCO and Cultural Rights, in
Niec, H, 1998, (ed), Cultural Rights and Wrongs: A Collection of Essays in
Commemoration of the 50th Anniversary of the Universal Declaration of
Human Rights, UNESCO publication*
Brown, Michael (1998) ‘Can Culture Be Copyrighted?’ Current Anthropology
39: 193‐222 Anthropology Pers
Brown,M 2005 Who Owns Native Culture Introduction ch2 Cultures and
Copyright ;ch 3 Sign Matters
Carman,J. 2005 Against Cultural property
Cuno,J 2008 Who Owns Antiquity :Museums and the battle over our ancient
Heritage Introduction and ch 1 :political matters
Davis,Peter 2005 Places,cultural touchstones and the ecomuseum. In
Corsane,Gerard (ed) Heritage,Museums and Galleries.pp 365‐376
London:Routlesge
Coombe, Rosemary (1998) Introduction to The Cultural Life of Intellectual
Properties. Authorship, Appropriation and the Law Durham NC: Duke University
Press Literature A40 COO/ Anthropology D78 COO
Cowan,J. Wilson R et al 2001 Culture and Rights
Duffek,Karen and Townsend‐Gault, Charlotte, (eds), Bill Reid and Beyond.
Bill McLennan and K.Duffek The Transforming Image painted arts of
> N.W. Coast First Nations University of british colombia Press 2007
>
Errington, Shelly (1998) ‘Authenticity, Primitivism and Art Revisited’, pp 137‐
157 in The Death of Authentic Primitive Art and Other Tales of Progress, Berkeley:
University of California Press Inst Arch MG3 ERR/ Anthropology E10 ERR
Golvan C. 1989, Aboriginal art and copyright: the case of Johnny Bulun”
European Intellectual Property Review 10.
Greenfield,J 1994 The return of Cultural Treasures especially Conclusions
Handler,R. 1994 Is “Identity” a useful cross‐cultural concept in J.R.Gillis ed
Commemorations:the politics off national identity pp27‐41
15
Hanson A 1990, The making of the Maori: cultural invention and its logic.
American Anthropologist 91: 890‐902
Harrison, S. 1999 Identity as a scarce resource. Social Anthropology 7: no3:239‐
251
Jonaitis, A, 2004, Reconsidering the Northwest Coast Renaissance, in Duffek
and Townsend‐Gault, C, (eds), Bill Reid and Beyond, 155‐224 [TC]
McLennan,Bill and K.Duffek 2007 The Transforming Image painted arts of
N.W. Coast First Nations University of british colombia Press
Messinger, P. (1999) [1989] Ethics of Collecting Cultural Property: Whose
Culture? Whose Property? Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press Inst
Arch AG 20 MES/ Anthropology D 9 MES
Townsend‐Gault (2004) ‘Circulating Aboriginality’, Journal of Material Culture
9 (2): 183‐202 Anthropology Pers/ www
Kramer, Jennifer (2004) ‘Figurative Repatriation: First Nations ‘Artist‐
Warriors’ Recover, Reclaim, and Return Cultural Property through Self‐
Definition’, Journal of Material Culture 9 (2): 161‐182 Anthropology Pers/ www
Kreps, Christina 2003 Liberating Culture:Cross‐cultural perspectives on
Museums,curation and heritage preservation pp48‐78. London:Routledge
Merrill,W. and Ahlborn,R. 1997 Zuni archangels and Ahayu:da:A sculpted
chronicle of power and identity. In Henderson A. and Kaeppler A. (eds)
Exhibiting Dilemmas:issues of representation at the Smithsonian.
Washington:Smithsonian Press.
Merryman J. 1986 Two ways of thinking about cultural property. American
Journal of International Law 80: 831‐853
Merryman, J 2005 International J of Cultural property vol 12
Meryman,J 2006 Imperialism, Art and Restitution
Murphy,D 1995 Plunder and Preservation
Palmer, N. (1989) ‘Museums and Cultural Property’, pp 172‐204 in P. Vergo
(ed) The New Museology London: Reaktion Books Inst Arch M6 VER/ Issue
Desk Inst Arch IOA VER 2/ Art A49 VER
*Phillips, Ruth (1998) ‘The Collecting and Display of Souvenir Arts:
Authenticity and the “Strictly Commercial”’, pp 49‐71; and ‘Changing
Discourses: The Critique of the Touristic in Contemporary Art Practise’, pp
262‐280 in Trading Identities: The Souvenir in Native North American Art from the
Northeast, 1700‐1900 Washington: McGill‐Queen’s University Press
Anthropology T60 PHI / Science SLC PHI
Renfrew C. 2000 Loot,Legitimacy and Ownership
16
Robson,E. 2006 Who Owns Artefacts Oxbow books
*Rowlands, Michael (2004) ‘Cultural Rights and Wrongs: Uses of the Concept
of Property’, pp 207‐226 in K. Verdery and C. Humphrey (eds) Property in
Question: Value Transformation in the Global Economy Oxford: Berg
Anthropology D85 VER
*Schmidt, P, R, 1996, The Human Right to a Cultural Heritage – African
Applications, in Schmidt, P and McIntosh, R, (eds), Plundering Africa’s Past;
18‐28
Strathern, M 1996, Potential Property. Intellectual Rights and Property in
Persons, Social Anthropology 4, 1, 17‐21. Anthropology Pers.
Touraine, Alain.2004. Pour un contrat culturel. Pp. 307‐310 in Où vont les
valeurs ?, edited by Jérôme Bindé. Paris : Éditions UNESCO.
Weiner, Annette (1992) Chapter 2 ‘Inalienable Possessions: The Forgotten
Dimension’, pp 23‐43 in her Inalienable Possessions: The Paradox of Keeping‐
While‐Giving Berkeley: University of California Press Inst Arch DD WEI/
Issue Desk IOA WEI 2/ Anthropology S52 WEI
Week 6 ‘ Heritage as Performance and the Discourse of Intangible Cultural
Heritage
“For many peoples, the intangible heritage is the vital source of an identity that is
deeply rooted in history”
UNESCO (web‐site unesco.org)
The relatively recent interventions made by the formulation of intangible
heritage debate has shifted attention away from heritage as monuments, sites
and artefacts to include not only the masterpieces but also the masters. The
most recent model seeks to sustain a living, if endangered tradition, by
supporting the conditions necessary for cultural reproduction. The task then
is to sustain the whole system as a living entity and not just a switch to
collecting ‘intangible artefacts’. We shall take several examples of such
‘metacultural productions’– including food and music – to discuss how the
practice of ‘craftship’ and other forms of making and doing – are more
substantial forms of skilled knowledge on which future heritage practice can
be based.
*Essential Readings
*Kirshenblatt‐Gimblett, B, 2004, Intangible Heritage as Metacultural
Production, in Museum Studies vol 56 no.1‐2: 52‐65. [pdf on‐line/ Teaching
Collection]
*Mitchell, J. P. 2006, Performance, In Handbook of Material Culture, (eds) C.
Tilley, M. Rowlands et al. London: Sage: 384‐401 [Teaching Collection]
17
*Nas, P.J.M, 2002, Masterpieces of Oral and Intangible Culture: Reflections on
the UNESCO World Heritage List, in Current Anthropology, vol 43 no.1: 139‐
48. . [pdf on‐line/ Teaching Collection]
*Students are also asked to visit the UNESCO website and familiarise
themselves with the Intangible Heritage programme and List of Oral and
Intangible Masterpieces: http://www.unesco.org/culture/intangible‐heritage/
12th Nov – Seminars – 12‐2pm
Seminar Questions: ‐ i. What are we to understand by the term ‘intangible
heritage’ and what is the usefulness and the limitations of its application to
the cultural performance and practice of heritage?
ii. What are the challenges and opportunities intangible heritage confronts
the heritage and museum culture with both conceptually and
operationally?
General Readings
*[Extra bibliographies to be circulated prior to the session. See also week 3]
Bagnall, G. 2003, Performance and performativity at heritage sites. Museums
and Society, 1(2) 87‐103.
Dubisch,J. 1995 In a Different Place ch 10 Women, Performance, and
Pilgrimage: Beyond Honour and Shame. Princeton University press
Fabian, J. 1983, Time and the Other How Anthropology Makes its Objects.
New York: Columbia University Press.
Hoskins, J. 2006. Agency, Biography and Objects. In Handbook of Material
Culture, (eds) C. Tilley, M. Rowlands et al. London: Sage: 74‐84.
Hart, L, 2007, Authentic recreation: living history and leisure, Museums and
Society, 5(2) 103‐24.
Lindholme,C. 2008 Culture and Authenticity chs 6 and 7 Food and Dance.
Phelan, P. 1993, Unmasked: The Politics of Performance. New York:
Routledge. Whiteley, P,M, 2002, Archaeology and Oral Tradition: The Scientific Importance of Dialogue, American Antiquity, Vol. 67, No. 3. 405-415.
Background Readings
Cleere, H, 1996, The concept of ‘outstanding universal value’ in the World
Heritage Convention, in Conservation and Management of Archaeological Sites,
vol. 1, no. 4: 227‐233 Inst arch Per
Cleere, H, 1995, Cultural Landscapes as world heritage, in Conservation and
Management of Archaeological Sites, vol. 1, no 1: 63‐68 Inst arch Per
Cleere, H, 2000, The World Heritage Convention in the Third World, in
McManamon, F, and Halton, A, (eds), Cultural Resource Management in
Contemporary Society 99‐ 106, Routledge Inst arch Per
18
Cleere, H. 2006. The World Heritage Convention: Management by and for
whom?. In (eds) R. Layton and S Shennan, A Future for Archaeology.
