Arrangemanget hålls på engelska.
This webinar aims to lay the foundation for a new research program exploring the complex intersections of heritage and polarization. In the past decades, the world has seen a rise in divisions along social and political lines, both within and between societies. These processes have reactivated old rifts and generated new ones, between left and right, poor and rich, native and foreign. Wrapped up in these divisions we find cultural heritage. To understand the relationship between the phenomena of heritage and polarization we believe it is necessary to look beyond the toppling of statues; to conceptual roots; other points in time; and a broader range of geopolitical settings. The webinar will therefore revolve around concepts and concrete manifestations of the two phenomena in different historical and cultural contexts.
Link to Zoom
https://stockholmuniversity.zoom.us/s/61405100046
Programme
14:00
Welcome address
Anna Källén
14:20
Concepts
Victoria Fareld, Jennifer McCoy, Hans Ruin
15:20
Break
15:30
Controversies
Elisabeth Niklasson, Eneken Laanes, Avi Astor
16:20
Break
16:30
Contexts
Adam Hjorthén, Robert J. Cook, Dan Slater
17:20
Break
17:30
Concluding discussion
Polarized Pasts: Concepts, Controversies and Contexts
18:00
End of webinar
Webinar leaders
- Anna Källén (PI), Cultural Heritage, Stockholm University
- Victoria Fareld (CO-I), Intellectual history, Stockholm University
- Adam Hjorthén (CO-I), History, Freie Universität Berlin & Stockholm University
- Elisabeth Niklasson (CO-I), Cultural Heritage, University of Aberdeen
- Ida Hughes Tidlund (CO-I), Ethnology, Stockholm University
Panelists
- Avi Astor, Sociology, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona
- Robert J. Cook, American History, University of Sussex
- Rodney Harrison, Heritage Studies, University College London
- Thomas Hylland Eriksen, Social Anthropology, University of Oslo
- Eneken Laanes, Comparative Literature & Cultural Analysis, Tallinn University
- Jennifer McCoy, Political Science, Georgia State University
- Jens Rydgren, Sociology, Stockholm University
- Hans Ruin, Philosophy, Södertörn University Dan Slater, Political Science, University of Michigan