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Anna-Maria Walter “A Struggle for Remoteness: Skitouring in the Bavarian Alps” and Jasmine Zhang “Imaginaries of Svalbard, Interdisciplinary Research, and Fieldwork: Where Emergent Knowledge Surges”

ContoursTalks series

20.03.2023 13:00  – 15:00 

Location: Oulu University, Finland, and online via Zoom

Or you can join us online via Zoom: https://oulu.zoom.us/my/contours


Anna-Maria Walter: A Struggle for Remoteness—Skitouring in the Bavarian Alps

Contrary to the common imaginations of the ‘wild remote’ as marginal and isolated, an active struggle to distance oneself from “civilization” drives many outdoor enthusiasts to render the not-so-remote Alps into a distinct Other, a counterpart to crowded city life. Many seem to overlook that by way of doing so they turn natural environments into tourist hubs. Ski mountaineering, however, remains one of the few opportunities to deviate from preexisting paths: through a “natural selection” of fitness and ability, remoteness in the mountains is established along a vertical axis. Since the number of newcomers has been growing, self-proclaimed experts venture ever further into less frequented valleys. At the same time, many inhabitants of highly touristic regions would prefer to stay off the map. Moreover, wild animals suffer from the disturbance by off-piste activities. The Alpine Club therefore runs campaigns to advocate keeping protective areas free from human intrusion. Under growing population pressure remoteness becomes the desired trope: Everyone tries to get away from others, to preserve – the experience of - a miniature paradise for oneself. What do we learn from this renaissance of remote and mountain places? What does it teach us about contemporary (semi)urban living? And how is the reframing of remoteness connected to changing perceptions of the environment, or ‘nature’ at large?

About Anna-Maria

She holds a postdoctoral position at the University of Oulu and is a researcher with the CONTOURS project. She currently works on conceptions of the self through social media use, digital anthropology, perceptions of mountain landscapes in the Himalayas and the Alps, and the socio-ecological dimensions of Alpine ski touring.

More information on her project can be found here.

Jasmine Zhang: Imaginaries of Svalbard, Interdisciplinary Research, and Fieldwork—Where Emergent Knowledge Surges

In this presentation, I look at the interrelationships among interdisciplinarity, on-site fieldwork, and the High Arctic archipelago Svalbard through the lens of imaginaries. Since 2020, I have been part of the interdisciplinary project SVALUR, exploring possibilities of imagining an environmental memory in Svalbard, that combines knowledge generated from different means, for instance environmental monitoring and local experiences and activities. Taking an autoethnographic method, I intend to reflect on and examine my experiences obtained from encounters enabled by this project. Imaginaries provide a productive site to do this if seen more as a means than the central subject of study. Following the curiosity of understanding effects of imaginaries of Svalbard, interdisciplinarity and fieldworking, I am guided by the following questions: why and how did imaginaries of interdisciplinary research and doing fieldwork in a remote place lead me to the imaginaries of Svalbard? How have the imaginaries of Svalbard interacted with my imaginaries of doing research in an interdisciplinary team, and conducting fieldwork in three different settlements in Svalbard? And, how do imaginaries as socio-cultural models interconnect with the spatial, temporal and material systems that also provide important dimensions of imaginaries? I propose that we should remain hopeful in our abilities to imagine with imaginaries with care, compassion, and criticality, as creating conditions for emergent knowledge.

About Jasmine

You find more information about Jasmine and her work here.

About ContoursTalks

The ContoursTalks series is organized by the ERA.NET-funded research project CONTOURS: Conservation, Tourism, Remoteness.

For more information on the CONTOURS project and ContoursTalks, please see www.contours.fi

If you have any further inquiries, please send an email to carolin.maertens@rcc.lmu.de