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HEI International Student Conference 2022

Welcome to HEI’s annual International Student Conference!

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HEI: Heritage Experience Initiative has the pleasure of inviting to HEI’s International Student Conference 2022.

The conference will bring together students from archaeology, museology, conservation and cultural heritage studies. The aim of the conference is to function as a platform where students can present their research to other students, discuss and gain new insights, and build international networks. 

The conference is open for all students! 

If you can't be there in person and want to listen in, send an email to Marie D. Amundsen and ask for the zoom link to the conference. 

Day 1: Wednesday October 19

Kristine Bonnevies hus, auditorium 2

 

12.30

Doors open

 

13.00

Welcome

Marie D. Amundsen, Research, dissemination and outreach coordinator HEI: Heritage Experience Initiative, UiO

 

13.05

HEI International Student Conference: Background and vision

Þóra Pétursdóttir, associate professor IAKH, University of Oslo

Keynote 1

 

13.15

 

13.35

‘Tell me what you eat, and I will tell you who you are’. The role of food and foodways as inclusive museum practice

Sofie Scheen Jahnsen, IAKH, University of Oslo

Q&A

 

13.45

Break

Session 1

14.00

Culturing Care: Examining the potential of contemporary sourdough breadmaking in understanding interspecies care ethics in our changing heritage

Margaréta Pintér, Aarhus University

14.15

 

Small Scottish Heritage Organisations: Resilience and Sustainability in Heritage Practice.

Hanneke Booij, University of Stirling

14.30

På Sporet af Linie 7: An interactive and multimedia walking tour for the preservation of Copenhagen's tram heritage

Alley Cortes, Aarhus University

 

14.45

Coffee break

Keynote 2

15.00

 

15.20

Encountering the Body: personhood and iconography in the Scandinavian Iron Age

Elisabeth Aslesen, University of Leicester

Q&A

Session 2

15.30

zoom

Reconstructing Eighteenth-Century Tailoring: A Qualitative Study of Craft Knowledge

Therese Holmgren, University of Gothenburg

15.45

Rock Art in Technicolour - Exploring Augmented Reality as an Accessibility Tool for Rock Art in Tanum World Heritage

Aliisa Råmark, University of Gothenburg

16.00

Street art and evental heritage

Laima Nomeikaite, Roskilde University and University of South-Eastern Norway

 

16.15

Discussion

 

16.30

End of the first day

Day 2: Thursday October 20

Helga Engs hus, auditorium 1

 

9.15

Doors open

Keynote 3

 

9.30

 

 

9.50

“We, who were in the self-defence [attack], were given these [medals].” Cultural property war crimes, and wartime collaboration by cultural property criminals, in Russia’s war on Ukraine

Sam Hardy, The Norwegian Institute in Rome, University of Oslo

Q&A

Session 3

10.00

Scotland’s Cold War Materialised: Engaging with the Material Culture of the Royal Observer Corps 

Sarah Harper, University of Stirling

10.15

Memories of Communist victimhood and representing victimisation in the museum

Samantha Corrine Vaughn, Newcastle University

10.30

Decolonisation in Scandinavian Museums

Muhammed Topdas, Newcastle University

 

10.45

Break

 

11.00

 

 

11.20

Project presentations by two first year MA students at ARK4050 – Archaeology and dissemination, IAKH, University of Oslo:

Audne Skogheim

Thomas Kjær

Q&A

 

11.30

Poster presentation MUSKUL students, IKOS, University of Oslo

Q&A

 

12.15

Lunch

Keynote 4

 

13.30

zoom

13.50

Heritage, Community and Sustainability in Wester Ross UNESCO Biosphere Reserve, Scotland

Zoe Russell, University of Stirling

Q&A

Session 4

14.00

zoom

Art, Museum and Heritage: A case study of a slightly different sledge

Ane Kristin Bang-Steinsvik, IKOS, University of Oslo

 

14.20

Coffee break

 

14.35

The citizens in science

Ingvild Dalene Bjerga, IAKH, University of Oslo

 

14.50

The built heritage in The Vega Archipelago during the climate change era

Linn Catrin Lilleeide Brudevoll, IKOS, University of Oslo

 

15.05

 

Breaking tradition? Mesolithic axe production in Southeastern Norway

Nora Nymo Øynebråten, IAKH, University of Oslo

 

15.20

Discussion

 

16.00

End of the second day

Day 3: Friday October 21

Helga Engs hus, auditorium 3

 

09.15

Doors open

 

09.30

Welcome day 3

Keynote 5

 

09.35

zoom

 

09.55

Smart sustainable earth construction: Advancement of a traditional construction technique through bioengineering

Derrick Mwebaza, Newcastle University

Q&A

 

10.05

Short break

Session 5

10.10

The many meanings behind heritage values

Jesper A. J. Gulliksen, IAKH, University of Oslo

10.25

Digital Collections - preservation strategies and security issues

Sergio Tassi, IKOS, University of Oslo

10.40

Restoration and re-functioning of a multi-cultural heritage site: Analysis of Kesik Minare case in Antalya Kaleiçi with a focus on memory of Kesik Minare

Zeynep Yilmaztürk, Aarhus University

 

11.00

Break

 

11.15

Concluding remarks and discussion

 

11.30

12.00

Walk to Georg Sverdrups hus, Blindern

HEIs Kulturarvsdag at Georg Sverdrups hus, Blindern w/lunch

HEI: Heritage Experience Initiative is a research and teaching initiative at the University of Oslo, initiated by the Department of Archaeology, Conservation and History, the Department of Culture Studies and Oriental Languages, and the Norwegian Institute in Rome, and in collaboration with the Museum of Cultural History. HEI aims at developing deeper interdisciplinary insights into what heritage is, and the role of heritage today. An important goal is the integration of teaching and research.

Published Aug. 22, 2022 10:00 AM - Last modified Oct. 15, 2022 11:23 PM