Priority Area 2 Humans and Environment

Priority Area 2 bundles measures that explore the relationship between humans and the environment, whereby 'environment' can encompass both natural and cultural spaces. Particular attention is paid to major crises or transformation processes and the perception of these in artistic expression. In addition to projects that deal with sustainability - in the broadest sense - and thus the preservation of natural and cultural spaces, the FoF 3 area also includes projects that examine utopian/dystopian imaginaries of the future, as they are often expressed in crisis situations. Close cooperation with projects from the other Fields of Focus, particularly on environmental and climate issues, but also on other aspects of sustainability, is desired.

Priority Area 2 builds on the FoF 3 focus research areas “Transformation Processes” and “Cultural Heritage” as well as on the ongoing research projects Center for Apocalyptic and Postapocalyptic Studies (CAPAS), “Worldmaking” and the TRN “Environments - Upheavals - Rethinking”. 

The following measures are funded in Priority Area 2:
 

Contemporary depiction of the earthquake: Lisbon is in flames, ships capsize in the harbour in the waves of the tsunami (copperplate engraving)

TRN „Denk(t)räume – (Re-)Thinking and Doing Futures“

Catastrophes, as threatening as they are, can also be the beginning of radical metamorphoses, new world models. What scope for action arises from such Rethinking? How do crises become catalysts? The TRN takes a transculturally and historically informed look at changing, threatened environments and uses the particular strengths of the Humanities and the Social Sciences to initiate discourses, (re)shape narratives and thus, to develop alternative models for a ‘realisable future’. In inter- and transdisciplinary Critical Dialogues, we will form a network of scientists that will form the basis for the establishment of a Junges Kolleg that will fertilise existing activities in the field of transformation research at the university and that brings young scholars to Heidelberg. 

Project Lead: Prof. Dr. Barbara Mittler (China Studies), Prof. Dr. Susann Schäfer (Geography)