Weber, Heike
LV-Nr.: 3131 L 314
BA KulT WTG 3, 4
BA KulT FW 14, 15, 16
MA TGWT FW 9, 11, 12, 14 (in 11 & 12 nur kleine Leistung)
SE/PS Global Histories of Technology: Actors, Artefacts and
Knowledge in Non-Western Contexts
Mo. 10-12 Uhr
Raum: H 2051, Anmeldung über ISIS
Beginn: 15.04.2024
The history of technology still grapples with repercussions of the 'great divergence'
debate. This debate posits that innovations and large-scale technological advancements,
spearheaded by European industrialisation, created a chasm between Europe and other
regions, a gap that still remains to be bridged. This seminar challenges this Eurocentric
focus that measures all historical technological developments against Western standards
and explores the history of technology in non-Western context by focusing on local actors
and their knowledge-making processes.
We will employ both a theoretical and an
empirical approach, focusing on case studies from the Ottoman Empire, South America,
India, Zimbabwe, Kenya, Tanzania and Korea from the mid-19th to the 20th century.
Throughout the seminar, we will critically engage with themes such as globalisation,
invention and innovation, maintenance and repair, "technological dialogue" and
"transfer", infrastructures in (post)colonial contexts and the pivotal role of embedded and
local knowledge in tailoring technologies to suit specific local needs and conditions.
The seminar is geared towards the needs of beginners in history of technology.
Literatur:
Edgerton, David: The Shock of the Old: Technology and Global History since 1900.
Oxford 2008.
Hasenöhrl, Ute: Histories of Technology and the Environment in Post/Colonial Africa:
Reflections on the Field, in: Histories 1 (2021), S. 122-44.
- Trainer/in: Katharina Busch
- Trainer/in: Berta Hermine Fischer
- Trainer/in: Tjark Ika Helmut Fritz Nentwig
- Trainer/in: Zeynep Ecem Pulas
- Trainer/in: Heike Waltraud Weber