Sunday, 1 March 2026

Online event: From Wild Boar to Household Resource Use: Czech Contemporary Ecological Anthropology

 ENVIRONMENTAL HISTORY TODAY WEBINAR SERIES 2025-2027

Host Country: Czechia and Slovakia

Date and Time: March 10 2026, 15:00 – 17:00 (CET)

Title: From Wild Boar to Household Resource Use: Czech Contemporary Ecological Anthropology

Discussants: Luděk Brož and Petr Jehlička - Institute of Ethnology of the Czech Academy of Sciences

Chair: Doubravka Olšáková, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

Type: Panel

Abstract:

The BOAR project is an anthropological study of veterinary knowledge and practice beyond animal

health, examining how veterinary science increasingly mediates human-wildlife interactions, and serves

to structure and govern society through biosecurity measures. More specifically, the project focuses on

how recreational hunting communities, self-appointed stewards of wild boar, are becoming key subjects

for veterinary interventions.

The RESOURCE project turns the usual logic of reasoning about the use of resources upside down.

Instead of investigating the wasteful and destructive forms of consumer life, it aims at frugal practices in

Czech and Dutch households. The research focuses on the management of two key household

resources: food and water.

URL: https://universiteitleiden.zoom.us/j/67225642207?pwd=PAJnx9q9ajHGbdCibXBi3BXn7URTp3.1



Saturday, 28 February 2026

CFP: Museums of Science and Technology as Dynamic Sites of Knowledge Production in Historical Perspective

Museums of Science and Technology as Dynamic Sites of Knowledge Production in Historical Perspective


A conference hosted by the Ignaz Lieben Society and the Technisches Museum Wien

12–13 November 2026, Technisches Museum Wien


Introduction

Museums of science and technology are at once enduring and dynamic sites of knowledge production. They organise, preserve, store, research, and interpret knowledge and objects—both physically and digitally. They serve as cultural and social meeting points where knowledge, objects (increasingly including media and interactive exhibits), and people from diverse social and professional backgrounds converge. Today, museums of science and technology act as centres for education and research, promoting scientific and technological knowledge, encouraging critical reflection on scientific and technological change, and fostering civic engagement and social responsibility.


The tasks and missions of these museums have changed over time. The history of museums of science and technology spans more than two centuries and may be described as a succession of several generations. Institutions of the first generation, such as the Conservatoire des Arts et Métiers founded in Paris in 1794 and the Imperial-Royal National-Fabriksprodukten-Kabinett at the Polytechnic Institute in Vienna, emerged from cabinets of curiosities as well as scientific and commodity collections used for teaching.


These were primarily object-centred display collections designed to disseminate knowledge, with formalised public access and a strong emphasis on observing rather than hands-on engagement.


The second generation represented museums in the modern sense, such as the Deutsches Museum (1906) and the Technisches Museum Wien (1909). These museums explicitly targeted a broad public and sought to convey technological progress and the scientific and technical achievements of industrialisation. They often incorporated collections from first-generation predecessor institutions. For instance, the National-Fabriks-Produktenkabinett and the Technische Kabinett of the Vienna Polytechnic formed the foundation of the Technisches Museum Wien.


The emergence of a third generation of museums is linked to science centres, notably the Exploratorium in San Francisco (1969), which served as an international model. Concepts developed in the United States influenced further museum foundations such as the Cité des sciences et de l’industrie in Paris (1986) and the Technoseum in Mannheim (1990). These institutions shifted their focus away from the mere presentation of historical objects toward more interactive exhibitions designed to convey abstract principles through experiential learning.


More recently, scholars have proposed the concept of a fourth generation of science and technology museums, seeking to promote civic engagement, social responsibility, and critical engagement with scientific and technological topics.


Aim of the Conference

The aim of the conference is to deepen our understanding of how the emergence and development of museums of science and technology stimulated, presented, and preserved knowledge. We seek to examine museums as dynamic sites where knowledge about science and technology was established, displayed, negotiated, communicated, and at times silenced or rejected. We welcome contributions from the history of science and technology, cultural and social history, and science and technology studies.


