CHEurope

CHEurope Critical Heritage Studies and the Future of Europe_Towards an integrated, interdisciplinary and transnational training model in cultural heritage research.

Critical Heritage Studies and the Future of Europe_Towards an integrated, interdisciplinary and transnational training model in cultural heritage research

The latest article produced as a result of the research and training activities in the CHEurope network. A post-hoc anal...
07/10/2021

The latest article produced as a result of the research and training activities in the CHEurope network. A post-hoc analysis of digital surrogacy in virtual heritage now published in the International Journal of Heritage Studies (open access):

(2021). Digital surrogacy: politics and aesthetics in visualising the historical past of a city. International Journal of Heritage Studies. Ahead of Print.

Our ESR Katie McEnery's illustrated book is out soon. Katie has a background in art therapy and her research focuses on ...
15/07/2021

Our ESR Katie McEnery's illustrated book is out soon. Katie has a background in art therapy and her research focuses on heritage and wellbeing.

12/03/2021

Building a career in archaeology: K.Kristiansen Posted on: March 12, 2021 “I always preach to my students ‘forget everything about career planning, be open, never put all your eggs in one basket, that will only make you unhappy’. ‘Be open to the unexpected'”. Professor of archaeology at Go...

Para leer!!
13/12/2020

Para leer!!

A geografia da morte não é aleatória. Quanto mais descartável o corpo, mais distante do centro de São Paulo o cemitério será.

Two CHEurope members awarded ERC grantsWe are thrilled to announce that two of the CHEurope project consortium members h...
23/11/2020

Two CHEurope members awarded ERC grants

We are thrilled to announce that two of the CHEurope project consortium members have just been awarded each a huge ERC Synergy Grant by the European Research Council (ERC).

The first project entitled “From correlations to explanations: towards a new European prehistory” will be led and coordinated by Bronze Age specialist Kristian Kristiansen, Professor in Archaeology, and archaeologist Karl Göran Sjögren from the University of Gothenburg. In addition to other archaeologists from the University of Gothenburg, the project also includes strontium isotope specialists from the National Museum in Copenhagen, geneticists and archaeologists from University College London and geneticists from the Lundbeck Foundation GeoGenetics Centre at the University of Copenhagen. By combining novel modelling approaches with archaeology and large quantities of data and analyses – including everything from prehistoric genetic material to climate data – the research team aims to discover and explain the key processes behind the genetic and cultural diversity in Europe. The researchers will investigate the period from the first farmers around 6,000 years BCE, to the end of the Bronze Age around 500 years BCE.

The second project is entitled “Material Minds: Exploring the Interactions between Predictive Brains, Cultural Artefacts, and Embodied Visual Search” and is led by Felipe Criado-Boado, Spanish National Research Council (CSIC), Institute of Heritage Sciences (Incipit), in partnership with Andy Clark, University of Sussex, Department of Informatics and Department of Philosophy (UK), Luis M. Martínez, Spanish National Research Council-CSIC, Institute of Neurosciences-IN (SP) and Johannes Müller, University of Kiel, Institute of Prehistoric and Protohistoric Archaeology (DE). The project asks in what ways the worlds we build and inhabit alter our own minds and the ways we process information? Do the material structures of our settlements, buildings, roads, and artefacts change fundamental patterns of thought and attention, so that understanding change in these ‘material codes’ becomes part and parcel of understanding the emergence of the modern mind? To answer these questions, the “Material Minds” Project brings together a unique team from archaeology, vision science, and cognitive philosophy. Using a carefully curated set of materials, spanning a range of cultures and a wide sweep of archaeological, historic, ethnoarchaeological and contemporary settings, we aim to test, for the first time, the hypothesis of materiality-driven cognitive change. “Materiality” here refers to material culture: human made cultural artefacts that include portable objects but also buildings, landscapes and ornamentations. The project will develop and deploy a new synergistic methodology that combines multiple real-world case studies with state-of-the-art visual neuroscience, and agent-based simulations.

The ERC’s Synergy projects represent the absolute top-tier of European research projects and target small groups of very prominent researchers who want to collaborate on a joint research project. As the name suggests, these research projects bring together leading researchers from different fields who join forces to achieve new, innovative results that none of them could have achieved alone. Projects can be funded up to 10 million € for a period of 6 years.

More info: http://cheurope-project.eu/two-cheurope-members-awarded-erc-grants/

FINAL CALL FOR THE CHEUROPEPROJECT CONFERENCE ! Welcome at 9.00 tomorrow morning and opening keynote lecture by Wayne Mo...
14/10/2020

FINAL CALL FOR THE CHEUROPEPROJECT CONFERENCE !

