reconnecting

12.10.2022 - 14.10.2022
Deadly Dreams - When Dreams of Progress, Health, Wellbeing and Beauty Bequeath Toxic Legacies
Collaborator : Lotte Arndt
08.10.2022
Lubumbashi Biennale: Around Toxic Collections with Philippe Mikobi and Lotte Arndt; moderated by Costa Tshinza (FR)
Collaborator : Lotte Arndt
07.10.2022
Lubumbashi Biennale: An introduction to toxicity, with Alexandre Mulongo Finkelstein, Mpho Matsipa, Lucrezia Cippitelli, Bruno Leitão and Paula Nascimento; moderated by Smooth Nzewi and Lotte Arndt (EN/FR)
06.10.2022
Toxicity - the 7th Biennial of Lubumbashi, Democratic Republic of Congo
Collaborator : Lotte Arndt
01.10.2022 - 31.12.2022
Experimental Seminary: Life and Death in Museum Conservation
Collaborator : Lotte Arndt
19.09.2022 - 30.09.2022
Human remains, museums and memory work
14.09.2022
BERLIN BIENNAL 2022: Workshops Reconnecting 'Objects'
Collaborator : La Villa Hermosa
10.09.2022 - 11.09.2022
BERLIN BIENNIAL CONFERENCE: From Restitution to Repair
09.09.2022
BERLIN BIENNAL 2022 - Reconnecting ‘Objects’: An opening conversation
05.09.2022 - 06.09.2022
Gbégbé Days
Collaborator : Rossila Goussanou
31.08.2022
On the repercussions of racial science: The difficulty of talking about the dead
Collaborator : Sophie Schasiepen
12.10.2022 - 14.10.2022
Deadly Dreams - When Dreams of Progress, Health, Wellbeing and Beauty Bequeath Toxic Legacies
Practical :

Click here to see more information regarding the workshop program:

https://www.uia.no/konferanser-og-seminarer/deadly-dreams-when-dreams-of-progress-health-wellbeing-and-beauty-bequeath-toxic-legacies

Deadline for submission of  paper proposals and abstracts is June 1. 2022. 

Paper proposals and the preliminary title of the presentation as well as an abstract of the proposed must be accompanied by a short bio. The abstract must not exceed 600 words.

The workshop will be held on 12-14 October 2022.

We offer  workshop participation and opportunities to disseminate and discuss your work with other researchers, and a possibility to take part in a joint publication after the workshop. We also offer all accommodation costs, including meals, covered for your stay in Kristiansand at the  Radisson Blu Caledonien hotel  for the duration of the work-shop.

We will provide some support for travel expenses for early career participants, participants from low-income countries and participants without institutional affiliation and support. Please inform us in the paper proposal if travel support is necessary for your attendance.

For the scientific and research related inquiries contact Professor May-Brith Ohman Nielsenmay-brith.o.nielsen@uia.no 

For more information regarding the workshop contact Elijah Doro, PhD : elijah.doro@uia.no

Collaborator : Lotte Arndt
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From 12-14, October, Lotte Arndt participated in the Deadly Dreams workshop in  Kristiansand, Norway, presenting a paper on Toxic Conservation.

Toxic legacies are complex and multi-dimensional, incomprehensible, mysterious and ignorable. In this workshop we will examine the many facets of toxicities, the dreams and socio-cultural practices that brought harmful toxic substances into peoples' lives and the environment.

Throughout modern history, human society has through scientific ingenuity sought to eradicate hunger, vermin and disease. This quest is predicated on the aesthetic and progressive dreams to improve wellbeing and living conditions, to protect and preserve homes, to make everyday lives more comfortable, convenient and to bring cleanliness, order and beauty into surroundings.

In many ways, these dreams have shaped today's world. They are part of our thoughts, habits and spaces, our knowledge, norms, skills and expectations. 

But the pursuit of these dreams has also brought in toxic substances, materials and objects into peoples' lives, communities, the environment and other species. Directly and indirectly, over short, longer or even transgenerational timescales these materials have left indelible toxic legacies and chemical relations. The toxic legacies and burdens are not evenly shared, but follow patterns of power, privilege, consumption and environmental care. The United Nations (UN) and World Health Organization (WHO) have labeled 'the toxic epidemic' as one of the major global health challenges of our time affecting the life and wellbeing of present and future generations on an unprecedented and cataclysmic scale.

Toxic legacies are complex and multi-dimensional, incomprehensible, mysterious and ignorable. In this workshop we will examine the many facets of toxicities, the dreams and socio-cultural practices that brought harmful toxic substances into peoples' lives and the environment.

We invite papers that examine such practices in different localities and in different arenas of everyday and professional life. We encourage papers that reflect on the construction of these dreams and the concomitant patterns of thought and power that brought the harmful substances into use and the implications for human health and the environment.