Analyses should consider diverse historical, social, and cultural contexts and identify museums as sites of knowledge production within broader frameworks of scientific and technological education and research.


We particularly welcome studies that highlight how these museums historically represented forms of hegemonic knowledge and deprived marginalised communities of their objects and knowledge systems. We likewise welcome studies that explore the gender-specific dimensions of knowledge production and representation, such as the invisibility of women’s contributions to science and technology or gendered portrayals of technological change.


Methodological and Thematic Approaches

In the following, we outline possible methodological and thematic approaches through which we aim to analyse in greater depth the four generations or types of museums of science and technology mentioned above. This list is not exhaustive; contributions that address the overall theme of the conference using other methods or thematic perspectives are explicitly welcome.


Institutions, Networks, Stakeholders

We welcome contributions on the history of the foundations of science and technology museums and their affiliated research institutes, their missions, organisational structures, and functional profiles. Possible sources include founding documents, legal frameworks, funding records, job descriptions, self-representations, and both institutional and private correspondence. We particularly welcome network analyses and studies of the relationships between museums and universities, research institutes, schools, ministries, industries, trade associations, funding bodies, NGOs, and other communities or stakeholder groups. In the 19th century, museums of science and technology were closely intertwined with the emergence of the technical sciences (Klein 2016). The dominant discourse of progress was not supplemented or replaced by alternative narratives until the late 20th century. We welcome contributions that examine both the longevity of this progress narrative and the ruptures within it—within the institution itself as well as in its networks and interactions with various partners from politics, commerce and industry, universities, schools, and beyond.


Architecture, Exhibitions, Spaces

Museums of science and technology contribute, through their buildings and often iconic architectures, to the spatial anchoring of science and technology within the landscapes of cities and nations. Their exhibitions—with their specific assemblages of artefacts, images, interactives, and texts—constitute material stagings of science and technology through which meaning has been and continues to be assigned to the modern world (Bigg/Bergeron 2021). We welcome contributions that engage with the material, spatial, and experiential dimensions of representing science and technology, and that analyse exhibitions as embodied forms of knowledge production by drawing on catalogues, photographs, reports, and reviews (Fleming 2019, Lehmann-Brauns et al. 2010).


Collections and Objects

We welcome contributions that analyse the ongoing processes of knowledge production, negotiation, and erasure that take place through the collecting of objects in museums of science and technology. Similar to developments in art history, scholars of the history of technology have identified the emergence of two types of technological historiography: an object-centred history practiced in museums, and a predominantly text-based history conducted at universities. We particularly encourage contributions that seek to reconnect these two modes of writing the history of technology and that systematically use museum objects as prisms for a multifaceted history of technology (Ebert 2019, Boon et al. 2024).


Utopias, Visions, and Future Perspectives of Museums

One metaphor for the dynamic museum comes from technology: that of the paternoster lift—an open, continuous conveyor in which people, objects, and knowledge circulate without interruption and where no fixed hierarchy of top and bottom exists. Utopias and visions of what museums of science and technology should be, as well as calls for and warnings against particular directions in which these museums might develop, have accompanied their history. We welcome contributions on past utopias, visions, and controversies concerning the purpose and mission of science and technology museums. Within this framework, we explicitly invite presentations on the so-called fourth generation of science and technology museums and welcome examples of museums and exhibitions that foster community‑oriented scientific literacy, civic engagement, and social responsibility.


Keynote

Helmuth Trischler (Munich)


Submission Guidelines

The publication of the conference contributions in the journal 'Blätter für Technikgeschichte' is planned.


Please submit an abstract and a short CV by 15 March 2026 to: ILG_TMW_Tagung_2026@tmw.at


Travel and accommodation reimbursement is not possible or only possible in exceptional cases.


