Tidligere arrangementer - Side 4
We want to invite you to an open evaluation with our PhD-fellow in Cultural History studies Zsolt Györegy. To comment on the candidates work, we have invited Professor Lisa Voigt from the Department of Spanish and Portuguese at Yale University.
We want to invite you to an open evaluation with our PhD-fellow in Environmental studies Nhung Lu Rots. To comment on the candidates work, we have invited Researcher Arve Hansen at Centre for Development and the Environment (SUM) at the University of Oslo
A talk by Elena Kochetkova, Associate Professor in Modern European Economic History at the University of Bergen.
Master Sonja Irene Åman at the Department of Culture Studies and Oriental Languages will defend her dissertation Governing the People of the Whale: History and Politics of Aboriginal Subsistence Whaling for the degree philosophiae doctor (PhD).
Militarisation and Grassroots Activism in Present-Day Japan.
Lecture by Kerry Brown, Professor of Chinese Studies and Director of the Lau China Institute at King’s College, London.
Welcome to this semester's fifth Friday seminar, where Dr. Mary Elston will will present a part of her book manuscript that deals with the complex temporalities of the concept of tradition (ar. turath) as used in the oldest Arab university, al-Azhar. The event is open for all.
Book presentation with Alessandro Rippa.
In this course, PhD fellows are acquainted with the ethical dilemmas and controversies arising from four interpretative approaches.
In this CIMs lecture, Dr. Eirik Hovden will give an overview over how to understand changes in Islamic law in institutions, genres and rules, ca. 1200-1800 CE.
Hvordan er naturkunnskap og humanistisk kunnskap sammenfiltret – historisk og i dag?
Welcome to this semester's fourth Lifetimes Friday seminar where we are joined by Alessandro Rippa, associate professor from the Department of Social Anthropology at UiO. The event is open to all.
Lecture by Sera Yeong Seo Park, associate lecturer at the Department of Social Anthropology at the University of St Andrews.
A PhD seminar with Professor Cecilie Basberg Neumann.
Welcome to the third Friday seminar this semester where we are joined by IKOS doctoral fellow Mustafa Akay. The event is open to all.
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?
Welcome to a CIMS Friday lecture By Prof. Vemund Aarbakke who will introduce us to the Muslim-Turkish minority in contemporary Greece.
Open lecture with professor Shiping Tang.
Master Ayse Nalan Azak at the Department of Culture Studies and Oriental Languages will defend her dissertation When the Remedy Becomes a Threat: The Lifetimes of Antibiotic Use and Antimicrobial Resistance in Turkey for the degree philosophiae doctor (PhD).
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!
We want to invite you to an open evaluation with our PhD-fellow in China studies Daniel Mohseni Kabir Bäckström. To comment on the candidates work, we have invited Associate Professor Mikkel Bunkenborg from the Department of Cross-Cultural and Regional Studies at the University of Copenhagen.
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.
In this CIMs lecture, Prof. Stephan Guth explores what a Norwegian National Library manuscript tells us about the everyday life of a Levantine merchant in the mid-18th century.