London: UCL Press. 65‐74
Dubisch,J. 1995 In a Different Place ch 10 Women, Performance, and
Pilgrimage:Beyond Honour and Shame. Princeton University press
Fabian, J. 1983, Time and the Other How Anthropology Makes its Objects.
New York: Columbia University Press.
Holtorf, C. 2001. Is the Past a Non‐Renewable Resource? In Destruction and
Conservation of Cultural Property. R. Layton, P. Stone and J. Thomas (eds). One
World Archaeology Series. London: Routledge
Holtorf, C. 2006, Can Less be More? Heritage in the Age of Terrorism: In (ed)
N Ascherson Public Archaeology. Vol 5 no. 2. London; James and James; 101‐
110.
Hoskins, J. 2006. Agency, Biography and Objects. In Handbook of Material
Culture, (eds) C. Tilley, M. Rowlands et al. London: Sage: 74‐84.
Lacoste, M, C, 1994, The Story of a Grand Design: UNESCO 1946‐1993
McBryde, I, 1997, ‘The Ambiguities of authenticity – rock of faith or shifting
sands?’ Nara Conference on authenticity in relation to the World Heritage
Convention’, Conservation and Management of Archaeological Sites, 1997, 93‐100
In Arch Pers
Meneley, 2004, A, Scared Sick or Silly? in Antze, P, and Lambek, M (eds)
Illness and Irony – On the Ambiguity of Suffering in Culture, 21‐39. [TC]
Parkin, D. 1999, ‘Mementoes as Transitional Objects in Human Displacement’,
Material Culture Journal, 4:3
Phelan, P. 1993, Unmasked: The Politics of Performance. New York:
Routledge.
Stanley, N, Being Ourselves For You: the global display of cultures
Week 7 ‐ Heritage and Memory: Commemoration and ‘Crimes against
culture’
We examine the motives and justifications for commemoration and reparation
of cultural heritage. We will place emphasis on heritage and museum projects
concerned with the memorialisation of conflict, political oppression and
genocide, and consider the role museums and memorials play in ‘memory‐
work’ and ‘healing’as reconciliation . ‘Outside’ the academy conflicts
occurring over competing interpretations of sites and monuments has
resulted in clashes, often fuelled by nationalist, ethnic or religious agendas in
which the cultural heritage has become a scene of violence, destruction and
even death. In this session we shall examine some key ‘events’ which mark
this context including the recent attacks on the Bamiyan Buddhas by the
19
Taliban in Afghanistan which the UNESCO Director Matsurra dubbed as
“crimes against culture.” We explore the specific repercussions of these
conceptualisations of iconoclasm and their relationship to elite identities,
ethnic/ religious/ regional movements, nation‐building and to cultural
fundamentalism. Holocaust museums also offer a means to re‐address
dominant conceptualisations of heritage destruction and renewal by bringing
into view new and alternative concepts and models of heritage as a
‘renewable resource’.
Essential Reading
M. Hirsch 1999 Projected Memory:holocaust photographs in Personal and
Public Fantasy in Mieke Bal et al (eds) Acts of Memory :3‐24
Huyssen,A. 2003 Present pasts:Media,Politics and Amnesia in his Present
Pasts: Urban Palimpsests and the politics of memory
Paul Williams 2007 Memorial Museums ch 2 The surviving object: presence and
absence in memorial Museums
Seminar Question: ‐ i. How should cultural heritage respond to contexts of
loss and trauma? ii. What do you understand by the terms ‘negative
heritage’ and ‘heritage healing’’? iii. In what ways is heritage used to
ensure everyday wellbeing and protection?
General Reading
Conflict and Memory
Adorno,Th. W.Valery Proust Museum . in Prisms Cambridge,MIT Press 175‐
185
Basu,Paul 2007 Palimpsest memoryscapes:materialising and mediating war
and peace in Sierra Leone. In de Jong and Rowlands,M. eds Reclaiming
Heritage.
Bender, B and Winer, M, (eds) 2001, Contested Landscapes: Movement, Exile and
Place,
Bordage, R. (1993) ‘Sachsenhausen: A Floored Museum’, in Museum
International, No.177 (Vol. XLV, No. 1) Inst Arch Pers/ www
Bonnell, J and Simon, R, 2007, ‘Difficult’ exhibitions and intimate encounters,
Museums and Society 5(2) 65‐85.
Butler, B, J, 2001, Egypt: Constructed Exiles of the Imagination, in Bender, B
and Winer, M, (eds) 2001, Contested Landscapes: Movement, Exile and Place,
Das, V, 1995 Critical Events. Inst Arch DBMA 5 DAS / Anthropology RA 16
DAS
20
Coombes, A, 2004, History After Apartheid: Visual Culture and Public Memory in
a Democratic South Africa
Farmer, S. (1995) ‘Symbols that Face both Ways: Commemorating the Victims
of Nazism and Stalinism at Buchenwald and Sachsenhausen’ in
Representations, Winter No.49 Art Pers/ www
Flood,Barry 2002 Between Cult and Culture: Bamiyan,Islamic iconoclasm and
the Museum. The Art Bulletin 84.4:641‐659 (Donaldson Library and TC)
Gopal S. 1990 Anatomy of a Confrontation: Ayodhha and the rise of
communal violence in India
Handler, R, 1988, Nationalism and the Politics of Culture in Quebec.
Anthropology V 28 HAN
Hetherington, K, 1996.The Utopics of Social Ordering – Stonehenge as a
Museum without Walls. In G. Fyfe and S. MacDonald (eds) Theorizing
Museums. 153‐177.
Holtorf, C. 2001. Is the Past a Non‐Renewable Resource? In Destruction and
Conservation of Cultural Property. R. Layton, P. Stone and J. Thomas (eds). One
World Archaeology Series. London: Routledge [TC]
Holtorf,C. 2006 Can less be more? Heritage in the age of terrorism . Public
Archaeology 5.2: 101‐109
Hoskins,A. 2003 Signs of the Holocaust :exhibiting Memory in a Mediated
Age media,Culture and Socierty 25(1):7‐22
Hughes,R. 2003 The abject artefacts of memory:photographs from Cambodia
Genociude Media,Culture and Society 25(1):23‐44
Keenan, T, 1996, Introduction (“Like a Museum”) in Hanhardt et al, The End
(s) of the Museum.
James, Jason. 2004. “Recovering the German Nation: Heritage Restoration and
the Search for Unity.” Pp. 143‐165 in Marketing Heritage: Archeology and the
Consumption of the Past, edited by Rowan Yorke and Uzi Baram. Walnut Creek
CA: Alta Mira Press.
Koonz,C. 1994 Between memory and oblivion: Concentration camps in
german memory, in J.R.Gillis (ed ) Commmemorations: The Politics of national
identity . pp 258‐281.
Layton, R, Stone, P and Thomas, J 2001, Destruction and Conservation of
Cultural Property, This volume contains a number of papers on Ayodhya and
other conflicts.
Ledgerwood,J. 1997 The Cambodian Tuol Sleng Museumof genocidal crimes:
National narrative Museum Anthropology 21(1):82‐98
Lennon,J, &Foley,M. (eds) 2000 Dark Tourism.
Linenthal,E.T. 2001 Preserving Memory : the struggle to create America’s
Holocaust museum . Columbia Univ Press.
MacDonal;d, S. 2009 Difficult Heritage:Negotiating the Nazi Past in
Nuremburg and Beyond. Routledge.
21
Mandal, D, 1993, Ayodhya: Archaeology After Demolition
Olick, Jeffrey K. and Daniel Levy. 1997. Collective Memory and Cultural
Constraint: Holocaust Myth and Rationality in German Politics. American
Sociological Review 62 (December): 921‐936.
Meskell,L. 2002 Negative Heritage and past mastering in Archaeology.
Anthropological Quarterly vol 75. 3: 557‐574
Patraka V. (1996) ‘Spectacles of Suffering: Performing Presence, Absence, and
Historical Memory at US Holocaust Museums’, in E. Diamond (ed)
Performance and Cultural Politics, London: Routledge Literature D10.7 DIA/
[TC]
Rowlands,M. 1999: Remembering to Forget: sublimation as sacrifice in war
memorials in, A.Forty and S.Kuchler esd The Art of Forgetting
Rowlands,M. 2008 Civilisation,Violence and Heritage healing in Liberia. J.of
Material Culture vol 13.2.
Rowlands ,M. and Tilley,C. 2006 Monuments and memorials in Tilley,C et al
edited A Handbook of Material Culture
.Stolcke, V, 1996, Talking Culture: New Boundaries, New Rhetorics of
Exclusion in Europe, Current Anthropology 36:1‐24. Anthropology Pers.
Van der veer P. 1994 Religious Nationalism:.Hindus and Muslims in India
[see http://www.unesco.org for UNESCO’s account of the destruction of the
Bamiyan Buddhas]
Verdery, K. (1999) The Political Lives of Dead Bodies: Reburial and Postsocialist
Change, New York: Columbia University Press Anthropology N43 VER/
SSEES Misc XII VER
Young, J. (1993) The Texture of Memory: Holocaust Memorials and Meaning, New
Haven: Yale University Press, especially Introduction [TC]/ Inst Arch MG 2
YOU/ Hebrew DD 15.1 YOU
Special bibliography on trauma and memory
Amadiume, I and An‐Na’im, A 2000, The Politics of Memory.
Antze, P and Lambek, M, 1998, Tense Past: Cultural Essays in Trauma and
Memory. Inst Arch Processing / Anthropology D 23 ANT.