References

Bergeron, Andrée, Bigg, Charlotte. (2021). The spatial inscription of science in the twentieth century. History of Science, 59(2), 121-132. https://doi.org/10.1177/0073275320988399

Boon, Tim, Haines, Elizabeth, Dubois, Arnaud, Staubermann, Klaus. (2024). Understanding Use: objects in museums of science and technology. (Artefacts Studies in the History of Science and Technology, Volume 11). Washington, D.C., Smithsonian Institution Scholarly Press. https://doi.org/10.5479/si.25444927

Boyle, Alison, Hagmann, Johannes-Geert. (2017). Challenging Collections. Approaches to the heritage of recent science and technology. (Artefacts Studies in the History of Science and Technology, Volume 11). Washington, D.C., Smithsonian Institution Scholarly Press. https://doi.org/10.5479/si.9781944466121

Canadelli, Elena, Beretta, Marco, Ronzon, Laura (2019). Behind the Exhibit: Displaying Science and Technology at World's Fairs and Museums in the Twentieth Century (Artefacts Studies in the History of Science and Technology, Volume 12). Washington, D.C., Smithsonian Institution Scholarly Press. Book. https://doi.org/10.5479/si.9781944466237

Ebert, Anne-Katrin (2019). Ran an die Objekte! Ein Plädoyer für das gemeinsame Erforschen und Sammeln von Objekten in den technischen Museen. In: Heßler, Martina, Weber, Heike: Provokationen der Technikgeschichte. Zum Reflexionszwang historischer Forschung. 229-258. https://doi.org/10.30965/9783657792337_008

Fleming, Martha. (2019). Embodied ephemeralities: Methodologies and historiographies for investigating the display and spatialization of science and technology in the twentieth century. History of Science, 59(2), 197. https://doi.org/10.1177/0073275319858528

Friedman, Alan J. (2010). The evolution of the science museum. Physics Today, 63(10), 45. https://doi.org/10.1063/1.3502548

Klein, Ursula (2016). Nützliches Wissen. Die Erfindung der Technikwissenschaften, Göttingen: Wallstein.

Lackner, Helmut, Jesswein, Katharina, Zuna-Kratky, Gabriele (2009), 100 Jahre Technisches Museum Wien, Wien: Verlag Carl Ueberreuter.

Mikoletzky, Juliane, Jiresch, Erich (1997). K.K. Polytechnisches Institut – Technische Hochschule – Technische Universität Wien, Wien: TU Wien.

Pedretti, Erminia, Iannini, Ana Maria Navas. (2023). Vers des musées scientifiques de quatrième génération: changer les objectifs, changer les rôles. Culture & Musées, 41, 151. https://doi.org/10.4000/culturemusees.10013

Rennie, Léonie J. (2021). Controversy and Critical Exhibitions: Envisioning a Fourth Generation of Science Museums. Canadian Journal of Science Mathematics and Technology Education, 21(1), 213. https://doi.org/10.1007/s42330-021-00142-w

Lehmann-Brauns, Susanne, Sichau, Christian and Trischler, Helmuth (Hg.), 2010, The Exhibition as Product and Generator of Scholarship (Berlin: Max-Planck-Institut für Wissenschaftsgeschichte)

Trischler, Helmuth (2024). The research museum – a place of integrated knowledge production. In: Science Museum Group Journal 22,3. https://dx.doi.org/10.15180/242204

Sunday, 22 February 2026

𝗧𝗵𝗲 𝗚𝗿𝗲𝗮𝘁𝗲𝘀𝘁 𝗗𝗲𝗯𝗮𝘁𝗲 𝗧𝗵𝗲 𝟭𝟰𝟬𝟵 𝗔𝗿𝘁𝘀 𝗤𝘂𝗼𝗱𝗹𝗶𝗯𝗲𝘁 𝗮𝘁 𝘁𝗵𝗲 𝗨𝗻𝗶𝘃𝗲𝗿𝘀𝗶𝘁𝘆 𝗼𝗳 𝗣𝗿𝗮𝗴𝘂𝗲 Ota Pavlíček, Luigi Campi (eds)

𝗧𝗵𝗲 𝗚𝗿𝗲𝗮𝘁𝗲𝘀𝘁 𝗗𝗲𝗯𝗮𝘁𝗲

𝗧𝗵𝗲 𝟭𝟰𝟬𝟵 𝗔𝗿𝘁𝘀 𝗤𝘂𝗼𝗱𝗹𝗶𝗯𝗲𝘁 𝗮𝘁 𝘁𝗵𝗲 𝗨𝗻𝗶𝘃𝗲𝗿𝘀𝗶𝘁𝘆 𝗼𝗳 𝗣𝗿𝗮𝗴𝘂𝗲

Ota Pavlíček, Luigi Campi (eds)

