Program - Syddansk Universitet

DANSK HISTORIKERMØDE 2016
26.-27. AUGUST 2016, SYDDANSK UNIVERSITET
PROGRAM/PROGRAMME
Kort over Odense, 1573: Odense Bys Museer / Map of Odense 1573: Odense City Museums
FREDAG/FRIDAY 26. AUGUST 2016
8.45-9.30
REGISTRERING/REGISTRATION
Campustorvet
8.45-9.30
KAFFE/COFFEE
Panoramaudsigten
9.30-9.45
VELKOMMEN/WELCOME
Auditorium 100
9.45-10.30
Lokale/Room 100
KEYNOTE SPEECH
Charles Zika (University of Melbourne): Visuality, Emotions and the
European Witch-hunt
The use of visual sources has not been part of the traditional tool box of
historians. Yet visuality can often reveal perspectives seemingly at odds with
textual sources, and provides a keen sense of the powerful impact of historical
events. For understanding a historical period in which literacy is limited, visual
meanings and messages seem especially appropriate – as they also are for a
contemporary culture awash with images. This paper will look at how the
visuality of images and reading them according to their emotional strategies
and purpose, can illuminate key aspects of the European witch-hunt.
Bio:
Charles Zika is a Professorial Fellow in History at the University of Melbourne
and also a Chief Investigator in the Australian Research Council Centre of
Excellence for the History of Emotions. Professor Zika's research interests lie
in the intersection of religion, emotion and visual culture in German-speaking
Europe between the 15th and 18th centuries, and at present focus on sacred
place, natural disasters and witchcraft.
Most recent publications:
“Disaster and Apocalypse, Emotions and Time in Sixteenth-Century
Pamphlets”, in Charles Zika & Jenny Spinks (eds.): Disaster, Death and the
Emotions in the Shadow of the Apocalypse, 1400-1700 (Palgrave Macmillan,
2016).
“Violence, Anger & Dishonour in Sixteenth-Century Broadsheets from the
Collection of Johann Jakob Wick”, in Susan Broomhall & Sarah Finn (eds.):
Violence and Emotions in Early Modern Europe (Routledge, 2016).
“Recasting Images of Witchcraft in the Later Seventeenth Century: The Witch
of Endor as Ritual Magician” in Susan Broomhall (ed.): Gender and Emotions
in Medieval and Early Modern Europe: Destroying Order, Structuring
Disorder (Ashgate, 2015).
The Four Horsemen: Apocalypse, Death & Disaster, co-edited with Cathy
Leahy & Jenny Spinks (National Gallery of Victoria, 2012).
The Appearance of Witchcraft: Print and Visual Culture in Sixteenth-Century
Europe (Routledge, 2007).
10.40-12.25
Lokale/Room 99
SESSION I
Paneldebat om oral history i Danmark
Stine Grønbæk Jensen (Svendborg Museum)
Chris Holmsted Larsen (RUC/Roskilde University)
Jacob Knage Rasmussen (Svendborg Museum)
Sofie Lene Bak (Københavns Universitet/University of Copenhagen)
Sebastian Olden-Jørgensen (Københavns Universitet/University of Copenhagen)
Lokale/Room 98
Historikere og deres grænser: Historie, forsker og menigmand mellem
Slesvig og Alperne
Merete Bo Thomsen (Dansk Centralbibliotek for Sydslesvig)
René Ejbye Pedersen (Syddansk Universitet/University of Southern Denmark)
Mogens Rostgaard Nissen (Dansk Centralbibliotek for Sydslesvig)
Peter Thaler (Syddansk Universitet/University of Southern Denmark)
Lokale/Room 97
Arbejderne og arbejderbevægelsen i begrebshistorisk lys
Margit Bech Vilstrup (Arbejdermuseet & ABA & Syddansk Universitet/The Worker’s
Museum & ABA & University of Southern Denmark)
Niels Finn Christiansen (Syddansk Universitet/University of Southern Denmark)
Nynne-Cecilie Kelager Schmidt (Syddansk Universitet/University of Southern
Denmark)
Jeppe Nevers (Syddansk Universitet/University of Southern Denmark)
Bertel Nygaard (Aarhus Universitet/Aarhus University)
Lokale/Room 96
Den kolde krig tur-retur
Julie Andersen (Syddansk Universitet/University of Southern Denmark)
Sune Bechmann Pedersen (Göteborgs Universitet/University of Gothenburg)
Rosa Magnusdottir (Aarhus Universitet/Aarhus University)
Rasmus Mariager (Københavns Universitet/University of Copenhagen)
Iben Vyff (Helsingør kommunes museer)
Lokale/Room 95
