
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
John Bullock, guest co-host on this episode, asks the question, “How do we shift the argument so that we can start to talk about the reality of what we experience rather than the propaganda of what people tell us is a problem.” And from there, Michael, John and Nona discuss the history of street lighting, the unproven link between light and safety and the spiritual notion of light equaling safety. Perhaps, as Nona says, we need to reveal the “invisible infrastructures.”
Nona Schulte-Römer is currently working and teaching as senior researcher at Humboldt University in Berlin in a social scientific project on the public understanding of 5G and light exposure in urban contexts. She has a background in humanities, sociology and journalism. In her previous research she has focused on public lighting, light pollution, sustainable chemistry and aquatic micropollutants. Her focus is thereby how these phenomena become issues of public concern or remain ‘invisible’ infrastructures.
Mentions in the podcast:
Wolfgang Schivelbusch, “Disenchanted Night: The Industrialization of Light in the Nineteenth Century”, University of California Press
Our citizen science project website:
https://nachtlicht-buehne.de/startseite/nightlights/
Our citizen science app can be found and tested or used here: https://lichter.nachtlicht-buehne.de/
4.7
1414 ratings
John Bullock, guest co-host on this episode, asks the question, “How do we shift the argument so that we can start to talk about the reality of what we experience rather than the propaganda of what people tell us is a problem.” And from there, Michael, John and Nona discuss the history of street lighting, the unproven link between light and safety and the spiritual notion of light equaling safety. Perhaps, as Nona says, we need to reveal the “invisible infrastructures.”
Nona Schulte-Römer is currently working and teaching as senior researcher at Humboldt University in Berlin in a social scientific project on the public understanding of 5G and light exposure in urban contexts. She has a background in humanities, sociology and journalism. In her previous research she has focused on public lighting, light pollution, sustainable chemistry and aquatic micropollutants. Her focus is thereby how these phenomena become issues of public concern or remain ‘invisible’ infrastructures.
Mentions in the podcast:
Wolfgang Schivelbusch, “Disenchanted Night: The Industrialization of Light in the Nineteenth Century”, University of California Press
Our citizen science project website:
https://nachtlicht-buehne.de/startseite/nightlights/
Our citizen science app can be found and tested or used here: https://lichter.nachtlicht-buehne.de/
30,662 Listeners
32,112 Listeners
29,979 Listeners
153,397 Listeners
25,787 Listeners
110,617 Listeners
55,911 Listeners
11,811 Listeners
2,529 Listeners
2,633 Listeners
6,446 Listeners
10,492 Listeners
6 Listeners
5 Listeners
1,998 Listeners