Welcome at 9.00 tomorrow morning and opening keynote lecture by Wayne Modest on in and starting from 9.15

LAST CHANCE TO REGISTER ON cheurope-project.eu

Just a few days until the CHEurope virtual final conference kicks off on Zoom! ***Please pre-register to attend here***:...
13/10/2020

Just a few days until the CHEurope virtual final conference kicks off on Zoom! ***Please pre-register to attend here***: https://gu-se.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_iRpC0-jkQyW2voeOKKAonA

Additional information and the conference programme can be found here: http://cheurope-project.eu/closing-cheurope-online-conference/

This international conference will mark the CHEurope project’s conclusion and allow the presentation to the wider scientific community of the results obtained during more than 4 years of collaborative research

Only one week to go until the start of the CHEurope online conference (15-16 October) ! If you are working on critical h...
08/10/2020

Only one week to go until the start of the CHEurope online conference (15-16 October) ! If you are working on critical heritage studies or just interested in the ways cultural heritage interacts with society and impacts on our everyday life, register for free on http://cheurope-project.eu/ and join us in these 2 intensive days of presentations and discussions !

CHEurope is an EU-funded collaborative project (Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions within the Horizon2020 programme)
bringing together 8 European academic and research organisations and funding doctoral research of 15 PhD students from Europe and the world.

07/10/2020

You are all invited to our ESR Moniek Driesse’s midterm PhD seminar (online) this Thursday 8 October. In this seminar Moniek will present the current status of her research project and get into dialogue with external discussant Christine Hansen.

The research project aims to assert the importance of urban waters in knowledge production and contribute to building up an approach to urban heritage using mapping as an optic and water as its lens. In that sense, heritage becomes a perspective on change in time and space that can be used as a tool to imagine alternative urban realities in the past, present and future.

Moniek’s project emerges from letting water attract her attention. Not any particular body or type of water, but water as an entity that has drawn and continues to draw maps of cities. Not maps as in the pieces of paper with dots and lines drawn on them, but maps understood as phenomena that guide human understanding of orientations in time and space. Mapping, then, involves a set of actions through which a researcher can gather, present and articulate imagined understandings of place in varying temporalities, perceived and practised relations of dwelling with many others in ever-changing urban ecosystems. In her work in Mexico City, Belgrade and Gothenburg – cities that are different in many aspects, but where water plays a significant role in the cartographical narrative – Moniek allows water to become an active agent in the mapping process. By doing this, the focus moves from the map as an object to mapping as a performative and, thus, cultural, social and political activity. In that sense, in this research, cartography is understood as an act of becoming rather than a fixed ontology.

A preliminary manuscript with an overview of the structure and inherent logics of the still ongoing research is available for those who want to read or just have a look at it before the seminar. Please send an email to [email protected] to get your copy!

https://www.facebook.com/events/323307558930211

Day - 15 until the CHEurope conference (15-16 October) ! If you are interested in the multiple interactions between cult...
30/09/2020

Day - 15 until the CHEurope conference (15-16 October) !
If you are interested in the multiple interactions between cultural heritage and the future of our societies, the sustainable development of our cities, the continuous deployment of IT technologies, our health and wellbeing and the citizens participation in a multi-cultural world, this online webinar will contribute with stories, case studies and examples able to nourish further reflection and debate.
The 15 PhD fellows supported by the CHEurope EU-funded project, the academic staff of the partner organisations and a number of international keynote speakers will critically explore the multiple ontologies through which cultural heritage redraws the future of Europe and the world.

Info and registrations on www.cheurope-project.eu

Day -35 until our "Critical Heritage Studies and the Future of Europe" final online conference ! During 2 days (15-16 Oc...
10/09/2020

Day -35 until our "Critical Heritage Studies and the Future of Europe" final online conference ! During 2 days (15-16 October 2020), international keynote speakers, our consortium members and the 15 PhD fellows supported by the EU-funded CHEurope project will propose a renewed critical vision of the role that culturel heritage plays in our societies and explore the multiple ontologies through which cultural heritage redraws the future of Europe and the world.

The CHEurope project is funded by the European Commission under the Horizon2020 programme (Marie Skłodowska-Curie Innovative Training Networks)

More info on www.cheurope-project.eu
Register on https://gu-se.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_iRpC0-jkQyW2voeOKKAonA

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Eklandagatan 86
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SE41261

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