Antze, P, and Lambek, M (eds) Illness and Irony – On the Ambiguity of Suffering
in Culture [TC]
Benjamin, A, 1996, ‘Architecture of Hope: Daniel Liebskind’s Jewish
Museum’, in Present Hope: Philosophy, Architecture, Judaism (London:
Routledge)
22
Brison, S. J.1999 ‘Traumatic Narratives and the Remaking of the Self’, in Acts
of Memory, Cultural Recall in the Present, ed. M.Bal. J.Crewe and L. Spitzer
(University of New England Press).
Coetzee, C, and Nuttall, S, 1998, Negotiating the Past: The Making of Memory in
South Africa. Geography QW 60 NUT
Coombes, A. E. , 2000 ‘Translating the Past: Apartheid Monuments in Post‐
Apartheid South Africa’, in ed. A. Brah and A. Coombes Hybridity and its
Discontents: Politics, Science, Culture, (Routledge). Das, V, 1995 Critical Events. Inst Arch DBMA 5 DAS / Anthropology RA 16 DAS Das, 2000, The Act of Witnessing, Violence, Poisonous Knowledge, and Subjectivity, in (eds) Das and Kleinman, Violence and Subjectivity, pp205-226. Das and Kleinman, (eds) et al, 2000, Violence and Subjectivity [this edited volume contains a number of texts relevant to this section of the course] Das and Kleinman (eds) et al, Remaking a World: Violence, Social Suffering and Recovery. [this edited volume also contains a number of texts relevant to this section of the course] Das, V, 2007, Life and Worlds: Violence and the Descent into the Ordinary
Derrida, J. 1996. Archive Fever: A Freudian Impression. Trans. E. Prenowitz.
Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Duffy, T M, 2004 [2001], Museums of ‘Human Suffering’ and the Struggle for
Human Rights, in Carbonell, B M, (ed), Museum Studies – An Anthology of
Contexts, 117‐123
Feuchtwang, S. 2000. Reinscriptions: Commemorations, Restoration and the
Interpersonal Transmission of Histories and Memories under Modern States
in Asia and Europe. In S. Radstone (ed), Memory and Methodology, 59‐78.
Forty, A and Kuechler, S, 1999, The Art of Forgetting, Anthropology E 7 FOR
Freud, S. 1984 [1936]. A Disturbance of Memory on the Acropolis. In A
Richards (ed) On Metapsychology, 443‐456. London: Penguin Books.
Hanhardt et al, 1995, The End(s) of the Museum.
Hirsch, M, 2001, ‘Surviving Images: Holocaust Photography and the Work of
Postmemory’, The Yale Journal of Criticism 12.1 (Spring), 5‐38.
Hoskins, J, 1998, Biographical Objects. Inst Arch DBNB HOS / Anthropology
RR 16 HOS.
Huyssen, A. 1999, ‘Monumental Seduction’, in Acts of Memory: Cultural Recall
in the Present, ed. M. Bal, J. Crewe and L. Spitzer (University of New England
Press).
Laub, D. ‘Truth and Testimony: The Process and the Struggle’, in Trauma:
Explorations in Memory, ed. C. Caruth (John Hopkins University Press, 1995).
Maiello, A, 1996, Ethnic Conflict in Post‐colonial India, in Chambers, I and
Curti, L (eds) The Post‐Colonial Question. Geography H 20 CHA / Literature A
42 CHA / Town Planning G 50 CHA.
23
Patraka V, 1996, ‘Spectacles of Suffering: Performing Presence, Absence, and
Historical Memory at US Holocaust Museums’, in Performance and Cultural
Politics, ed. Elin Diamond. London: Routledge,
Rapaport, H. 2003. Later Derrida: Reading the Recent Work. London and New
York
Radstone, S, 2000, Memory and Methodology
Radstone, S, and Hodgkins, K, 2003, Contested Pasts – The Politics of Memory.
Radstone, S, and Hodgkins, K, 2003, Regimes of Memory
Rose, G, 1993, ‘The Future of Auschwitz’, in Judaism and Modernity:
Philosophical Essays (Oxford: Blackwell).
Santner, E, L, 1990, ‘Post‐war/Post‐Holocaust/Postmodern: Some Reflections
on the Discourses of Mourning’, in Stranded Objects: Mourning, Memory, and
Film in Postwar Germany, Ithaca: Cornell U.P.
Santner, E, L, 1992, ‘History Beyond the Pleasure Principle: Some Thoughts on
the Representation of Trauma’, in Probing the Limits of Representation, ed. Saul
Friedlander
Scarry, E, 1998, The Body in Pain
Wood, N, 1999, Vectors of Memory: Legacies of Trauma in Postwar Europe
Young, J, 1995, The Texture of Memory: Holocaust memorials and meaning. Inst
Arch MG 2 YOU / Hebrew DD 15.1 YOU
Young, J, 2000, ‘Daniel Libeskind’s Jewish Museum in Berlin: The Uncanny
Arts of Memorial Architecture’, in At Memory’s Edge: After‐Images of the
Holocaust in Contemporary Art and Architecture (New Haven: Yale University
Press).
Douglas,Lawrence 1998 The shrunken head of Buchenwald:icons of atrocity
at Nurembeurg. Representations 63: 39‐64
Week 8 Cultures in Motion,: mobility,roots‐tourism, souvenirs and
markets.
‘One essential element in improving the encounter between tourists and local
populations lies in the participation in and, ultimately, control over the protection
and management of sites by the local people themselves, as well as their sharing in
the profits which derive from tourism…Ways must be found to develop tourism so as
to preserve both the cultural and natural resources, whilst also inviting the
substantive participation of local communities; that is, a tourism which can be part of
sustainable development’ (UNESCO report Culture, tourism, development: crucial
issues for the 21st Century 1996:8)
24
One of the key incentives of contemporary development of heritage projects
in both North and South is that of the power to attract tourism. We shall
explore the current theoretical debates within the growing literature on the
‘anthropology of tourism’ and the ‘mobility of cultures’ ; ‐ including critiques
which recast mobility/tourism as a neo‐colonial force and which emphasise
the exploitative infrastructures of commodification and consumerism which
accompany (are ‘exported’ by) the tourist industry. We place alongside these
discussions case‐studies which give you an insight into the practical
application of tourism projects and are aimed at newer ‘ethical’ trends in
tourist management. Heritage tourism has developed as a significant part of
this, relating to new ideas of ownership in cultural property, authenticity and
claims to cultural resources. As museums and other heritage and visitors
centers devote increasing attention to the marketing of products for visitors‐
often selling objects and performances as part of domestic and international
tourism industries, what are authentic, what are copies, what kinds of
experience are being acquired, what this means for cultural transmission
become matters for debate.
Essential reading
Basu, P, 2005, ʹRoots‐Tourism as Return Movement: Semantics and the
Scottish Diasporaʹ in M. Harper (ed.), Emigrant Homecomings: The Return
Movement of Emigrants, 1600‐2000, (pdf/ online)
Or Basu,Paul 2004 Route metaphors of ‘roots‐tourism’ in the Scottish Highlands
diaspora, ch 8 150‐178 in Coleman,S and Eade J. Reframing Pilgrimage:cultures in
Motion.
Nash,D. 1998 The Anthropology of Tourism Introduction
*Parkin, D. 1999. Mementoes as transitional objects, Journal of Material Culture
(TC) (pdf/ online)
*Selwyn, T, 1996 (ed) The Tourist Image: Myths and Myth Making in Tourism,
introduction: 1‐33 [TC]
See Anthropology Today 2004 Special issue on tourism June 20(3)
Seminar Questions: ‐ i. Discuss the motivations of tourists to consume
heritage sites and cultural performances. What are the social impacts and
local responses to tourism? ii. Discuss the different forms of heritage and
tourism ‘commodification’. What are the implications here for concepts of
‘roots’, ‘origins’, ‘authenticity’ and the ‘exotic.’? iii. Critically examine the
relationships between cultural heritage and the refuge‐exile experience.
How does object‐work feature in this context?
25
General reading
Aziz, H, 1993 A holiday without Alcohol, FOCUS [Journal of Tourism
Concern]
Boniface, P, and Fowler, P, J, 1993, Heritage Tourism in “The Global Village” esp.
Intro. chapters 1, 3, 4 & 11
Britton, S, G, 1982, The Political Economy of Tourism in the Third world, in
Annals of Tourism Research, vol 9; 331‐58
*Cohen, E, 1988, Authenticity and Comodification in Tourism, Annals of
Tourism Research, vol.15, no.3 371‐86
*Crick,M. 1995 The Anthropologist as Tourist: an identity in question in
Lanfont,M., Alcock,J., Bruner,E. eds International Tourism:Identity and Change
London: Sage.
Fennell, D.A. 2008 Ecotourism Introduction
*Graburn, N, 1983, ‘The Anthropology of Tourism’, in Annals of Tourism
Research, vol 10, no. 3, pp. 9‐33
Graburn,N. ed 1976 Ethnic and Tourist Arts
Grewal, I, 1996, Home and Harem: Nation, Gender, Empire, and the Cultures of
Traveleps. section 1.3 The Guidebook & Museum
Hall, D & Kinnaird, V 1994, Tourism & Gender
Journal of Material Culture 2004 Special Issue on Tourist Arts – exp[ec article
by Graburn.
Harrison, David, and Michael Hitchcock, eds. 2005. The Politics of World
Heritage: Negotiating Tourism and Conservation. Clevedon, UK: Channel View
Publications.
