European Commission logo
español español
CORDIS - Resultados de investigaciones de la UE
CORDIS

Archipelagic Imperatives: Shipwreck and Lifesaving in European Societies since 1800

Descripción del proyecto

¿Qué nos llevó a rescatar a los náufragos?

En el siglo XIX, el peligro de naufragio era moneda corriente. ¿Se ha planteado alguna vez los riesgos ilógicos que entraña salvar a las personas de un barco que se hunde? El proyecto AISLES, financiado con fondos europeos, investigará la actividad de los botes salvavidas voluntarios a partir de la década de 1820. Hasta entonces, la ayuda a los náufragos había sido circunstancial y el desapego moral respecto al sufrimiento estaba reconocido como un valor. Sin embargo, la actividad de los botes salvavidas invirtió este criterio moral. El objetivo de esta investigación es comprender la innovación moral humanitaria. Proporcionará un modelo para el análisis contextual profundo de la cultura moral en términos de emergencia, subsistencia, representación y distinción insular de los imperativos humanitarios. Los hallazgos del proyecto ayudarán a responder preguntas de teoría moral con respecto a las relaciones conflictivas entre el humanitarismo y la moralidad ordinaria.

Objetivo

Why does humanitarianism take the form of an archipelago, an aggregation of “single issues,” selective, resistant to generalization, and even at times inconsistent? In order to answer this question, which is crucial to, but has been sidelined in histories of humanitarianism, the project develops a novel approach. This approach homes in on the rupture of humanitarian morality with quotidian moral norms and values.
For this purpose, the project investigates the history of a particular moral norm, the imperative of saving lives from shipwreck, that emerged in the ambit of volunteer lifeboat movements from the 1820s onward. Such movements had emerged first in Britain and the Netherlands, then elsewhere, most prominently France and Germany. The imperative in question took the form of a novel unconditional norm that demanded taking counterintuitive risks in order to save lives. Previously, assistance to the shipwrecked had been situational. Moral detachment from suffering had been recognized as a value. Existential risk had constituted an exemption from lifesaving duty. Lifeboat movements overturned this quotidian moral rationale. This shift was neither determined by economic incentives nor by technological or legal innovation. The saving of lives from shipwreck thus provides an ideal laboratory, with a rich and varied source base, for understanding humanitarian-moral innovation on its own terms.
The intervention of the project is twofold. On the plane of historical knowledge, it provides a model for the deep contextual analysis of moral culture in terms of the emergence, sustenance, representation, and insular distinctness of humanitarian imperatives. On the plane of theoretical knowledge, the project develops innovative answers to questions of moral theory, especially about the generality of norms and the conflicted relation of humanitarianism and everyday morality. The project develops novel methodological tools for combining moral theorizing and historical research.

Régimen de financiación

ERC-COG - Consolidator Grant

Institución de acogida

GEISTESWISSENSCHAFTLICHE ZENTREN BERLIN EV
Aportación neta de la UEn
€ 1 912 016,00
Dirección
SCHUTZENSTRASSE 18
10117 Berlin
Alemania

Ver en el mapa

Región
Berlin Berlin Berlin
Tipo de actividad
Research Organisations
Enlaces
Coste total
€ 1 912 016,00

Beneficiarios (1)