🔓𝗢𝗽𝗲𝗻 𝗔𝗰𝗰𝗲𝘀𝘀


More Info: https://bit.ly/4rN90sG


TABLE OF CONTENTS

Introduction

Luigi Campi & Ota Pavlíček

Part I: The 1409 Arts Quodlibet at the University of Prague. Its Authors, Contents, Preservation, and Historical Context

1. The 1409 Prague Arts Quodlibet in the Context of Prague and Central European Quodlibetal Tradition

Ota Pavlíček

2. Matthias of Knín’s Road to the 1409 Prague Quodlibet: An Intellectual Biography and Some Notes on the 1409 Quodlibet in Its Historical Context

Luigi Campi

3. The Quodlibetal Book of Matthias of Knín in MS Praha, KMK, L 45, Viewed by a Codicologist

Michal Dragoun

4. Catalogue of MS Praha, KMK, L 45, including Matthias of Knín’s Quodlibet of 1409

Ota Pavlíček

Part II: Selected Themes from the 1409 Prague Quodlibetal Debate

1. Matthias of Knín’s quaestio principalis and Anti-eternalism at the Prague Faculty of Arts in the Wake of Wyclif

Luigi Campi

2. Divine Ideas as a Metaphysical and Theological Topic at the Prague 1409 Quodlibet

Ota Pavlíček

3. Sight and the Rainbow in the 1409 Quodlibet-Related Materials: Drawing Inspiration from Robert Grosseteste and Albert the Great to Nicole Oresme and Themo Judaei

Lukáš Lička

4. The Astronomical and Cosmological Arguments in MS Praha, KMK, L 45

Zuzana Lukšová

5. Zdeněk of Labouň and the Doctrine of Critical Days: Medical Astrology at the 1409 Prague Quodlibet

Karel Dobiáš

6. British Logic in MS Praha, KMK, L 45: consequencie, obligaciones, insolubilia

Miroslav Hanke

Part III: Selected Texts from the 1409 Prague Quodlibetal Debate

1. The Introductory Section of Matthias of Knín’s Quodlibet with a Note on the Edition

Ed. Luigi Campi

2. Matthias of Knín’s and Paul of Prague’s Disputation at the 1409 Prague Quodlibet: Edition of Texts on Divine Ideas

Ed. Ota Pavlíček

3. Editions of the 1409 Quodlibet-Related Sets of Arguments on Sight, Sensible Qualities, and the Rainbow, with a Note on the Edition

Ed. Lukáš Lička

4. Editions of the 1409 Quodlibet-Related Astronomical Texts With a Note in the Edition

Ed. Zuzana Lukšová

5. Matthias of Knín’s and Zdeněk of Labouň’s Disputation at the 1409 Prague Quodlibet: Edition of Texts on Medical Astrology

Ed. Karel Dobiáš

6. Editions of the 1409 Quodlibet-Related Sets of Arguments on Moral Philosophy with a Note on the Edition

Ed. Soňa Hudíková

Indices


Sarunas Milisauskas, Janusz Kruk: History of European Archaeology in the Twentieth Century. Warszawa: Instytut Archeologii i Etnologii PAN 2025

 Sarunas Milisauskas, Janusz Kruk: History of European Archaeology in the Twentieth Century. Warszawa: Instytut Archeologii i Etnologii PAN 2025. ISBN: 978-83-68122-24-4


CONTENTS

PREFACE

Acknowledgments

PART I. HISTORICAL INTRODUCTION

Chapter 1. Histories of Archaeology by Archaeologists

Chapter 2. Separating Fact from Fiction

PART II. HISTORICAL OBSERVATIONS ON EUROPEAN

ARCHAEOLOGY

Chapter 3. The Brief Overview of the Pre-1900 Period

Chapter 4. The Beginning of the New Century

Chapter 5. The Attainment of lndependence. The 1914-1939 Period

Chapter 6. New Dark Age.The Second War lnterlude 1939-1948

Chapter 7. Impose Marxism. The Stalinist Period 1948-1956

Chapter 8. New Methods and Many Major Discoveries.