*MacCannell, D, (1989 edition), The Tourist: A New Theory of the Leisure Class
MacCannell, D, 1992, Empty Meeting Grounds,
Myers,F. 2002 Painting Culture: the making of Aboriginal High Art. pp 277‐314
Pratt L, M, 1992, Imperial Eyes: Travel Writing & Transculturation, esp.
introduction
Rojek, C., 1997. ’Indexing., Dragging and the Social Construction of Tourist
Sights’, in Touring Cultures: transformations of Travel and Theory. C Rojek and J
Urry (eds).
*Selwyn, T, 1996 (ed) The Tourist Image: Myths and Myth Making in Tourism,
introduction: 1‐33
Timothy,D.J. and Boyd,S,W, 2003 Heritage Tourism Essex: : Pearson
Education Ltd
*Smith, L, (ed), 1977, Hosts and Guests: The Anthropology of Tourism, esp. Nash,
‘Tourism as a form of Imperialism’, & Graburn, ‘Tourism, The Sacred
Journey’
Tilley, C, 1997, Performing Culture in the Global Village, in Critique of
Anthropology, Vol 17, 67‐89.
26
UNESCO 1996, Culture, tourism, development: crucial issues for the 21st
Century
*Urry, J, 1990, The Tourist Gaze: Leisure and Travel in Contemporary Societies,
Introduction . London,Sage
Urry, J, 1995, Consuming Places, Part III & Part IV
(2)Authenticity,heritage and the art trade/souvenirs
Heritage implies value and in particular that which emerges from the
commodification/circulation of images and objects that acquire significance
,traced through their authenticity . We will follow the theme of the creation of
heritage value through authenticity, singularity, inalienability and their
circulation and possession through copies in order to come to some
conclusions about the significance of cultural transmission for heritage theory.
Required Readings
Myers,F. 2002 Painting Culture: the making of Aboriginal High Art. pp 277‐314
Steiner,C. 1995 The Art of Trade: on the creation of value and authenticity in
the African art market. In G.Marcus and F.Myers eds The Traffic in Culture
151‐166.
General Readings
Morphy,H. 1995 Aboriginal Art in a Global Context. In Worlds Apart ed
D.Miller pp211‐240
Spooner,B. 1986 Weavers and Dealers:the authenticity of an oriental carpet In
A. Appadurai The Social Life of Things
Kingston,S. 1999 Review article on Authenticity Journal of Material Culture vol
4.3
Steiner,C. 1999 Authenticity,Repetition and the Aesthetics of Seriality In
C.Steiner and R.Phillips (ed) Unpacking Culture pp 87‐103
Steiner,C. 1994 African Art in Transit
Townsend‐Gault ,C. 2004 Circulating Aboriginality Journal of Material Culture
9(2):183‐202
Parkin, D. 1999, ‘Mementoes as Transitional Objects in Human Displacement’,
Material Culture Journal, 4:3 [TC]
Phillips,R. and Steiner,C. 1999 Unpacking Culture cf articles by
Lee,Silverman, and Graburn.
27
28
Philllips,R. 1999 Represewntations in miniature:effigy,toy,model and
Souvenir in her Trading Identities: the souvenir in native North American Art
pp72‐103
Errington,S. 1998 The Death of Authentic Pritimitive Art. Chapter what
became of authentic primitive art ?
Corbey,R. 2000 Tribal Art Auctions in R.Corbey Tribal Art Traffic. Amsterdam
Phillips,R. 1999 Trading Identities:the souvenir in Native North American Art
from the North East pp 72‐103 representation in miniature…
Enwezor,O. 1997 Reframing the black subject:ideology and fantasy in
contemporaryu South African art Third Text 40 pp21‐40
Journal of Material Culture 2004 special issue on Tourists Art – especially article
by Graburn.
Thomas,N.1999 Indigenous signs in Colonial Designs in his
Possessions:Indigenous Art/Colonial Culture pp94‐126.
Townsend‐Gault,C. 2004 Circulating Aboriginality Journal of Material Culture
9.2:183 ‐202
Vogel,S. 1991 Digesting the West in her Africa Explores.
Dan Hicks
X-IronPort-AV: E=Sophos;i="4.52,290,1270418400"; d="doc'32?scan'32,208,32";a="116277001" From: Kristian Kristiansen <[email protected]> To: [email protected] Subject: nominering Date: Thu, 29 Apr 2010 00:09:43 +0200 X-Mailer: Apple Mail (2.936) Institutionen for historiska studier nominerer hermed Dan Hicks fra Oxford til at komme som gæsteforsker under hösten 2011, 2-3 måender. Han har givet sit tilsagn, og jeg attacher hans CV som taler for sig selv. Han har tidligere besøgt institutionen som forelæser på Masterkurset 'Modernitet og kulturarv, hans specieale er historisk arkæologi, hvilket betyder at han er relevant for både arkæologer og historikere. Han representerer således en vigtigt tværfalig inspiration. mvh Kristian Kristiansen
hicks_cv.doc PS VI kommer med et forslag mere, men har endnu ikke fået cv.
Sida 1 av 1
2010-04-29file://C:\DOCUME~1\KANEE~1.HUM\LOKALA~1\Temp\eud17.htm
Dan Hicks: CV, page 1 of 8
Curriculum Vitae: Dan Hicks MA (Oxon), Ph.D. (Bristol), FSA, MIfA
1. Personal Details Home Address: 46 Walton St, Oxford. OX2 6AD Email: [email protected] Nationality: British Tel: 44 (0)1865 613011 (office)
2. Present Appointment Aug 2007-present University Lecturer and Curator in Archaeology of the Modern Period,
School of Archaeology/Pitt Rivers Museum, Oxford University Fellow of St Cross College, Oxford
3. Previous Appointments Jul 2003-Jul 2007. Lecturer in Archaeology and Anthropology, University of Bristol Aug 2002-Jul 2003 Teaching Fellow in Archaeology, University of Bristol Sep 1998-Sep 1999 Archaeological Project Officer, Gloucestershire County Council Jul 1997-Sep1998 Archaeological Supervisor, Oxford Archaeological Unit Oct 1994-Jul 1997 Archaeologist, various British/North American organisations during college vacations
(14 months: including field school tutor for Dept of Classics, University of British Columbia; geophysical technician for Oxford Archaeotechnics; field archaeologist for Oxford Archaeology, RPS Consultants and Tempus Reperatum)
Apr 1993-Sep 1994 Archaeological Supervisor, Warwickshire Museum Archaeology Service Jul 1990-Apr 1993 Site Assistant, Gardens Archaeology Project, CKC Archaeology Jun-Sep 1989 Leverhulme Trust Trainee, Castle Bromwich Hall Gardens Archaeology Project
4. Academic Qualifications 1999 to 2002 Ph.D. Archaeology & Anthropology, Bristol University. “The Garden of the World”: a
historical Archaeology of eastern Caribbean Sugar Plantations. (awarded Feb 2003) 1994 to 1997 BA Archaeology & Anthropology. St John’s College, Oxford. First Class. (MA awarded 2001)
5. Special Awards, Honours and Distinctions o Honorary Research Fellow, Department of Archaeology, Boston University, USA (since 2005) o Member of the Institute of Field Archaeologists (MIfA) (elected 2005) o Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of London (elected 2008)
6. Research 6(a) Grants Awarded 2010 £4,000. The History and Curation of the Sub-Saharan Stone Age Collections of the Pitt Rivers Museum. The Boise Fund 2010 £1,500. Astor Visiting Lectureship for Professor Rosemary Joyce (University of California, Berkeley) 2009 $7,800. Fieldwork in New York City, July 2009. Stahl Endowment Grant (University of California, Berkeley). (Co-I with Prof. Laurie A. Wilkie) 2009 £116,325. Characterizing the World Archaeological Collections of the Pitt Rivers Museum. John Fell OUP Research Fund 2008 £23,988. Ecologies of Modern Heritage. AHRC/EPSRC Heritage Science Research Clusters. (Principal Investigator, with Dr Caitlin DeSilvey, Exeter University) 2008 £450. Astor Travel Fund – (for visit of Prof. Mark Leone, University of Maryland, to Oxford) 2007 £15,300. Heritage Lottery Fund/Institute of Field Archaeologists Workplace Training Busary in
Archive Archaeology 2007 £32,475. EPSRC, with additional funding from ESRC, NERC, AHRC and English Heritage.
Collision or Consensus? A site-specific approach to integrating methodologies for the historic environment. Workshop series (Co-I with Dr Heather Viles, School of Geography, Oxford University)
Dan Hicks: CV, page 2 of 8
2006 £25,000. HEFCE FDTL 5 Transferability Fund: Archive Archaeology from Undergraduate to Postgraduate Contexts in Archaeology. (Co-I with Professor Clive Orton (UCL), Dr Gustav Milne (UCL) & Robin Skeates (University of Durham))
2006-2007 £34,575, Arts Council Grants for the Arts. Contemporary Art and Contemporary Archaeology. Workshop series and artistic commissions, Jan 2006-Jun 2007. (Co-I with Claire Doherty, University of the West of England)
2006-2009 £55,200. Public Art and Public Archaeology in the Context of Urban Renewal. (Great Western Research Studentship, 50% funded by Hammersons, PLC & Land Securities) (Co-PI with Claire Doherty, University of the West of England))
2006-2007 £21,949. Historical Archaeology and the British Atlantic World, AD 1600-1800. AHRC Research Leave Scheme
2006 £700. British Academy Overseas Conference Grant to attend Society for American Archaeology annual meeting in San Juan, Puerto Rico
2006 £635. Support for CHAT 2006 conference. Bristol Institute for Research in the Humanities and Arts, University of Bristol
2005 £950. Bristol University Research Fund. Small grant for replacement teaching during editing of Cambridge Companion to Historical Archaeology (February-March 2005)
2005. £750. Benjamin Meaker Visiting Fellowship (Institute for Advanced Studies (IAS), Bristol University): For visit of Professor Michael Shanks (Stanford University) to the IAS, June 2005.