Norden outside Norden: Nordic Influence in the World
Dorthe Gert Simonsen (Københavns Universitet/University of Copenhagen)
Mary Hilson (Aarhus Universitet/Aarhus University)
Tom Hoctor (UCL)
Byron Rom-Jensen (Aarhus Universitet/Aarhus University)
Sanne Aagaard Jensen (Københavns Universitet/University of Copenhagen)
Lokale /Room 77
Dansk Adelskultur 1400-1600
Lars Bisgaard (Syddansk Universitet/University of Southern Denmark)
Tine Kondrup (Syddansk Universitet/University of Southern Denmark)
Marie Møller Christensen (Københavns Universitet/University of Copenhagen)
Rasmus Skovgaard Jakobsen (Aarhus Universitet/Aarhus University)
12.25-13.25
FROKOST/LUNCH
Universitetets Restaurant /The University Restaurant
13.30-14.15
Lokale/Room 100
KEYNOTE SPEECH
Josiah Osgood (Georgetown University): The Mediterranean Crisis of
the First Century BCE
In the 80s BCE, the Mediterranean world slipped into near anarchy, raising
serious questions about the nature of Roman power. While major wars
seemingly were over by decade’s end, destabilization left a long legacy. The
Roman Senate tried vigorously to reassert its central authority, even as it was
directly challenged by Romans and foreign powers, sometimes in alliance. The
final breakdown of the Roman Republic is profitably understood as a
Mediterranean-wide crisis, in which widespread feelings of rootlessness played
a key role.
Bio:
Josiah Osgood is Professor of Classics at Georgetown University. His teaching
and research cover many areas of Roman history and Latin literature, with a
focus on civil war and its representations.
Most recent publications:
Rome: Building the World State (150 BCE-20 CE) (Cambridge University
Press, forthcoming)
Turia: a Roman Woman’s Civil War (Oxford University Press, 2014)
“Ending Civil War at Rome: Rhetoric and Reality”, American Historical
Review 120 (2015).
“Breviarium totius imperii: the Background of Appian’s Roman History”, in K.
Welch (ed.): Appian’s Roman History Empire and Civil War (London, 2015).
“Julius Caesar and Spanish Triumph-Hunting”, in C. H. Lange and F. J.
Vervaet (eds.): The Roman Republican Triumph: beyond the Spectacle
(Quasar, 2014).
14.30-16.15
Lokale/Room 100
SESSION II
Dansk universitetshistorie i det 20. og 21. århundrede:
Vidensproduktion, ”masseuniversitet” – og arbejdsplads
Ning de Coninck-Smith (Aarhus Universitet/Aarhus University)
Else Hansen (Rigsarkivet/The Danish National Archives)
Julian Lamberty (Syddansk Universitet/University of Southern Denmark)
Anders Ravn Sørensen (CBS/Copenhagen Business School)
Palle Roslyng-Jensen (Københavns Universitet/University of Copenhagen)
Lokale/Room 99
Kriminalitetens kulturhistorie i det tidlig moderne Danmark
Tyge Krogh (Rigsarkivet, København/ The Danish National Archives, Copenhagen)
Anette Larner (Aarhus Universitet/Aarhus University)
Louise Nyholm Kallestrup (Syddansk Universitet/University of Southern Denmark)
Asbjørn R. Thomsen (Rigsarkivet, Viborg/ The Danish National Archives, Viborg)
Lokale/Room 98
Energiens etik
Stephanie Erlenbach (Aalborg Universitet/Aalborg University)
David Nye (Syddansk Universitet/ University of Southern Denmark)
Bo Poulsen (Aalborg Universitet/Aalborg University)
Mogens Rüdiger (Aalborg Universitet/Aalborg University)
Lokale/Room 97
Imperier og verden – globalhistorie på KU
Lars Boje Mortensen (Syddansk Universitet/University of Southern Denmark)
Peter Fibiger Bang (Københavns Universitet/University of Copenhagen)
Karsten Johanning (Københavns Universitet/University of Copenhagen)
Kristian Kanstrup Christensen (Københavns Universitet/University of Copenhagen)
Lars-Emil Nybo Nissen (Københavns Universitet/University of Copenhagen)
Jacob Tullberg (Københavns Universitet/University of Copenhagen)
Lokale/Room 96
Efter nederlaget. Bearbejdelsen af tabet af Norge i 1814
Michael Bregnsbo (Syddansk Universitet/University of Southern Denmark)
Anne Engelst Nørgaard (Aarhus Universitet/Aarhus University)
Rasmus Glenthøj (Syddansk Universitet/University of Southern Denmark)