The 1956-1989 Time Period

Chapter 9. For the Better in Archaeology.

The 1989-2010 Time Period

PART III. ARCHAEOLOGY AND THE STATE

Chapter 10. Language and National Politics

Chapter 11. Nationalism in European Archaeology

Chapter 12. Archaeology in the Service of the State

Chapter 13. Archaeologist in Totalitarian Times

PART IV. NAIVE DREAMERS

Chapter 14. Osbert Crawford. The Critics of England

Chapter 15. Vere Gordon Childe

PART V. ARCHAEOLOGY OF STATES

Chapter 16. German and Nazi Archaeology

Chapter 17. Archaeology in the Russia and Former Soviet Union

Chapter l8. Archaeology in soviet Dominated countries 149

Archaeology in Czechoslovakia

Archaeology in East Germany

Archaeology in Poland

PART VI. THEORY AND PRACTICE

Chapter 19. Culture-Historical Archaeology

Chapter 20. Theories in European Archaeology

Chapter 21. The Origin of Complex Societies and Prehistoric

Warfare in Europe

Chapter 22. Excavations

PART VII. WOMEN IN EUROPEAN ARCHAEOLOGY

Chapter 23. Excavating Women

PART VIII. AMERICAN CONTRIBUTIONS TO EUROPEAN

ARCHAEOLOGY

Chapter 24. Defining American Contributions

Chapter 25. American Contributors

Chapter 26. The Professional Context of European Archaeology

Chapter 27. Logistics of American Research

Chapter 28. The Attraction of Europe

BIBLIOGRAPHY

External Links

APPENDIX

Andre Gonciar, The History of Romanian Archaeology. The Murky

Waters between lndividual Deontology and State ldeology

LIST 0F FIGURES AND TABLES

PERSONS INDEX



Wednesday, 18 February 2026

Gregor Feindt: Baťas Menschen. Rationalisierung, social engineering und Differenzierung in der tschechoslowakischen Unternehmensstadt Zlín, 1918–1948.

Gregor Feindt: Baťas Menschen. Rationalisierung, social engineering und Differenzierung in der tschechoslowakischen Unternehmensstadt Zlín, 1918–1948. Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht 2026. ISBN: 978-3-666-37109-7


OA: https://www.vr-elibrary.de/doi/pdf/10.13109/9783666371097


Baťas Menschen

Das Schuhunternehmen Baťa produzierte in Zlín preisgünstige Schuhe für den Weltmarkt – und leistungsfähige Menschen. Baťa lockte seine Beschäftigten mit einem Leben in Wohlstand, mit modernen Annehmlichkeiten und einem Ausblick in die weite Welt – und drang weit in ihren Alltag ein. Dabei übertrug das Unternehmen das in der Produktion eingeübte Prinzip der Rationalisierung auf die Personalverwaltung und den Alltag in Zlín, formte seine Belegschaft und differenzierte sie. Die Arbeit analysiert Sozialreform und Personalpolitik im Schuhunternehmen Baťa und stellt die Beschäftigten der Schuhfabrik in den Mittelpunkt, von der Ausbildung an der Werkbank über die Karrieren erfolgreicher Männer und einiger weniger Frauen bis hin zum Privat- und Familienleben. Dabei verfolgt das Buch die Entwicklung und Überformung des Sozialexperiments von seinen Anfängen in der Habsburgermonarchie über die demokratische Tschechoslowakei bis zur deutschen Herrschaft im Zweiten Weltkrieg und den Anfängen des Staatssozialismus.




Karin Reichenbach: Archäologie im Kontext deutsch-polnischer Beziehungsgeschichte

Karin Reichenbach: Archäologie im Kontext deutsch-polnischer Beziehungsgeschichte. Forschungsstrukturen und Deutungsdiskurse der niederschlesischen Burgwallforschung im 20. Jahrhundert. Dresden: Sandstein 2025. ISBN: 978-3-95498-885-3.