2004-2007 £249,354, HEFCE Fund for the Developing of Teaching and Learning Phase 5 (FDTL 5). Archive Archaeology: piloting approaches to the use of Museum Collections and Historic Environment Records in the teaching and learning of archaeology. (Co-PI with Professor Clive Orton (UCL), Dr Gustav Milne (UCL) & Dr Robin Skeates (University of Durham))
6(b) Doctoral Student Supervision (*=submitted) 2010-2013 Christian Thompson. Aboriginal Art and the Pitt Rivers Museum (funded by the Charlie Perkins
Trust – the first indigenous Aboriginal researcher to matriculate for a DPhil programme at Oxford University)
2008-2011 Sefryn Penrose. The Archaeology of Deindustrialization in Britain. (funded by the St Cross Scholarship in Archaeology)
2007-2010 Lisa Hill. Walking, Riding and Dwelling in the Forest: Archaeologies of Woodland Leisure Activity in the Forest of Dean, 1926-present (Ph.D. funded by AHRC)
2007-2010 Tony Buxton. Using probate inventories in historical archaeology. (self-funded). 2006-2009* James Dixon. Public Art and Public Archaeology in the Context of Urban Renewal. (Ph.D. funded
by Great Western Research collaborative Scholarship, with University of the West of England and Bristol Alliance as industry partners, supervised with Claire Doherty)
2004-2007* Laura McAtackney. Historical Archaeology at the Long Kesh/Maze Site, Northern Ireland. (Ph.D., AHRC funded, through Ring-Fenced Doctoral Award in History of Architecture the & Built Environment)
6(c) Conferences, Symposia & Conference Sessions Organised (2000-2007) 2009 CHAT 2009. International conference convened at Keble College 2008 Archaeological Ontologies. Session for TAG 2008 (University of Southampton, with Andy Jones) 2008 Research Methodologies for Heritage Science: Facilitating interdisciplinary collaboration. Workshop
organised for EPSRC/AHRC Science and Heritage Programme. Convened with Heather Viles (Oxford) and David Harvey (Exeter)
2007 Consensus or collision? Integrating methodologies in researching the historic environment: EPSRC-funded workshop series convened with Heather Viles (University of Oxford)
2006 CHAT 2006. International conference convened with Lisa Hill, Laura McAtackney, Cassie Newland, Angela Piccini and John Schofield (University of Bristol)
2006 ‘Materiality’: Perspectives from Archaeology and Geography. Workshop convened with Joshua Pollard and Simon Naylor, School of Geographical Sciences, Bristol University
2005 Round Table on Archaeologies of the Recent Past. Institute for Advanced Studies, University of Bristol (35 invited participants, with keynote paper by Michael Shanks, Stanford University)
Dan Hicks: CV, page 3 of 8
2003 Why all this ‘chat’ about historical archaeology? Session convened with Kate Giles (University of York) at TAG 2004 (University of Wales, Lampeter)
2003 CHAT 2003. Inaugural international conference, convened with Angela Piccini (University of Bristol) 2003 Exploring Designed Landscapes. Session convened with Karen Metheny, Boston University) at 5th World
Archaeological Congress (American University, Washington DC) 2000 Addressing Multicultural Heritage. Session convened at TAG 2000 (University of Oxford)
7. Teaching & Administrative Responsibilities 7(a) Teaching Responsibilities within Oxford University (2007-present) Lectures for Honour Moderations in Archaeology & Anthropology
o Series of 8 one-hour lectures for Paper 4 (Nature of Archaeological Enquiry) Lectures for Final Honours School in Archaeology & Anthropology
o Series of three one-hour lectures for Paper 1 (Social Analysis and Interpretation) o Series of five one-hour lectures for Paper 2 (Cultural Representations, Beliefs and Practices) o Series of six two-hour classes for option paper (Material Culture Studies)
Tutorial Teaching in BA Archaeology & Anthropology, and BA History of Art o Eight tutorials for St John’s undergraduates for Mods Paper 4 o Four tutorials for option paper on Material Culture Studies (both Arch & Anth and History of Art
undergraduates) Other Teaching
o Material Culture Studies is taken as an optional paper by MSt Archaeology, students reading for an MSt in Museum Anthropology, and MSt/MPhil Social Anthropology students
o Regular supervision of undergraduate dissertations for students from Keble, Hertford & St Peter’s o Regular tutorials for first year DPhil students in Chinese Archaeology for Prof. Jessica Rawson
7(b) Administrative Responsibilities within Oxford University 2007-present) 2010- Member, Assessment Committee, Clarendon Fund (Social Sciences) 2010. Co-ordinator, Pitt Rivers Museum lunchtime seminar series 2009-2011 Chair of Examiners, MSt in World Archaeology, MSt in European Archaeology, MSt in
Landscape Archaeology 2009- Member, Graduate Studies Committee, School of Archaeology 2009- Member, Teaching Committee, Department of History of Art 2009- Member, Committee for Library Provision in Archaeology 2008-2009 Examiner, MSt in World Archaeology, MSt in European Archaeology, MSt in Landscape
Archaeology 2007- Member, Board of Management, Gerald Averay Wainwright Fund for Near Eastern Archaeology 2007- Member of Committee of the School of Archaeology 2007- Member of the Committee of the School of Anthropology and Museum Ethnography 2007- Member of the Policy & Planning Committee, Pitt Rivers Museum 2007-2010 Member of the Access Committee, Pitt Rivers Museum 2007- DPhil Internal Examiner/Assessor for transfers or confirmation of DPhil status (circa 6 per year) 7(c) Teaching Responsibilities in Archaeology & Anthropology, Bristol University (2000-2007) 2003-2006 Graduate Officer for Archaeology & Anthropology (Bristol University) 2002-2007 Director, MA Historical Archaeology (Bristol University) 2002-2007 Co-Director, MA Archaeology for Screen Media (Bristol University) 2003-2004 Acting Director, MA Maritime Archaeology and History, Bristol University 2002-2007 Tutor for MA Garden History, Dept of History of Art, Bristol University 2003-2007 Tutor for MA Colonialism in History (Department of Historical Studies) 2003-2007 Tutor for MA Landscape Archaeology 2005-2007 Material Culture Studies (third year undergraduate option) 2004-2007 Archaeological Theory (second year mandatory undergraduate unit, with Josh Pollard) 2003-2004 Maritime Heritage (postgraduate unit) 2003-2007 Representations of Heritage (postgraduate unit) 2002-2007 The Historical Archaeology of the Modern World (postgraduate unit)
Dan Hicks: CV, page 4 of 8
2002-2007 Studying Historical Landscapes (postgraduate unit) 2002-2007 Material Culture Studies in Historical Archaeology (postgraduate unit) 2002-2007 Standing Buildings Archaeology (postgraduate unit) 2001-2003 Ancient Technology (second year undergraduate unit) 2000-2001 Archaeological Heritage Management (third year undergraduate mandatory unit) 2000-2003 Sites and Monuments (first year undergraduate mandatory unit) 2000-2003 Artefacts – An Introduction (first year undergraduate unit) 7(d) Other Teaching & Administrative Responsibilities before 2007 2006-2007 Visiting Tutor in Archaeology, Rewley House 2003-2005 Co-ordinator, departmental research seminars, Archaeology & Anthropology, Bristol University 2003-2006 Website manager, Archaeology & Anthropology (Bristol University) 1999-2002 Director, Bristol University archaeological field schools (UK and Caribbean) 1999-2002 Tutor in Continuing Education (Bristol University) 1995-1996 Field School Tutor, Department of Classics, University of British Columbia (2 summer seasons)
8. Activities outside the University 8(a) Appointments, Editorships, Reviewing, etc. 2009-2013 Member of AHRC Peer Review College (2009-2013) 2008- Member of Editorial Board for International Journal of Historical Archaeology 2006- Member of Grants Committee of World Archaeological Congress 2006- General Editor, with Joshua Pollard, of series for British Archaeological Reports: Studies in Historical and Contemporary Archaeology (6 volumes published 2006-present) 2002- Founding member of CHAT Standing Committee (Contemporary and Historical Archaeology conference group). Convenor of CHAT 2003, CHAT 2006 & CHAT 2009 conferences 2008-2010 Member of Ph.D. Committee for Brent Fortenberry, Boston University (principal advisor: Mary C. Beaudry) 2007-2009 Member of Ph.D. Committee for Jodi Barnes, American University (principal advisor: Joan Gero) 2003-2007 Member of Steering Group for English Heritage Change and Creation programme 2003-2006 Member of Council, Society for Post-Medieval Archaeology 2003-2005 Newsletter Editor, Society for Post Medieval Archaeology [ongoing] Regular speaker to local archaeological societies [ongoing] Reviewer of manuscripts for CUP, OUP, University Press of Florida, Sage, Antiquity, Current Anthropology, American Historical Review, World Archaeology [ongoing] Regular reviewer of applications: eg within the past year post-doctoral applications for Corpus Christi, Cambridge; St John’s, Oxford; external assessor for tenure review in Anthropology at Cornell 8(b) Invited Seminars/Talks (selected) 2009 Keynote address, Theoretical Archaeology Group conference, University of Durham 2009 Keynote address, Society for Historical Archaeology annual meeting, Toronto 2008 Seminar, Institute for European and Mediterranean Archaeology, SUNY Buffalo 2008 Seminar, Department of Archaeology, Gothenburg University 2008 Seminar, Dept of Archaeology, Boston University 2007 Seminar & Tutor for Nordic Graduate School in Archaeology, Swedish Institute at Athens 2007 Brown Bag lecture, Dept of Archaeology, Boston University 2006 Commentator: The Stuff of Politics: Technoscience, Democracy and Public Life. Oxford
