Local and Historical Knowledge: Keys for Rethinking Contemporary Planetary Issues

Illustration image generated using AI software. Credits: The Holberg Prize

How can local and historical knowledge contribute to rethinking current, planetary issues? Four excellent young researchers form the Nordics share perspectives from their research.

On occasion of the annual Nils Klim Committee meeting, we are hosting a reception and academic event at the Royal Danish Academy of Sciences and Letters. Four excellent young scholars from the Nordic countries, including three previous Nils Klim Laureates, are invited to reflect upon how the local knowledge they have encountered and the different geographical and historical spaces that they have conducted research within may inspire critical and ethico-politico approaches to tackle some of the great planetary problems we face in our time.

The event is open for all, but registration is required. The registration deadline is 16 January. (Please note: The livestream link is open to all and requires no registration.)

Abstract

The planet is burning, hard rain is pounding the Earth, epidemics are widespread, wars are fought, fish are gasping for oxygen, societies are divided by new forms of populism on the rise, children’s wellbeing is on the decline, the number of forced migrants is exploding, as exile and diaspora communities are growing. The list of geopolitical problems is extensive, and its scale seems to be worldwide. In addition, and perhaps as frightening, it seems as if we are running out of suggestions for understanding and intervening. Counter-narratives are therefore urgently needed.  

Instead of either shying away from these questions or suggesting to colonize the moon, this symposium aims to “stay with the trouble” and land on the earth. For, in distinct parts of the world, people continue to do important things worthy of our attention. The relationship between the local and the planetary, the now, past and future needs reconsideration. One way ahead, is to ask if and how local and indigenous, situated and historical knowledge may serve as precious frameworks and tools that assist us in understanding and living in the current time.  

The idea is not simply to go back to ways of thinking and handling originating in the past. Neither is the goal to suggest an extractive practice, where ancient or indigenous communities, cosmologies, and habits are conceived as just another source to tap. Rather, the aim is to consult local knowledge production and historical events in their own right, and as inspiring counternarratives to global or world-wide principles celebrated by the interpretative repertoire of modernity. 

This seminar invites four excellent young scholars from the Nordic countries, to reflect upon how the local knowledge they have encountered and the different geographical and historical spaces in which they have conducted research may contribute to inspire critical and ethico-politico approaches towards planetary problems and even contribute to planetary rethinking and solutions to planetary problems.

We ask: How can local and historical knowledge contribute to rethinking current, planetary issues? How may our critiques of the current here-and-know be informed by other times, other places, other cosmologies and alternative epistemologies? How may we foster inspiration, ethical collaboration and exchange across different times and spaces, and thereby recenter the epistemic spaces of the present?

Programme

Opening remarks 

Eco-Dependent: The Bible on Humans and Nature 
by Associate Professor Frederik Poulsen, University of Copenhagen.
2020 Nils Klim Laureate.

To Travel or Not to Travel? Ancient Perspectives on Human Mobility
by 
Professor Elisa Uusimäki, University of Aarhus.
2022 Nils Klim Laureate.

Lessons from Historical and Local Arctic Indigenous Perspectives
by 
Assistant Professor Aviâja Lyberth Hauptmann, Ilisimatusarfik, University of Greenland.

A Humanist Perspective on the Anthropocene: How Fiction Might Inform our Attitude Towards Climate Change   
by 
Associate Professor Simona Zetterberg-Nielsen, University of Aarhus.
2023 Nils Klim Laureate.

Panel discussion with the speakers 

Q&A

The event is chaired by Professor Dorthe Staunæs, University of Aarhus  

Speakers

Details

Thursday 18 January 2024
17:00
19:30
,
Europe/Oslo
Gl. mødesal, 1. sal, Videnskabernes Selskab, H.C. Andersens Boulevard 35, 1533 København V

Practical information

Mottagelse fra kl. 17:00. Det akademiske programmet og strømmesending starter kl. 18:00.

Arrangementet er åpent for alle interesserte.