OA: https://www.sandstein-kultur.de//openaccess/FGKoeM63.pdf

Die Burgwallforschung in Niederschlesien erzählt mehr als nur die Geschichte vor- und frühgeschichtlicher Befestigungen – sie spiegelt ein Jahrhundert politischer Umbrüche, nationaler Konflikte und wissenschaftlicher Antagonismen. Die Studie untersucht archäologische Infrastrukturen und Deutungsdiskurse in einer lange Zeit umstrittenen Grenzregion und zeigt, wie das Ausgraben und Forschen in den deutsch-polnischen Beziehungen des 20. Jahrhunderts verhaftet war. Anhand der institutionellen Entwicklungen, der prägenden Akteure und zentralen Forschungsprogramme wird die Entfaltung der Burgwallarchäologie von ihren systematischen Anfängen bis 1970 nachvollzogen. Darauf aufbauend, legt die Analyse der Deutungen von Wallanlagen diskursive Muster frei, in denen Ansprüche auf die konfliktbeladene Grenze stets widerhallten. Sie offenbaren, wie eng archäologische Deutungen und nationale Geschichtspolitik verflochten waren – vom Postulat germanischer Kontinuität und Überlegenheit in der Zwischenkriegszeit bis zur slawisch-polnischen Rückeroberungserzählung nach 1945. So wird die Burgwallarchäologie zu einem Spiegel der deutsch-polnischen Beziehungsgeschichte – und zugleich zu einem Fallbeispiel für die Bedingtheit historischer Erkenntnis. Ein Buch über Archäologie, Politik und die Verantwortlichkeit wissenschaftlicher Forschung im Spannungsfeld nationaler Narrative.





Online event: Pollution and sanitizing: Imperial environmental policy, legislation and everyday life

 Online event: Pollution and sanitizing: Imperial environmental policy, legislation and everyday life

Feb 26 (Thu), 14:00–16:00 (CET)


Anna Mazanik presents her book Sanitizing Moscow. Waste, Animals, and Urban Health in Late Imperial Russia (University of Pittsburgh Press, Oct 2025)

Andrei Vinogradov presents his forthcoming book Cleaning the Empire. Industrial pollution and birth of Russia's environmental policy (CEU Press, Fall 2026)

organizer and chair: Anastasia Fedotova (St Petersburg)


Anna Mazanik is an environmental and medical historian of Russia and a research fellow at the Max Weber Network Eastern Europe. Born in Moscow, she has studied in Russia, Hungary, Germany, and the US. She holds a PhD in history from Central European University.


Sanitizing Moscow presents an environmental history of public health reforms in late imperial Moscow between 1870 and 1917. It explores the relationship between Russia’s urban modernization and the more-than-human environment in the context of the major social and political changes, triggered by the liberal reforms of the 1860s and 1870s, and the transnational rise of scientific medicine and sanitary technologies.


Andrey Vinogradov is an environmental historian whose research focuses on industrial pollution, climate change, and their social consequences in Eastern Europe and Central Asia. He is currently a postdoctoral researcher at the Leibniz Institute for the History and Culture of Eastern Europe in Leipzig.


The rapid industrial growth that marked post-reform Russia pushed society toward an awareness of the environmental consequences of economic development. Challenging the entrenched view that industrial pollution and technological disasters first entered the political agenda as a result of Soviet forced industrialization, Andrei Vinogradov shows that environmental policy began to take shape much earlier, in conflicts between pre-revolutionary factory owners, peasants, city dumas, and ministerial officials in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Oil slicks on the Volga, toxic effluents from textile mills, and waste from sugar factories became forces that reshaped legislation and transformed the views of officials and the public on the environment.


Please register to get the Zoom link: https://forms.gle/qf41S5xPoSEbmhD48

The Zoom link will be sent before the meeting


Online event: From Wild Boar to Household Resource Use: Czech Contemporary Ecological Anthropology

 ENVIRONMENTAL HISTORY TODAY WEBINAR SERIES 2025-2027 Host Country: Czechia and Slovakia Date and Time: March 10 2026, 15:00 – 17:00 (CET) T...