University Centre for the Environment (OUCE) (convened by Prof. Sarah Whatmore) 2006 Research seminar series, Dept of Archaeology, Cardiff University 2006 Research seminar series on Diasporas, Movements and Migrations, School of Archaeology,
Oxford University 2005 Brown Bag lecture, Dept of Anthropology, College of William and Mary 2005 Brown Bag lecture, Dept of Anthropology, University of Maryland, College Park 2004 Keynote paper at ‘Biographies of London Life, AD 1600-present’ project launch for Museum of
London (Museum in Docklands)
Dan Hicks: CV, page 5 of 8
2003 Research seminar series, Dept of Archaeology, Sheffield University 2003 Cambridge Archaeological Field Club, University of Cambridge
Dan Hicks: CV, page 6 of 8
8(b). Publications Books (authored) in prep. The Archaeology of the British Atlantic World: an introduction. Cambridge: CUP (due Jan 2011). 2007. "The Garden of the World": an historical archaeology of eastern Caribbean sugar landscapes. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports (Studies in Contemporary and Historical Archaeology). Books (edited) 2010. The Oxford Handbook of Material Culture Studies. Oxford: OUP (edited with Mary C. Beaudry). 2007. Envisioning Landscape: Standpoints and Situations in Archaeology and Heritage. Walnut Creek, CA: Left Coast Press (One World Archaeology 52, edited with L. McAtackney and G. Fairclough). 2006. The Cambridge Companion to Historical Archaeology. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press (edited with Mary C. Beaudry) (runner-up, Best Academic Book, British Archaeological Awards 2008). Peer-Reviewed Journal Papers under review. Where is Archaeological Theory? Major Article under review for Current Anthropology. 2008. Improvement: What Kind of Archaeological Object is it? Journal of Field Archaeology 33(2): 111-116 2007. From Material Culture to Material Life. Journal of Iberian Archaeology 9/10: 245-255. 2005. ‘Places for Thinking’ from Annapolis to Bristol: Situations and Symmetry in ‘world historical archaeologies’. World Archaeology 37(3): 373-391. 2004. ‘Historical Archaeology and the British'. Cambridge Archaeological Journal 14(1): 101-6. 2003. ‘Archaeology Unfolding: diversity and the loss of isolation’. Oxford Journal of Archaeology 22(3): 215-229. 2000. ‘Ethnicity, Race and the Archaeology of the Atlantic slave trade’. Assemblage 5. Book Chapters 2010. The material geographies of sugar. In J. Symonds (ed.) Table Settings: The Material Culture and Social Context of Dining in the Old and New Worlds, AD 1700-1900. Oxford: Oxbow Books. 2010. Material Culture Studies: a reactionary view. In D. Hicks and M.C. Beaudry (eds) The Oxford Handbook to Material Culture Studies. Oxford: OUP. 2010. The Material-Cultural Turn: things as events, things as effects. In D. Hicks and M.C. Beaudry (eds) The Oxford Handbook to Material Culture Studies. Oxford: OUP. 2009. Rematerialising metropolitan histories? People, places and things in modern London. In Audrey Horning and Marilyn Palmer (eds) Crossing Paths or Sharing Tracks? Future directions in the archaeological study of post-1550 Britain and Ireland. Woodbridge: Boydell Press, pp. 323-350 (with Nigel Jeffries, Alastair Owens, Rupert Featherby and Karen Wehner, 2009) 2008. Change and Creation: Historic Landscape Character 1950-2000. In G. Fairclough, R. Harrison, J. Schofield and J. Jameson (eds) The Heritage Reader. London: Routledge, pp. 559-566 (with Andrea Bradley, Victor Buchli, Graham Fairclough, Janet Miller and John Schofield). 2008. Material Improvements: performing estate landscapes in the Leeward Islands, 1713-1838. In J. Finch and K. Giles (eds) Estate Landscapes. London: Maney (Society for Post-Medieval Archaeology Monograph Series), pp. 205-227. 2007. Further Reading. In S. Penrose (ed.) Images of Change: an archaeology of England’s contemporary landscape. Swindon: English Heritage. 2007. Landscapes as Standpoints. In D. Hicks et al (eds) Envisioning Landscape Archaeology. Walnut Creek, CA: Left Coast Press (One World Archaeology), pp. 13-29 (with Laura McAtackney) 2007. Colonialism and Landscape: Power, Materiality and Scales of Analysis in Caribbean Historical Archaeology. In D. Hicks et al (eds) Envisioning Landscape Archaeology. Walnut Creek, CA: Left Coast Press (One World Archaeology), pp. 251-274 (with Mark Hauser) 2007. Change and Creation: Historic Landscape Character 1950-2000. In G. Fairclough, R. Harrison, J. Schofield and J. Jameson (eds) The Cultural Heritage Reader. London: Routledge, pp. 559-566 (with Andrea Bradley, Victor Buchli, Graham Fairclough, Janet Miller and John Schofield). 2007. Historical Archaeology in Britain. In D.M. Pearsall (ed.) Encyclopedia of Archaeology. San Diego: Academic Press, pp. 1318-1327.
Dan Hicks: CV, page 7 of 8
2006. Introduction: The Place of Historical Archaeology (with Mary C. Beaudry). In D. Hicks and M.C. Beaudry (eds) The Cambridge Companion to Historical Archaeology. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 1-9. 2006. Historical Archaeology and Buildings (with Audrey Horning). In D. Hicks and M.C. Beaudry (eds) The Cambridge Companion to Historical Archaeology. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 273-292. Book Reviews & Review Articles 2009. The Smallest Rooms. Times Literary Supplement 5568/5569: 35. 2009. Review of Owen Hatherley ‘Militant Modernism’. Planning Perspectives 25(2): 272-274. 2008. Review of Barbara Bender et al. ‘Stone Worlds: narrative and reflexivity in landscape archaeology’. American Antiquity 74(3): 590-591. 2008. Review of T Rowley ‘The English Landscape in the Twentieth Century. Landscapes 8(1): 86-90. 2007. Navigating the ‘mentions’ and ‘silences’ of world historical archaeology: a European perspective. European Journal of Archaeology 10(1): 93-97 2006. Review of S. Kane (ed.) ‘The Politics of Archaeology and Identity’. Journal of Historical Geography 32(3): 665-667 2004. From the ‘Questions that Count’ to the ‘Stories that Matter’ in Historical Archaeology. Antiquity 78: 934-939. Professional Publications 2009. Excavating the Archives: archive archaeology and the Higher Education sector. London: Higher Education Funding Council for England (with Gustav Milne, John Shepherd and Robin Skeates, 39pp). 2004. Change and Creation: historic landscape character 1950-2000. London: English Heritage (with Andrea Bradley, Victor Buchli, Graham Fairclough, Janet Miller and John Schofield, 12 pp.). 2004. Biographies of London Life: the archaeology of Londoners and their things, AD 1600-2000. London: Museum of London ‘Research Matters’ Occasional Publication 3. (with Nigel Jeffries, 10pp.) Selected Authored Archaeological Reports 2003. Archaeological Assessment of The Holmes and Goldney Gardens. Bristol: University of Bristol. 2001. An Archaeological Rapid Assessment, Landscape Survey, Building Survey and Evaluative Excavation at Goldney and Goldney Gardens, Clifton, Bristol. Bristol: University of Bristol. 2001. An Archaeological Landscape Survey, Building Survey and Evaluative Excavation at Wingfield Estate, Saint Kitts, eastern Caribbean. Bristol: University of Bristol. (with Mark C. Horton). 2001. An Archaeological Landscape Survey, Building Survey and Evaluative Excavation at Balenbouche Estate, Saint Lucia, eastern Caribbean. Bristol: University of Bristol. (with Mark C. Horton). 1999. An Archaeological Watching Brief at Millennium Green, Redbrook, Gloucestershire. Gloucester: Gloucestershire County Council (GCC) 1999. An Archaeological Excavation at Stratford Park Mansion, Stroud, Gloucestershire (GCC) 1999. Highmeadow Farm, Coleford and Staunton, Gloucestershire: Archaeological Desk-Based Assessment and Standing Buildings Assessment. (GCC). (with Richard K. Morriss) 1999. An Archaeological Watching Brief at Greenfields, Brockweir Common, Gloucestershire (GCC) 1999. An Archaeological Watching Brief at Seabrook, Cold Aston, Gloucestershire (GCC) 1999. An Archaeological Evaluation at Land to the Rear of 10 Hailes Street, Winchcombe (GCC) 1999. An Archaeological Watching Brief at 12 Roman Way, Bourton-on-the Water, Gloucestershire (GCC) 1999. An Archaeological Watching Brief at The Tankards, Lechlade, Gloucestershire (GCC) 1999. An Archaeological Evaluation at Cotswold School, Bourton-on-the-Water, Gloucestershire (GCC) 1999. An Archaeological Evaluation at The Market Place, Coleford Gloucestershire (GCC) 1999. An Archaeological Evaluation at The Coalyard, Westbury-on-Severn, Gloucestershire (GCC) 1999. An Archaeological Watching Brief at Badgers End, Stow-on-the-Wold, Gloucestershire (GCC) 1999. Excavations at Bourton-on-the-Water County Primary School, Gloucestershire 1996-7 (GCC) 1999. An Archaeological Evaluation at Landgate Yard, High Street, Stroud, Gloucestershire (GCC) 1999. Castle Cottage, Brimpsfield, Gloucestershire: Archaeological Desk-Based Assessment (GCC) 1999. An Archaeological Evaluation at 2-4 London Road, Cirencester, Gloucestershire (GCC)
Dan Hicks: CV, page 8 of 8
