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The last year has brought extraordinary challenges to societies and cultures, as well as bringing long-standing crises and predicaments to the foreground in new ways. In this series of five podcast episodes, launched in May 2021, we aim to open up conversations about how arts and humanities research might respond to these challenges – and about the futures we want to see for arts and humanities.
Each podcast episode presents a conversation between two University of Leeds researchers or stakeholders, in which they discuss what their area has learned from the events of the last year; what new research questions and methods they see emerging; and what we can do now to create the future we want to see.
This first conversation brings together University of Leeds colleagues Emma Tomalin, Professor of Religion and Public Life, and Nic Salazar, Associate Professor in Transformational Performance Practices. Emma and Nic discuss issues including: the place and agency of non-human actors in research; the ways in which institutional structures, cultures and processes can constrain the kinds of outputs and impacts that arise from research; and the importance and value of respecting multiple forms of knowledge, which may not fit standard models of academic practice.
This is one of five conversations to be released over May and June 2021, which are available via major podcast platforms. If you’d like to comment on any of the issues raised on social media, use the hashtag #ArtsAndHumanitiesFutures and follow us on Twitter and follow us on Twitter @LeedsAHRI. For more information on the Leeds Arts and Humanities Research Institute, please visit: https://ahc.leeds.ac.uk/leeds-arts-humanities-research-institute.
By Leeds Arts and Humanities Research InstituteThe last year has brought extraordinary challenges to societies and cultures, as well as bringing long-standing crises and predicaments to the foreground in new ways. In this series of five podcast episodes, launched in May 2021, we aim to open up conversations about how arts and humanities research might respond to these challenges – and about the futures we want to see for arts and humanities.
Each podcast episode presents a conversation between two University of Leeds researchers or stakeholders, in which they discuss what their area has learned from the events of the last year; what new research questions and methods they see emerging; and what we can do now to create the future we want to see.
This first conversation brings together University of Leeds colleagues Emma Tomalin, Professor of Religion and Public Life, and Nic Salazar, Associate Professor in Transformational Performance Practices. Emma and Nic discuss issues including: the place and agency of non-human actors in research; the ways in which institutional structures, cultures and processes can constrain the kinds of outputs and impacts that arise from research; and the importance and value of respecting multiple forms of knowledge, which may not fit standard models of academic practice.
This is one of five conversations to be released over May and June 2021, which are available via major podcast platforms. If you’d like to comment on any of the issues raised on social media, use the hashtag #ArtsAndHumanitiesFutures and follow us on Twitter and follow us on Twitter @LeedsAHRI. For more information on the Leeds Arts and Humanities Research Institute, please visit: https://ahc.leeds.ac.uk/leeds-arts-humanities-research-institute.