Lone Kølle Martinsen (Syddansk Universitet/University of Southern Denmark)
Torbjörn Nilsson (Södertörns högskola/Södertörn University)
Lokale/Room 95
Scandinavian-American Encounters: New Approaches to ScandinaviaAmerican Migration and Ethnic History
Dag Blanck (Uppsala universitet/Uppsala University)
Jørn Brøndal (Syddansk Universitet/University of Southern Denmark)
Torben Grøngaard Jeppesen (Odense Bys Museer/Odense City Museums)
Stephen Kantrowitz (University of Wisconsin)
Terje Mikael Hasle Joranger (Universitetet i Oslo/University of Oslo)
Karen V. Hansen (Brandeis University)
16.15-16.45
KAFFE/COFFEE
Panoramaudsigten
16.45-18.30
Lokale/Room 100
SESSION III
Medborgerskab, demokrati og velfærdsstat i det moderne Danmark
Liv Egholm (CBS/Copenhagen Business School)
Nina Javette Koefoed (Aarhus Universitet/Aarhus University)
Niels Nyegaard (Aarhus Universitet/Aarhus University)
Anders Sevelsted (CBS/Copenhagen Business School)
Lokale/Room 99
Erhvervshistorie under kulturhistorisk inspiration
Kristoffer Jensen (Danmarks Industrimuseum/The Danish Museum of Industry)
Louise Karlskov Skyggebjerg
Mads Mordhorst (CBS/Copenhagen Business School)
Jeppe Nevers (Syddansk Universitet/University of Southern Denmark)
Lokale/Room 98
Demokrati og dets fjender i mellemkrigstiden
Christian Egander Skov (Aarhus Universitet/Aarhus University)
Chris Holmsted Larsen (RUC/ Roskilde University)
Kristina Krake (Syddansk Universitet/University of Southern Denmark)
Niels Wium Olesen (Aarhus Universitet/ Aarhus University)
Nils Arne Sørensen (Syddansk Universitet/University of Southern Denmark)
Lokale/Room 97
Danmarks koloniale orden – lokale og globale perspektiver på kolonial
styring i det 18. og 19. århundrede
Kristoffer Edelgaard Christensen (Lunds universitet/Lund University)
Simon Rastén (Aarhus Universitet & Nationalmuseet/Aarhus University & National
Museum of Denmark)
Søren Rud (Københavns Universitet/University of Copenhagen)
Rasmus Sielemann (Københavns Universitet/University of Copenhagen)
Lokale/Room 96
Historie og digital erindring
Lokale/Room 95
Rundbordsdiskussion: Genetablering af kønshistorisk netværk i
Danmark (KNiD)
Ismar Dedović (Københavns Universitet/University of Copenhagen)
Tea Sindbæk Andersen (Københavns Universitet/University of Copenhagen)
Helle Strandgaard Jensen (Københavns Universitet/University of Copenhagen)
Anne Sørensen (Aarhus Universitet/Aarhus University)
Bolette Frydendahl Larsen (Lunds universitet/Lund University)
Birgitte Possing (Rigsarkivet/The Danish National Archives)
Nina Trige Andersen (www.lynxtext.dk)
18.30-19.00
VIN & SNACKS/WINE & SNACKS
Panoramaudsigten
BOG RECEPTION/BOOK RECEPTIOM FOR ERLING
SANDMO (University of Oslo)
Panoramaudsigten
19.00-22.00
MIDDAG/DINNER
Universitetets Restaurant/The University Restaurant
LØRDAG/SATURDAY 27. AUGUST 2016
9.30-10.15
Lokale/Room 100
KEYNOTE SPEECH
Patricia Clavin (University of Oxford): Narratives of the global:
Rethinking the origins of world war in the twentieth century
In 1917, Thorstein Veblen noted that peace was not absolute, but ‘a relative
matter, a matter of more or less’. Ninety-nine years later, this reflection strikes
a resoundingly contemporary note. It serves as the jumping off point for a
lecture that seeks to recast the origins of the world wars through the lens of
human security. This concept links economic, health, the environmental
security with political and personal freedoms. It also invokes a ‘bottom up’
approach, which recognizes a wide range of actors, and the prevalence of
conflict within, as much as between, states.
Bio:
Patricia Clavin is Professor of International History at Jesus College,
University of Oxford. Professor Clavin’s research and publications centre on
the history of international and transnational relations in the Twentieth
Century. Clavin is especially interested in the relationship between
international security and economic and financial stability, and the role played
by international and regional (notably European) organizations.