1999. An Archaeological Evaluation at Land off The Slade, Dursley, Gloucestershire (GCC) 1999. Archaeological Excavations at Victoria Road Infants’ School, Cirencester, 1995-6 (GCC) 1999. An Archaeological Watching Brief at Denmark Road Girls’ School, Gloucester (GCC) 1999. An Archaeological Evaluation at the Bowling Club, Stratford Park, Stroud, Gloucestershire (GCC) 1999. An Archaeological Watching Brief at Deerhurst Priory and Adjacent Fields, Gloucestershire (GCC) 1999. An Archaeological Evaluation at Horsley Priory, Horsley, Gloucestershire (GCC) 1999. Archaeological Excavation, External and Internal Building Recording, and Watching Brief at Museum in the Park, Stratford Park, Stroud, Gloucestershire (GCC) 1998. Watching Brief at Westgate Bridges Deck Replacement Scheme, Gloucester (GCC) 1998. An Archaeological Watching Brief at Abbey Grounds, Cirencester, Gloucestershire (GCC) 1998. An Archaeological Watching Brief at Oakeys Garage, Stow-on-the-Wold, Gloucestershire (GCC) 1998. Manor Farm Barns, Southrop, Gloucestershire: Archaeological Desk-Based Assessment (GCC) 1998. An Archaeological Watching Brief at 8 High Street, Stanton, Gloucestershire (GCC) 1998. An Archaeological Watching Brief at 23 The Burgage, Prestbury, Gloucestershire (GCC) 1998. An Archaeological Watching Brief at Craignethan, Prestbury, Gloucestershire (GCC) 1998. An Archaeological Evaluation at The Whiteway, Cirencester, Gloucestershire (GCC) 1998. Winchcombe Infants’ School, Gloucestershire: Archaeological Desk-Based Assessment (GCC) 1998. Kidderminster Flood Alleviation Scheme, Worcestershire: Archaeological Desk-Based Assessment for the Environment Agency (GCC) 1998. ‘Site 12’. In D. Wilkinson (ed.) Excavations at The Oracle Site, Reading 1997-98: Post- excavation Assessment (Oxford Archaeological Unit) 1998. ‘Watching Brief’ and ‘Site 12’. in D. Wilkinson (ed.) Archaeological Excavation and Watching Brief at St Giles’ Mill, Reading 1997-98: Post-Excavation Assessment (Oxford Archaeological Unit) 1998. Littlemore Hospital, Oxford: An archaeological evaluation. (Oxford Archaeological Unit) 1997. Economies in Collision: The Roman-British Pottery Industry in Oxfordshire (Undergraduate dissertation, University of Oxford) 1994. An Archaeological watching brief at Rugby Road, Nuneaton (Warwickshire Museum Archaeological Report) 1994. An Archaeological Evaluation and Watching Brief: Nuneaton Medieval Hospital, Warwickshire (Warwickshire Museum Archaeological Report) 1994. Archaeological observation of tree-planting at Coughton Court, Warwickshire (Warwickshire Museum Archaeological Report) 1993. The Vicarage, Alcester, Warwickshire: An Archaeological Evaluation (Warwickshire Museum Archaeological Report) 1993. Archaeological Observations at The Spinney, Mancetter, Warwickshire (Warwickshire Museum Archaeological Report)
X-IronPort-AV: E=Sophos;i="4.52,361,1270418400"; d="scan'208";a="132204892" From: Kristian Kristiansen <[email protected]> To: [email protected] Subject: program for Dan Hicks som gästeforsker Date: Mon, 10 May 2010 12:55:00 +0200 X-Mailer: Apple Mail (2.936) X-MIME-Autoconverted: from quoted-printable to 8bit by hds83.hum.gu.se id o4AAt78K005592 Hej Her følger Dan Hicks forslag til progra,: Dr Hicks will deliver a series of lectures and seminars on the theme of "Modern Remains: the future city as the recent past". These papers, which form part of a book that he will be working on during 2011-12, will explore the potential status of 20th-century urban landscapes as heritage, and even as a kind of archaeological resource. In doing so, they will explore the wider implications of the idea of an archaeology of the modern, and of metropolitan modernism, while simultaneously re-assessing the history of the historic preservation movements in two cities: London and New York City. Eight papers, organised in a broadly chronological sequence, will be given, each exploring the different ways in which the remains of the recent past have been imagined and understood over the past 100 years in New York City and in London. 1. From modern futures to the modern as the recent past 2. Dwelling: from historic houses to ‘aesthetic control’ 3. Destroying: ideas of the loss of heritage from wartime destruction to slum clearance and urban regeneration 4. Saving: how the kinds of building or site on which preservationist campaigns have focused have changed & how this relates to changing paradigms in urban history 5. Locating: zoned planning and heritage designation 6. Valuing: the idea of community heritage & significance from Jane Jacobs to ‘intangible heritage’ 7. Remembering: from memorialization to reconstructionism, and current heritage debates around the aftermath of terror (9/11 and 7/7). 8. Shaping the remains of the modern Dette program knytter an til en række emner- fra globalisering/ antropologi, til historie, etnologi, arkæologi og kulturstudier. Mit forslag er at vi inviterer relevante emner til at deltage og komme med forslag til fælles seminarer som kan organiseres omkring nogle af forelæsningerne, med supplerende forelæsninger evt. Desuden vil Dan Hicks kunne holde forelæsninger på MA kurset Modernitet og kulturarv, som han tidligere har bidraget til. mvh Kristian Kristiansen
Page 1 of 1Kristian Kristiansen, 12:55 2010-05-10, program for Dan Hicks som gästeforsker
2010-05-10Printed for Eva Englund <[email protected]>
Helge Jordheim
Till Humanistiska fakultetsnämnden Nomineringsförslag till Gästforskare 2010 Institutionen för litteratur, idéhistoria och religion nominerar fil. dr Helge Jordheim, Oslo som kandidat till att bli gästforskare. Helge Jordheim, född 1971, är litteraturvetare och idéhistoriker med tyska språket som disciplinär hemvist. Han disputerade först 2006 men hade långt dessförinnan etablerat sig som en idérik och kringsynt forskare på sina områden. Stor uppmärksamhet väckte hans skiss till en ”ny filologi”, där textläsningens praktik relaterades till moderna idéhistoriska teori; Läsningens vetenskap har överstts till flera språk. Jordheims teoretiska intresse är orienterat åt begreppshistorien, i synnerhet i dess tyska variant med Reinhart Koselleck som främsta representant. Jordheim har också intresserat sig för de humanistiska vetenskapernas teori, praktik och användning och medverkat i en introduktionsbok om humaniora. Efter disputation har Jordheim vistats flera terminer i Berlin. För närvarande är han anställd vid universitetet i Oslo. Helge Jordheims bilagda CV, liksom hans track record sådant det kan avläsas i Oslouniversitetets motsvarighet till GUP vittnar om stor produktivitet och även en rikhaltig aktivitet på konferenser och i extramurala sammanhang. Hans kompetens och intressen är av stor relevans för vår fakultet. Begreppshistoria har vidsträckt användning inom det humanistiska fältet och är ett av LIR-institutionens profilområden. Jordheims omfattande orientering i modern humanistisk teori skulle komma inte bara litteraturvetare och idéhistoriker till godo utan har bäring på flera av fakultetens ämnen. Detsamma gäller i ännu högre grad vad han gjort i fråga om humanioras allmänna vetenskapsteori och användning. Slutligen är hans förankring disciplinen tyska en garanti för att även språkdisciplinerna vid fakulteten kan profitera av hans närvaro. Jordheim föreslås bli anställd under tre månader, fördelade på ht 2010, vt 2011 och ht 2011. Hans lön i Oslo är f.n. 520.000 norska kroner/år. Göteborg den 27 april 2010
Ingemar Nilsson prefekt
1
HELGE JORDHEIM
Curriculum vitae born 1971-11-16
1. Employment Fall 2008- Academic director, KULTRANS, University of Oslo 2006-2008 Post doctoral fellow, Department of Literature, Area Studies and European
Languages, University of Oslo 2006-2007 Head of the Undergraduate and Graduate Programs for Literature, University of
Oslo Spring 2006 Lecturer, Department of Literature, Area Studies and European Languages,
University of Oslo Fall 2005 Head of the research project Text/History, Faculty of Humanities, University of
Oslo 2. Education Dr. art University of Oslo, March 2006, German literature
Dissertation: “Gattungsverhandlungen zwischen Poetologie und Politik in der zweiten Hälfte des 18. Jahrhunderts – der Staatsroman im Werk Wielands und Jean Pauls”
Cand. philol. University of Oslo, December 1997, German literature (MA) Thesis: “Die Politik des Romans im Zeitalter der Aufklärung” Free University Berlin, Germany, September 1994-July 95 DAAD Graduate Student Fellow Cand. mag. University of Oslo, June 1995, German, French, History of Ideas (BA) Université de Nantes, France, January-July 1993 3. Fellowships and honors 2007 “H. M. Kongens Gullmedalje” – His Majesty the King’s Gold Medal – for best dissertation in the humanities in 2006. 2006-2009 Postdoctoral Fellowship, The Norwegian Research Council 2000-2005 Doctoral Fellowship, Faculty of Humanities, University of Oslo 1995-1996 DAAD Graduate Student Fellowship 4. Books 2010 The Body and its Images: Health, Humours, Illnesses. Forthcoming Paris:
Champion (ed., with Sabine Arnaud) 2008 Humaniora – en innføring, Oslo: Universitetsforlaget (with Anne Birgitte Rønning,
Erling Sandmo og Mathilde Skoie) 2008 Tekst og historie. Å lese tekster historisk, Oslo: Universitetsforlaget 2008 (with
Kjell Lars Berge, Trygve Riiser Gundersen, Tore Rem, Karen Gammelgaard, Kristin Asdal, Johan Tønneson)
2008 Imperium/Imperialisme, ”Begreper i historien”, Bd. 1, Oslo: Unipub (ed.) 2008 Erich Auerbach: Verdenslitteraturens filologi, Oslo: Cappelen Akademisk Forlag
(ed.)
