Max Planck Institute for the History of Science, Berlin

Friedrich-Meinecke-Institut, Freie Universität Berlin



Call for Papers

Workshop: *Resources and Economies of Knowledge in the Anthropocene*



September 12–13, 2016

Max Planck Institute for the History of Science, Berlin



Organic and inorganic resources have provided and continue to provide the
foundations for the development of human societies. Yet the processes and
mechanisms through which knowledge about their use and exploitation
co-evolved with societal praxis over centuries are very much context
related. The production, dissemination and appropriation of knowledge about
natural resources is interwoven with specific material cultures of a
society or group, and with its political, economic and cultural conditions.



The workshop will focus on the knowledge economies of natural resources
during the past 200 years, a period defined by the chemist Paul J. Crutzen
as the Anthropocene, an age in which human influence has become so dominant
that it has surpassed the influence of geophysical and other natural forces
on the earth’s geo-biological system. During the Anthropocene, there has
been a significant increase on a global scale in the exploitation of
natural resources, which has led to the present situation in which the loss
and shortage of several natural resources has become evident. To fully
understand how local practices and techniques make use of resources, or how
economic and social institutions exploit them, the global conditions in
which these resources are situated must first be investigated.



The workshop seeks to understand the mechanisms and asymmetrical forms in
which knowledge economies of resources evolved during the Anthropocene, a
period that in terms of history of politics, economics and culture is
defined by colonialism, imperialism, decolonization, nationalism and
neo-colonial environments. The workshop moreover seeks to understand how
access to and transfer of knowledge has been related to transnational,
international and global networks that are organized as economic
enterprises and understood as so-called modernization processes. We assume
that natural resources with agricultural, maritime or subterranean origins
have their own particular histories: histories of the use and exploitation
of particular resources; histories of the development of knowledge for
defining, analyzing and describing a resource; and histories of the
transformation of nature. *Theoretically and methodologically, we are
particularly interested in discussing how we can (re)write a global history
of the Anthropocene when resources are the focus of our attention. *We
would like to discuss whether recent approaches in the fields of global
history of knowledge and environmental history are especially promising in
this regard, and how they have able to interact with approaches in the
fields of economic or political history.



*This call for papers invites proposals that trace the production,
dissemination and appropriation of knowledge concerning resources
throughout the Anthropocene. *We are interested in discussing some of the
following questions from either a micro- or macro-historical perspective:

·         How did knowledge concerning resources co-evolve and interact
with societal circumstances?

·         How did practical knowledge circulate and how were technologies
and infrastructures disseminated geographically through globalization
processes that were related to public or private economies during periods
of colonialism and imperialism?

·         How was the asymmetrical division of resources reinforced, and
how were exclusion processes cemented by new territorial divisions and the
exploration of new terrestrial, subterranean and maritime regions in the
age of imperialism or during the Cold War?

·         How is the division of resources and knowledge about resources
related to Anthropocenic processes?

·         How can differences in the development of knowledge and its
application be explained?

·         How could knowledge about resources evolve into and adapt to new
fields of application?



*The conference will be conducted in English. The organizers will cover
(economy) travel and accommodation expenses for invited participants.*

*Please send a short abstract of your proposed contribution (no more than
400 words) and a brief academic CV with institutional affiliation in one
file to [email protected] <[email protected]> and
[email protected] <[email protected]>.*



*The deadline for proposals is April 30, 2016.*

*Organizers and Information:*

*Nadin Heé: [email protected] <[email protected]>*

*Helge Wendt: [email protected] <[email protected]>*

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