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MERSENNE  September 2019

MERSENNE September 2019

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Subject:

CFP: Workshop on "Logistical Natures. trade, traffics, and transformations in natural history collecting"

From:

Yvonne Reimers <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

[log in to unmask]

Date:

Mon, 2 Sep 2019 13:23:30 +0200

Content-Type:

text/plain

Parts/Attachments:

Parts/Attachments

text/plain (108 lines)

Dear colleagues,

Please note our call for papers on: "Logistical Natures. trade, 
traffics, and transformations in natural history collecting"

A workshop organized by the joint research project “Animals as Objects. 
Zoological Gardens and Natural History Museum in Berlin, 1810−2020”, 
Museum für Naturkunde Berlin, Feb 13/14 2020
Deadline CFP: Sept 20 2019

No collection, no research, no natural history museum nor zoological 
garden without logistics. Traders, colonial shipping routes, transport 
companies, feed producers and distributors, chemical and pharmaceutical 
industries, waste disposal infrastructures, but also computerized 
databases, catalogues, daily veterinary logs, and finances, all take 
part in forming and maintaining natural history collections. We 
understand natural history collections to encompass both informational 
and material collections of specimens in museums and databases, and 
collections of living animals and other organisms in zoos and botanical 
gardens. In order to supply these collections with specimens or animals, 
the objects have to be procured, transported, prepared, maintained, 
organized, displayed, and disposed of. Furthermore, the objects 
collected are turned into data and ingested into the changing apparatus 
of natural sciences. All these operations rely on pre-existing 
infrastructures, while simultaneously shaping them.

This workshop invites scholars from science and technology studies, 
history and history of science, technology and media to focus on the 
trade, traffics and transformations of animal-objects within and between 
sites of knowledge in their global logistical, political, scientific and 
economic context. We therefore bring together perspectives on the 
material and informational infrastructures of animal-objects, which form 
and inform their care, conservation and sustainability. We encourage 
special attention to the ways animal collections – be it in zoological 
gardens or in natural history museums – are assembled, maintained, and 
consumed through those infrastructures, and to the circulation of 
objects, organisms, and data. Specifically, this workshop invites 
contributions concerning translocations of collected organisms and data 
as well as their traffics between political, cultural and epistemic 
spaces, between the living and the dead, and between the material and 
the digital.

Thus, we are interested in contributions that unravel the techniques, 
artefacts, infrastructures and biographies which transform organisms 
into objects, data, and assets or subvert these categories. In combining 
attention to practices and practicalities (Mol 2002; Haraway 1997) with 
historical sensibilities to rupture and continuation (Nyhart 2009; 
Kohler 2002), we situate our approach at the intersection of science and 
technology studies, history, and history of science.

We hold that this focus on logistical matters in natural history 
collecting can provide a generative approach to chart its articulations 
of nature and society.
In this spirit, we invite theoretical approaches to the logistics of 
‘animal collections’ and papers that attend to these practices through 
specific cases. We aim to collectively rethink the past and present of 
natural history through its infrastructural preconditions and effects, 
as well as through its collective and distributed practices, and their 
transformations over time.
 
The workshop will focus especially, but not exclusively, on:
●	Trade: the history and practices of trade in animals on a local or 
global scale from barter and gift economies to sales; processes of 
valuation and devaluation of animal objects; spaces of object 
distributions, like markets, auctions, databases; the relations between 
traders, researchers, dealers and collectors, and their respective 
boundary works.
●	Traffics: the itineraries of objects past and present; legal, 
hygienic/medical and ecological regimes of animal and plant 
translocations, e.g. CITES, Nagoya Protocol, Cartagena Protocol; data 
journeys from the field to the database and back, and beyond.
●	Transformations: the history and practices of transforming organisms 
into living zoo attractions, museum exhibits or data sets; the logistics 
of turning animals into objects and data and the related practices of 
objectification in animal collecting institutions; thresholds between 
“dead” and “alive” as effects, intended and unintended, of logistical 
practices, understood as biological as well as political and 
technological categories; transitions from the material to the digital 
(and back) and the infrastructures of data; transformations of the 
material culture of data and the informational investments in material 
artefacts.

The workshop “Logistical Natures. Trade, Traffics and Transformations in 
Natural History Collecting” on 13/14 February 2020 will be followed by a 
second paper-workshop in the autumn of 2020 which aims to assemble a 
special issue (journal tbc). Please send your abstract (max. 500 words) 
and CV to [log in to unmask] no later than Sept 20, 2019. We will 
cover travel and accommodation costs. For further information, please 
contact [log in to unmask]

The workshop is conceived and organized by the joint research project 
“Animals as Objects. Zoological Gardens and the Natural History Museum 
in Berlin, 1810˗2020” 
(https://www.museumfuernaturkunde.berlin/en/science/animals-objects):
Filippo Bertoni (Humanities of Nature, Museum für Naturkunde Berlin)
Ina Heumann (Humanities of Nature, Museum für Naturkunde Berlin)
Clemens Maier-Wolthausen (Zoological Gardens Berlin)
Tahani Nadim (Humanities of Nature, Museum für Naturkunde Berlin)
Mareike Vennen (Institute for Cultural Studies, Humboldt University 
Berlin)

It is funded by the Federal Ministry of Education and Research.

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