To whom it may concern,
Dear colleagues,
As the programme of the POEM Opening Conference has been finalized, we would like to share it with you. Please find it below.
Registration will open soon and please notice that limited seats are available.
For more information, please visit the project website: https://www.poem.uni-hamburg.de/ .
With kind regards,
Angeliki Tzouganatou
Programme of the POEM Opening Conference
Participatory Memory Practices: Connectivities, Empowerment, and Recognition of Cultural Heritages in Mediatized Memory Ecologies
Date: 13.-14.12.2018
Venue: Museum der Arbeit (Wiesendamm 3, 22305 Hamburg, Germany)
Thursday 13.12.18
12:00 Registration
13:00-13:15 Welcome addresses
13:15-13:45 Introduction of the POEM project by Gertraud Koch (POEM Coordinator, University of Hamburg, Germany)
13:45-14:30 Keynote by Susanne Wessendorf (London School of Economics, United Kingdom)
Pitfalls and promises of researching super-diversity
14:30-15:15 Keynote by Gisela Welz (Goethe University Frankfurt/Main, Germany)
“A common cultural basis for a European demos?” Heritage making and participatory memory practices in Europe
15:15-15:30 Coffee Break & Poster Presentation of POEM partner organisations
15:30-16:15 Block 1.1: Building connectivities through institutions
Isto Huvila & Inge Zwart (Uppsala University, Sweden)
Professional take on participation
Maria Economou & Franziska Mucha (University of Glasgow, United Kingdom)
Crowdsourcing of cultural heritage digital collections through gamification
Maria Economou & Cassandra Kist (University of Glasgow, United Kingdom)
The role of museums’ social media for the engagement with arts and culture
Elisabeth Tietmeyer & Susanne Boersma (Stiftung Preußischer Kulturbesitz, Germany)
Collaboration and incorporation of vulnerable groups in professional participatory memory work
16:15-17:45 Block 1.2: Building connectivities through institutions & discussion
Stefan Benedik (House of Austrian History, Austria)
Beyond digital collecting – participatory experiments in the house of Austrian history’s online museum
Emily Oswald (University of Oslo, Norway)
“See where this is?” A local history museum’s Facebook concept and the use of historical photographs for reminiscing on social media
Dagmar Brunow (Linnaeus University, Sweden)
Recognizing ethnic and social minorities in audiovisual archives in Europe: archival challenges, community ethics and inclusive heritage
17:45-18:00 Coffee break & poster presentation of POEM partner organisations
18:00-19:00 Transfer
19:00-20:30 Social Event (tba)
20:30 Reception
Friday 14.12.2018
09:00-09:45 Block 2.1: Connectivities built by people and groups
Theopisti Stylianou-Lambert & Lorenz Widmaier (Cyprus University of Technology, Cyprus)
Sharing vs. collecting? Perceptions of photographs online
Rachel Charlotte Smith & Asnath Paula Kambunga (Aarhus University, Denmark)
Future memory making: Prototyping (post-) colonial imaginations with Namibian youth
Ton Otto & Anne Chahine (Aarhus University, Denmark)
Future memory making: Co-creating (post-) colonial imaginations with youth
from Greenland and Denmark
Ross Hall & Eleni-Aikaterini Moraitopoulou (Ashoka, United Kingdom)
Young people empowerment and social inclusion through PMW in Ashoka Changemaker Schools
Theopisti Stylianou-Lambert & Myrto Theocharidou (Cyprus University of Technology, Cyprus)
Uses of digital cultural heritage databases for people’s memory and identity work
09:45-11:15 Block 2.2: Connectivities built by people and groups & discussion
Özge Çelikaslan (Karlsruhe University of Arts and Design, Germany)
Politics of memory in the case of collective counter-archive practices
Dahlia Mahmoud & Elisabeth Stoney (Zayed University, Abu Dhabi)
Community, creative practice and sharing marginal narratives
Špela Ledinek Lozej (Institute of Slovenian Ethnology, Slovenia)
Collaborative inventory – participatory linking of cultural heritage collections in the Slovenian-Italian cross-border region
11:15-11:30 Coffee Break & Poster Presentation of POEM partner organisations
11:30 -12:15 Block 3.1: Connectivities built by memory modalities
Gertraud Koch & Quoc-Tan Tran (University of Hamburg, Germany)
Memory modalities in diverse types of memory institutions
Gertraud Koch & Jennifer Krueckeberg (University of Hamburg, Germany)
Modalities of personal memory work
Isto Huvila & Dydimus Zengenene (Uppsala University, Sweden)
Managing participatory ecologies of memory modalities
Gertraud Koch & Angeliki Tzouganatou (University of Hamburg, Germany)
Internet ecologies of open knowledge as future memory modalities
12:15-13:00 Lunch
13:00-14:30 Block 3.2: Connectivities built by memory modalities & discussion
Sandra Trostel (Independent filmmaker, digital storyteller)
Documentary film as a freely available cultural asset – a case study on the project “All creatures welcome”
Susanna Ånäs (Open Knowledge Foundation Finland and Wikimedia, Finland)
Wikidocumentaries – a micro history wiki for citizen historians
Sónia Vespeira de Almeida & Sónia Ferreira (FCSH‐Universidade Nova de Lisboa, Portugal)
Portuguese exiles in Europe. Uses of the past and participatory memory
Olle Sköld & Ina-Maria Jansson (Uppsala University, Sweden)
How videogamers make memory: a study of memory work in videogame communities and the opportunities and pitfalls of its inclusion in the collections of public memory institutions
14:30-14:45 Coffee break & poster presentation of POEM partner organisations
14:45-15:30 Closing session
16:00 Guided Museum tour (in English)
This project has received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation
programme under the Marie Skłodowska-Curie grant agreement No. 764859.
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European Training Network "POEM"
University of Hamburg
Institute of European Ethnology/Cultural Anthropology
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