2
3
2007 Der Staatsroman im Werk Wielands und Jean Pauls. Gattungsverhandlungen zwischen Poetologie und Politik, Max Niemeyer Verlag, Tübingen, in der Reihe „Communicatio. Studien zur europäischen Literatur- und Kulturgeschichte“.
2006- Nietzsches samlede verker in Norwegian translation (ed., published: Antikrist, Morgenrøde, Om våre dannelsesinstitusjoners fremtid, Avgudenes ragnarok, Hinsides godt og ondt)
2003 Hans Georg-Gadamer: Forståelsens filosofi. Utvalgte hermeneutiske skrifter, Oslo: Cappelen Akademisk Forlag (ed., trans.)
2001 Lesningens vitenskap. Ukast til en ny filologi, Oslo: Universitetsforlaget. 5. Recent articles 2010 „Unzählbar viele Zeiten“. Die Sattelzeit im Spiegel der Gleichzeitigkeit des
Ungleichzeitigen. Forthcoming in Hans Joas/ Peter Vogt (ed.): Materialen zu Reinhart Koselleck, Suhrkamp: Frankfurt am Main
2010 The Present of Enlightenment – Temporality and Mediation in Kant, Foucault, and Jean Paul. Forthcoming in William Warner/ Cliff Siskin (ed.): This is Enlightenment, Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press
2010 The Peristalsis of Power. Jean Paul and the Body of the Prince. Forthcoming in Helge Jordheim/ Sabine Arnaud (ed.): The Body and its Images: Health, Humours, Illnesses, Paris: Champion
2008 Other Spaces, other Times. Holberg’s Niels Klim in the Context of the European Utopian Novel, in Eivind Tjønneland/ Gunnar Sivertsen (ed.): Holberg, Bergen: Fagbokforlaget, 151-172
2008 Imperium, imperialisme og en introduksjon til begrepshistorisk teori og praksis, in Imperium/Imperialisme, ”Begreper i historien”, Bd. 1, Oslo: Unipub, 7-37 (with Iver B. Neumann).
2008 Filologien og det verdenshistoriske drama, in Erich Auerbach: Verdenslitteraturens filologi, Oslo: Cappelen Akademisk Forlag, 183-205.
2008 Imperiebegrepets tilbakekomst. Et begrepshistorisk perspektiv, in Internasjonal Politikk 66, 111-120.
2008 Samtidighet og usamtidighet: Temporalstrukturer i Ernst Blochs og Victor Klemperers kritikk av den nasjonalsosialistiske diskurs, in Ingunn Lunde/ Susanna Witt (ed.) Terminal Øst. Totalitære og posttotalitære diskurser, Oslo: Spartacus forlag, 116-135.
2007 Thinking in convergences – Koselleck on language, history and time, in Ideas in History 3/2007, 65-90. 2007 Le prince peut-il avoir des amis? Une etude de la politique de l’amitié dans le
XVIIIe siècle allemand, in Martin Wåhlberg/ Trude Kolderup (ed.): Amour, violence, sexualité. De Sade à nos jours, Paris: L’Harmattan, 231-239.
2007 Versuche zu einer Zeithermeneutik der Modernen und der Postmodernen: die Gleichzeitigkeit des Ungleichzeitigen in Grass’ Im Krebsgang und Wolfs Leibhaftig, i Ivar Sagmo (ed.): Moderne, Postmoderne – und was noch?, Peter Lang Verlag, 111-132.
2007 Conceptual History between Chronos and Kairos – the Case of ‘Empire’, in Redescriptions. Yearbook of Political Thought and Conceptual History 11/2007, LIT Verlag: Berlin, 115-145.
2006 Verdenslitteratur og litteraturforskningens kairós: Goethe, Auerbach, Said - og vi, in Norsk litteraturvitenskapelig tidsskrift 1/2006, 11-36.
2006 Gjerningsmenn og ofre – Holocaust-monumentet i Berlin mellom historie, politikk og estetikk, in Per Steinar Raaen, Eskil Følstad, Olav Skevik (red.): Stiklestad og andre minnesteder. Verdal: Stiklestad Nasjonale Kultursenter 2006, 179-198.
2006 Kan vi lære av historien? Et tilbakeblikk på debatten om Falstadsenteret, in Årbok for norsk utdanningshistorie 23/2006, 160-166.
X-IronPort-AV: E=Sophos;i="4.53,206,1272837600"; d="scan'208";a="117256833" From: Ingemar Nilsson <[email protected]> To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]> Subject: Komplettering av nominering gästforskare Thread-Topic: Komplettering av nominering gästforskare Thread-Index: AQHK8O17xK/IHRi7bUerz3kfigS85Q== Date: Tue, 11 May 2010 09:36:50 +0000 Accept-Language: sv-SE, en-US X-MS-Has-Attach: X-MS-TNEF-Correlator: X-MIME-Autoconverted: from quoted-printable to 8bit by hds83.hum.gu.se id o4B9av8K018549 Aktivitetsplan för gästforskare Helge Jordheim 20102011 Vi har med Helge Jordheim diskuterat olika alternativa uppdrag som gästforskare vid Humanistiska fakulteten. För att kunna samordna anställningen vid GU med hans åliggande i Oslo har vi föreslagit att han vistas i Göteborg 4-5 veckor varje termin ht 2010ht 2011. Under dessa tider kommer Jordheim medverka i LIR-institutionens reguljära seminarieverksamhet; organisera och leda en fakultetsgemensam kurs på avancerad nivå om Filologi, historia och läsning; i samarbete med forskare på LIR organisera en seminarieserie i Begreppshistoria; biträda med handledning för olika doktorander vid LIR; i övrigt erbjuda sig att medverka med föreläsningar och seminarier för fakultetens olika institutioner. Särskilt intressant kommer Jordheims medverkan bli för det tvärvetenskapliga projektet Kultur och hälsa. I vår ursprungliga ansökan motiveras nomineringen av Jordheim med hans osedvanligt breda humanistiska orientering. Denna menar vi kommer att bli till stor glädje för samtliga institutioner och inte bara LIR. Jordheim kommer också att medverka i den den begreppshistoriska workshop som planeras i anslutning till besöket av professor Lucian Hölscher (Lehrstuhl für neuere Geschichte, Bochum) på LIR-institutionen i april 2011. En detaljerad tidsplan har inte fastställts men vi kommer att kunna avtala en sådan före höstterminens start och leverera till fakulteten om Jordheim skulle utses till gästforskare. Göteborg 11 maj 2010 Ingemar Nilsson Ingemar Nilsson, professor, prefekt Inst. för litteratur, idéhistoria och religion Göteborgs universitet, Box 200 40530 Göteborg tel: 031-786 4524 [email protected]
Page 1 of 1Ingemar Nilsson, 11:36 2010-05-11, Komplettering av nominering gästforskare
2010-05-11Printed for Eva Englund <[email protected]>
X-IronPort-AV: E=Sophos;i="4.53,212,1272837600"; d="scan'208";a="132403775" From: Ingemar Nilsson <[email protected]> To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]> Subject: Jordheim Thread-Topic: Jordheim Thread-Index: AQHK8ZeTts8TG+AaukO/GRoAZF8Tvg== Date: Wed, 12 May 2010 05:54:24 +0000 Accept-Language: sv-SE, en-US X-MS-Has-Attach: X-MS-TNEF-Correlator: X-MIME-Autoconverted: from quoted-printable to 8bit by hds83.hum.gu.se id o4C5sV8K029352 Komplettering 2 för Helge Jordheim Jordheim har med anledning av önskemålet om aktivitetsplan meddelat följande mer konkreta idéer rörande innehållet i föreslagna kurs och seminarieserie: "Høst 2010: seminar(er) om samtid og samtidighet på tvers av epoker og displiner - fokus: synkroni i historieskrivningen Vår 2011: workshop med Hölscher/seminar om begrepshistorie og globalisering Høst 2011: samtid og samtidighet - fokus: politisk samtidighet, kairos, fortuna, Entscheidung; og epistemologisk samtidighet: leksikon, kart, medier. I tillegg kan jeg gjerne kjøre en seminarserie om begrepshistorie og tilliggende herligheter (Skinner, Foucault etc.), avhengig av hva folk er interessert i. Egen forskning: Jeg skal bruke tiden til å skrive en engelskspråklig monografi om samtidighetens idé- og begrepshistorie, med fokus på 1700-tallet" Hälsningar IN Ingemar Nilsson, professor, prefekt Inst. för litteratur, idéhistoria och religion Göteborgs universitet, Box 200 40530 Göteborg tel: 031-786 4524 [email protected]
Page 1 of 1Ingemar Nilsson, 07:54 2010-05-12, Jordheim
2010-05-12Printed for Eva Englund <[email protected]>