Most recent publications:
Internationalism: A Twentieth-Century History, co-edited with Glenda Sluga
(Cambridge University Press, 2016).
“The Genesis of the War”, in Richard Overy (ed.): The Oxford Illustrated
History of World War II (Oxford University Press, 2015).
“International Organizations”, in Richard Bosworth and Joe Maiolo (eds.): The
Cambridge History of the Second World War, Vol. II, Politics and Ideology
(Cambridge University Press, 2015).
“The Austrian Hunger Crisis and the Genesis of International Organization
after the First World War”, International Affairs, 90:2 (2014).
Securing the World Economy: The Reinvention of the League of Nations, 19191946 (Oxford University Press, 2013). Winner of the British Academy Medal,
2015.
10.15-10.45
KAFFE/COFFEE
Panoramaudsigten
10.45-12.30
SESSION IV
Lokale/Room 100
Missionshistorie: Danske perspektiver på en global bevægelse
Rejhan Bosnjak (Syddansk Universitet/ University of Southern Denmark)
Julie Frederiksen (HF og VUC København Syd/ Higher Preparatory Examination
Course and Adult Education Center Copenhagen)
Daniel Henschen (Syddansk Universitet/ University of Southern Denmark)
Niels Kastfelt (Københavns Universitet/ University of Copenhagen)
Lokale/Room 99
Livsforløb på massebasis som kilde til kultur-, social- og
sundhedshistoriske problemstillinger
Helene Castenbrandt (Københavns Universitet/University of Copenhagen)
Jeppe Christensen (Københavns Stadsarkiv/ Copenhagen City Archives)
Anne Løkke (Københavns Universitet/University of Copenhagen)
Barbara Ana Revuelta Eugercios (Københavns Universitet/University of Copenhagen)
Asbjørn R. Thomsen (Rigsarkivet, Viborg/ The Danish National Archives, Viborg)
Lokale/Room 98
Roundtable: Business, welfare and economic development
Patricia Clavin (University of Oxford)
Jeppe Nevers (Syddansk Universitet//University of Southern Denmark)
Thomas Paster (University of Turin)
Klaus Petersen (Syddansk Universitet//University of Southern Denmark)
Lokale/Room 97
Pompeius – between politics and war
Jesper Carlsen (Syddansk Universitet/University of Southern Denmark)
Mads Lindholmer (University of Glasgow)
Jesper Majbom Madsen (Syddansk Universitet/University of Southern Denmark)
Josiah Osgood (Georgetown University)
Lokale/Room 96
Uncomfortable, immoral, and ugly feelings
Cecilie Bønnelycke (Langelands Museum/Museum of Langeland)
Caroline Nyvang (Det Kongelige Bibliotek/The Royal Library)
Søren Rud (Københavns Universitet/University of Copenhagen)
Karen Vallgårda (Københavns Universitet/University of Copenhagen)
Charles Zika (University of Melbourne)
Lokale/Room 95
Den accepterede vold
Jeppe Büchert Netterstrøm (Aarhus Universitet/Aarhus University)
Vincent Gabrielsen (Københavns Universitet/University of Copenhagen)
Jens Krasilnikoff (Aarhus Universitet/Aarhus University)
Gunner Lind (Københavns Universitet/University of Copenhagen)
Lokale/Room 77
Oplysning og enevælde – teori, realitet, praksis
Michael Bregnsbo (Syddansk Universitet/University of Southern Denmark)
Frank Ejby Poulsen (European University Institute)
Jonas Gerlings (Københavns Universitet/University of Copenhagen)
Brian Kjær Olsen (European University Institute)
12.40-13.40
Lokale/Room 100
PANELDEBAT/ROUNDTABLE
Hvor ble det av den nye kulturhistorien? Historiefaget i ro og bevegelse
etter den språklige vendingen
Forelæsning ved/lecture by Erling Sandmo (Universitetet i Oslo/University of Oslo)
Kommentatorer/Discussants:
Dorthe Gert Simonsen (Københavns Universitet/University of Copenhagen) &
Sebastian Olden-Jørgensen (Københavns Universitet/University of Copenhagen)
13.40
SANDWICH OG TAK FOR DENNE GANG/SANDWICH AND
THANKS FOR NOW
Panoramaudsigten
Yderligere information om de enkelte sessioner/ Information about the sessions:
http://www.sdu.dk/danskhistorikermoede2016
Dansk Historikermøde 2016 er støttet af/is supported by:
A.P. Møller og Hustru Chastine Mc-Kinney Møllers Fond til almene Formaal, Carlsbergfondet & Syddansk
Universitet.