PSA: I compiled a short list of texts and themes re: #museums and #exhibitions based on the 51 responses I got to save y'all from info-overload, but if you're curious, full responses are on the second sheet, sans emails. THANK YOU for your contributions! bit.ly/3bmIcI9
My article on AIR CONDITIONING just dropped in the fab new issue of Discourse. Read to hear me wild out on image ideologies, mass production, atmospheric work discipline, a fire at MoMA, conservation handbooks, macaroni factories, & more muse.jhu.edu/pub/27/article/…
Apoorva (@BilingualWindow) and I are excited to share citiesinfiction.com/ -a database that locates the literary landscape of India and South Asia. This website is for those who are interested in using fiction to teach and learn about the urban - cities, towns, and beyond.
Come and work with us! 3-year postdoctoral position at Oslo School of Architecture on the "Provenance" project, led by the brilliant Mari Lending in collaboration with partners from Manchester, New York, Hamburg, London, Madrid #architecture#anthropologyjobbnorge.no/en/available-jo…
We're happy to announce that the Decolonial, Postcolonial, and Anti-Colonial SIG's Frantz Fanon Dissertation Award nomination period begins today! The nomination period is from September 1 to November 1, 2023. Please share widely!!!
docs.google.com/document/d/1…
over half of Sri Lanka’s population ‘multidimensionally vulnerable’ - 12.34 million people out of Sri Lanka’s 22.16 million-strong population have been badly affected by the crisis thehindu.com/news/internatio… via @Meerasrini@the_hindu
The British Museum situation is symptomatic of what happens when you only fund short-term projects and additionality. If you want the nations heritage kept safe & recorded in perpetuity, you have to fund long-term cultural infrastructure & jobs. No short cuts.
What can architectural history teach us about our present climate crisis? And how can architectural historians join in the fight against climate change? Join the conversation on Wednesday, September 13 at 12 pm CDT. sah.org/conferences-and-prog…
Apply now for a 2024 ACLS Fellowship, supporting early-career, non-tenured scholars in the humanities and related social sciences. Awards of up to $60k award supplements for independent scholars and adjunct faculty. Deadline Sept. 28, 9PM EDT bit.ly/3Q0Oi5I
ALT Grid of headshots of 2023 ACLS Fellows with text "ACLS Fellowship Program Now Open. Deadline for Applications: September 28, 2023, 9:00 PM EDT"
Friends in or visiting Colombo, the #malaiyagam200 Rooted exhibition is going on through this Sunday (27th August) at Colombo National Library. It was truly wonderful to see the public witnessing of history at the opening last week.
If you’re in Colombo, do check out the ROOTED exhibition at the Colombo Public Library until Sunday 27th Aug. A really thoughtfully put together exhibition tracing the history of the community responsible for what #lka is famously known for - tea.
Reminder that I am soliciting contributions to @caavisual 2024 - "The Body and the Museum: Empire, Ethics, and New Directions." I'm looking to hear not just from academics and curators, but also from a range of museum professionals. DM me if you have Qs!
caa.confex.com/caa/2024/webp…
ALT Abridged abstract: Both the Hunterian Museum and the Wellcome Collection in London recently have been key loci for discussions on displaying the body and medicalized objects in museum collections. After a prolonged outcry, the Hunterian decided to remove the skeleton of Charles Byrne (known as the “Irish Giant”) from display ahead of its 2023 reopening. The long-running Medicine Man exhibition at the Wellcome also closed down, so that the institution could reconsider how medical collections should be shown to the public sensitively, ethically, and holistically. The origins of these problematic displays were rooted in imperialist projects that used museums and collecting to cement power. Expanding beyond the above British examples, this panel invites curators, art historians, and other museum professionals to reflect and engage with the imperial legacies of global collecting practices, the ethics of bodily autonomy and medical collecting, and possibilities for the future.
Calling all art historians and visual studies scholars!
The Getty Research Institute is now accepting applications for the 2024-25 Scholars Program on the theme of EXTINCTION. For the full description see the program website: gty.art/scholars
Apply by October 2, 2023
The call for contributions to our second workshop, “Navigating Museum Careers” is now open! makingmuseumprofessionals.bl… Deadline for submissions 22 September; workshop is online on 4-5 December 2023. Bursaries available
ALT First Museums Association Diploma course at Liverpool Museum, 1935. Reproduced with kind permission of the Museums Association
re-posting this list with new/old added suggestions because there’s a lot of marvellous non/fiction from this island that is definitely worth your time.
for those who wish to educate themselves more about Sri Lanka's history of conflict, here's an essential reading list of fiction/non-fiction starting with @thirana1's important ethnography 'In My Mother's House: Civil War in Sri Lanka' pennpress.org/9780812222845/…
Monument Lab is excited to announce that applications are now open for Re:Generation 2024! We’re seeking ten teams of two or more individuals working together to create a new or expand an existing public art, public history, or public humanities project.
Newest Spotlight on Extreme Heat in Urban South Asia, 6 original essays and 12 published IJURR on the urban politics of extreme heat and climate change articles free-to-view for 3 months. ijurr.org/spotlight-on/extre…
So excited to be teaching this new class on 𝙎𝙘𝙞𝙚𝙣𝙘𝙚, 𝙏𝙚𝙘𝙝𝙣𝙤𝙡𝙤𝙜𝙮, 𝙖𝙣𝙙 𝙎𝙤𝙘𝙞𝙚𝙩𝙮 this fall! I’ve wanted to teach a survey course with these book for a while now!
Syllabus here: larryau.com/teaching
ALT A book stack of books from Robert Merton, James C Scott, Janet Vertesi, Thomas Gieryn, Troy Duster, amongst others writing about science technology and society.