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Imperial Science and the Habitability of Central Asia and Mesopotamia, 1815-1914: A History of the Societal Consequences of Changing Environmental Limits

Descrizione del progetto

Un innovativo approccio allo studio della crisi climatica sociale

I disastri naturali e quelli provocati dall’uomo alterano il paesaggio in modo significativo, a volte rendendo inabitabili luoghi abitabili. Sebbene l’effetto dei cambiamenti climatici antropogenici a livello globale sia nuovo, il mondo è sempre stato caratterizzato da regioni abitabili e inabitabili. I primi tentativi (1815-1914), da parte degli scienziati imperiali britannici e francesi, volti a comprendere i limiti per la vita si sono avvalsi di metodi storici intellettuali per esaminare le teorie dei cambiamenti ambientali anziché rivolgere l’attenzione ai contesti imperiali su cui si basavano tali metodi. Il progetto HABITABILITY, finanziato dall’UE, indagherà le conseguenze sociali dei cambiamenti ambientali per colmare le lacune nella ricerca. Inserirà le idee scientifiche e culturali di inabilità all’interno dei loro contesti storici e istituirà studi sull’abitabilità come metodologia interdisciplinare cruciale per un’epoca di crisi climatica.

Obiettivo

Following a summer where parts of Europe flooded while others burned, this research addresses a fundamentally relevant question: what happens to societies when habitable places become uninhabitable? The large scale effects of anthropogenic climate change are new, but divisions of the world into 'habitable' and 'uninhabitable' regions are not, and have long shaped humanity. My project examines a pivotal part of this longer history by showing how between 1815 and 1914, British and French imperial scientists tried to measure the limits of life on earth in new ways (especially via the new sciences of geology, geography and ecology). There is nevertheless a significant research gap in that previous scholars have generally used intellectual history methods to examine theories of environmental change proposed by elite philosophers based in Europe, rather than addressing the imperial contexts in which this knowledge was made. Bringing an innovative combination of global history and history of science methods to archival sources, my project will close this gap by focusing on Central Asia and Mesopotamia, which became key to investigations into the societal consequences of environmental change (e.g. the movement of the Euphrates river causing cities to be abandoned). Examining the origins of these environmentally determinist imperial categories will simultaneously reveal their problematic legacies today (e.g. the idea of Afghanistan having an inherently 'violent geography'). This research thus aims to place scientific and cultural ideas of 'uninhabitability' into their historical contexts and pioneer 'habitability studies' as an essential interdisciplinary methodology for an age of climate crisis. This will also allow me to enhance my research skills (learning cutting-edge material culture and colonial archive methods) and expand my impact and international profile under the expert mentorship of Prof. Roland Wenzlhuemer to secure an academic position at a European university.

Campo scientifico (EuroSciVoc)

CORDIS classifica i progetti con EuroSciVoc, una tassonomia multilingue dei campi scientifici, attraverso un processo semi-automatico basato su tecniche NLP.

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Coordinatore

LUDWIG-MAXIMILIANS-UNIVERSITAET MUENCHEN
Contribution nette de l'UE
€ 173 847,36
Indirizzo
GESCHWISTER SCHOLL PLATZ 1
80539 MUNCHEN
Germania

Mostra sulla mappa

Regione
Bayern Oberbayern München, Kreisfreie Stadt
Tipo di attività
Higher or Secondary Education Establishments
Collegamenti
Costo totale
Nessun dato