Dear colleagues,
please note the call for a PhD Summer School on Anthropocene
Histories<http://eseh.org/call-for-participants-eseh-2025-summer-school-…
in connection with the ESEH European Society 2025 conference in Uppsala in August next
year. The PhD Summer School is organized by the Center for Anthropocene History at
KTH<https://www.kth.se/anthropocenehistory>. It will take place in the Stockholm
region from August 25 to 28, following the ESEH conference. The application deadline is
February 28, 2025
Best,
Sabine
Anthropocene Histories
ESEH 2025 Summer School in Environmental History
KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, Sweden
August 25-28, 2025
The ESEH and the Centre for Anthropocene History at KTH Royal Institute of Technology are
inviting applications for the 2025 ESEH Summer School to be held in and around Stockholm
on the topic of Anthropocene Histories.
The Anthropocene is not just a geochronological epoch to be defined by the International
Commission on Stratigraphy. It is a state of the world where the human and the natural
intersect so profoundly that it has started to impact the workings of our planet. The
anthropogenic environmental changes have acquired historical agency on the planetary
level. Thus, exploring and writing Anthropocene histories is a call and attempt to mend
the longstanding separation between human and Earth history and engage seriously with the
natural and the material in various ways and formats. While science can identify
geophysical and biogeochemical changes, it is history that connects the rapid planetary
changes with the explanatory dynamics of human societies and asks how and why such
geological records have emerged in the first place.
This Summer School is intended for doctoral students in history, STS, philosophy,
sociology, and neighboring humanities disciplines working on the history of anthropogenic
environmental changes that have impacted Earth processes on a planetary scale without
necessarily confining themselves to the geological definitions of the Anthropocene.
Together, we will discuss how Anthropocene Histories can and should be written and what
are the sources and methods that allow historians to account for the elemental materiality
in their writing. Possible topics include, but are not limited to, the following:
1. Anthropocene governance – resources, extractivism, politics and justice;
2. Histories of Earth elements and spheres: hydrosphere (oceans and terrestrial water),
minerals (geosphere), cryosphere (ice, snow, permafrost), biosphere (multi-species
history), atmosphere (air) and supra-atmospheric space;
3. Time, temporalities, historiographical principles of periodisation;
4. Modelling and the Digital Anthropocene;
5. Material, non-textual sources.
Setup of the summer school
The Summer School is organised by the Centre for Anthropocene History at KTH Royal
Institute of Technology and will be held in Stockholm and its picturesque archipelago. The
exact location will be announced closer to the date. The teaching faculty consists of
teachers from KTH and renowned scholars from other well-known universities.
The Summer School will include lectures, plenary discussions, workshops, hands-on
exercises and out-of-classroom learning opportunities. All Summer School participants are
expected to submit a written text on their topic in advance and present it at a workshop,
followed by feedback and discussion with other participants and lecturers. The accepted
Summer School participants will receive the instructions for their presentations in early
2025.
Successful participants will receive a certificate and 5 ECTS.
Eligibility
The Summer School is open to all doctoral students and early post-docs worldwide
interested in the above topics. A few places can be given to excellent MA students. The
working language of the summer school is English. While the range of topics is potentially
wide, we will give preference to applicants who engage with the planetary scale of
anthropogenic environmental change and pay special attention to the material, scalar,
spatial and temporal aspects of history.
Application
To apply for the summer school, send the following to
anthropocene@kth.se<mailto:anthropocene@kth.se>:
1) A curriculum vitae (max 2 pages);
2) An abstract of your research topic (max 450 words);
3) A letter of intent motivating how your research pertains to Anthropocene history and
how it relates to the planetary dimensions of anthropogenic environmental change. (max 2
pages)
APPLICATION DEADLINE: February 28, 2025.
Cost
The Summer School is free of charge to all participants. All accepted participants will
receive full meals and accommodation during the event. We will also cover any eventual
charges for local transportation to our different locations. Participants are responsible
for their own transportation to and from Stockholm. Limited travel funds are available
upon request. PhD students who participate at the ESEH 2025 conference in Uppsala can also
apply for the ESEH Travel Grants.
For further information, please contact
kati.lindstrom@abe.kth.se<mailto:kati.lindstrom@abe.kth.se>
Successful Summer School applicants will be informed by the end of March 2025.
[signature_1766038635]
Dr. Sabine Höhler
Professor of Science and Technology Studies
Head of Department of Philosophy and History
KTH Royal Institute of Technology
School of Architecture and the Built Environment
Department of Philosophy and History
Division of History of Science, Technology and Environment
Teknikringen 74 D
SE-100 44 Stockholm, Sweden
Fon: +46 8 790 87 41
Email: sabine.hoehler@abe.kth.se<mailto:sabine.hoehler@abe.kth.se>