Tidligere arrangementer - Side 4
We are pleased to announce Marie Louise Stig Sørensen, University of Cambridge, as the speaker for the fourth Gutorm Gjessing Lecture Series with the lecture "What does theory bring to our understanding of the prehistoric household/house?".
In this Environmental Humanities Lecture, anthropologists Nayanika Mathur, Professor of Anthropology and South Asian Studies at the University of Oxford, and Radhika Govindrajan, Associate Professor of Anthropology and International Studies at the University of Washington, Seattle, present their research on human-animal relationships, climate change, and religious ecology in India. What form might the environmental humanities take if considered from the place of the Indian Himalaya?
Master Astrid Tvedte Kristoffersen at the Department of Archaeology, Conservation and History will defend her dissertation Rock and Heavy Metal: Mining and Metallurgy in Eastern Norway in the Middle Ages, AD 1030–1537 for the degree of philosophiae doctor (PhD).
Kom og hør finansminister Trygve Slagsvold Vedum i møte med historiker Einar Lie.
This workshop, organized by the University of Tromsø – The Arctic University of Norway, will address the role of historians in debating and taking part in contested memorialization processes. The workshop includes a plenary lecture and a panel debate, as well as group work on marginalized groups in memorialization processes and the role of historians in confronting “contested pasts”. Participanting and completion of this workshop grants 1 ECTS.
Alexander Hartley (Harvard University) presents The copyright world system: Modernism, colonial copyright, and literary authorship. Daniel Raff (the Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania) presents Radical Agency and Business History.
Welcome to HEI's annual International Student Conference! This conference unites early career researchers in both formal and informal settings, providing a platform to explore the latest developments in the field of heritage studies.
Velkommen til HEIs internasjonale studentkonferanse, 19–20 oktober 2023!
The autumn 2023 Advanced Research Courses offered by the Norwegian Research School in History focus on conflicting and contested pasts, memory wars, and transnational history between states and regions in various parts of the globe, from Oceania and Eurasia to Europe and the USA. The course will take place on Zoom.
Join us for our final OSEH event where we explore issues of race, ethnicity, and gender, but also diverse ways of opening up environmental problems and possibilities in the academy and beyond. We are joined by acclaimed poet and nature writer Camille Dungy and prominent scholars in the environmental humanities, and there will be upcycled music, celebration and food.
Arkeologisk fredagsseminar med postdoktor Mari Arentz Østmo tilknyttet Institutt for arkeologi, konservering og historie (IAKH), samt Kulturhistorisk museum (KHM), og prosjektet Viking Nativity: Gjellestad Across Borders
Friday Seminar with Scott Anfinson from the University of Minnesota. Anfinson is a guest researcher at IAKH, and is both a heritage management archaeologist and a midcontinental North American prehistoric archaeologist. Anfinson is visiting UiO on a Fulbright Grant and studies heritage management in Norway.
The text development seminars are designed to be an integral part of the educational component, aimed at enhancing the writing skills of all candidates and ultimately producing high-quality dissertations.
Arkeologisk seminar med Dr. Marko Marila, gjesteforsker ved IAKH. Marila er postdoktor ved Linköping Universitet og tilknyttet prosjektet Nuclear Natures
AVLYST: Arkeologisk seminar med Alexa D. Spiwak, PhD stipendiat ved IAKH, tilknyttet HEI: Heritage Experience Initiative og forskningsprosjektet Relics of Nature: An Archaeology of Natural Heritage in the High North
Do you want to better understand the environmental and climatic crisis, work accross diciplines, experience Place-Based Learning and communicate environmental research to a broader audience?
Land holds an “ecological memory”, the patterns in the landscape that are maintained by creative fires. This seminar will discuss the importance and challenges of using fire to shape landscapes in Australia, Italy and Norway.
Register here!
The Department for Archaeology, Conservation and History (IAKH) cordially invites you to its first Digital Humanities Day, which will take place on 14 September 2023. This event will bring together a range of experts in the Digital Humanities to discuss the possibilities of using digital tools for historical research. Registration below.
Arkeologisk seminar med Dr. Lisbeth Skogstrand, forsker på prosjektet Gendering the Nordic Past ved IAKH
These papers explore examples of environmental storytelling, and asks what environmental storytelling can do. How does such initiatives tap into our imaginaries, or offer re-imaginations?
This panel approaches interdisciplinarity from a broad range of perspectives, including environmental governance, climate politics, botanics, cybernetics, and science history. Are there commonalities in how we engage interdisciplinarity, and how do we consider its methodological challenges?
This panel will address long-term aspects of interactions between ecological and material foundations of societies, forms of biological and cultural coexistence, and the interdependence of people and the non-human world, specifically in the shores and oceans of the world, through the lens of the arts and the humanities, aiming at pluralizing and un-disciplining the established paradigms of marine science and conservation.
In this panel we ask, how to read science through fiction, and can such readings provide us a way to understand the relationship between literature and environment?
In this panel, six doctoral scholars from varied disciplines present their research and discuss how generating oceanic knowledge for action requires transdisciplinary engagement.