Research Topics

The department’s research topics are chosen for their potential to provide impulses for re-theorizing the dynamics of paired concepts that have been foundational for anthropological thinking, such as nature-culture and society-technology. Through multiple yet interrelated interventions, proponents of feminist phenomenology, science and technology studies, and new materialism have identified the paradoxes that organise entanglements of life and opened them up for analysis. Humans appear simultaneously as powerful agents driving change and as victims of processes beyond their control. For example, collectively, though unequally, humans, among others, are now suffering from climate change, while as participants in capitalism they have contributed to the advent of the new geological time of the Anthropocene. Intimate technologies such as biometric scanners or genetic testing are human inventions that recast notions of well-being and belonging and alter the meaning of life itself. Large-scale engineering “solutions” open up new frontiers for science and create effects beyond what humans could have imagined to be possible. These are only some examples of contested innovations that push human activity in the direction of change. Such developments confront us with problems that are inherently political and demand analysis in such terms. 

Initially, three groups will work on the interrelated topics of ecological transformations, techno-optimism, and well-being.

Techno-optimism

Techno-optimism

June 22, 2020
Policy makers around the world deploy technology with the goal of leap-frogging their counties into the twenty-first century. While the technology does not always deliver what the fantasy envisions, its optimistic introduction generates new procedures that test alternative relations among states, markets, and citizens. New technologies gain traction more

Well-being

Well-being

June 22, 2020
State agencies and other institutions have long used concerns about health and disease to govern and control populations – as decades of research on medicalization have shown. Whereas, formerly, the rationale for medical intervention was to prevent illness and fight disease, nowadays it also involves promoting more
Ecological transformations
The conjunction of care and control describes central tensions in current eco-politics. On the one hand, most eco-political analyses take as their point of departure the observation that the attempts of humans to control ecological relationships – by reducing more
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