Center for Arctic Humanities

Centre for Arctic Humanities (ArcHum) is a virtual unit at UiT The Arctic University of Norway that coordinates various research environments. The main purpose is to strengthen professional communities in the field of Arctic humanities, develop collaborative relationships across relevant units at UiT, and advance cooperation with other universities. 

The center is a response to the challenges in the Research Council's evaluation of the humanities in Norway and a Norwegian parliamentary report on the Humanities in Norway (2016-2017), as well as to UiT's humanities strategy (2021), and UiT's strategy Eallju – Developing the High North: UiT’s strategy towards 2030 (2022). 

ArcHum was initiated by the Faculty of Humanities, Social Sciences and Education, The Arctic University Museum of Norway and Academy of Fine Arts, and the University Library.

Read more

Archum progress report (in Norwegian)

Research environments

Arctic Archaeology

Arctic Auditories

Arctic Voices

Centre for Sami Studies

CRAFT. Knowledge Integration and Blue Futures

Creating the New North

EA:RTH. Ethnographic Action: Researching Transformations of Humans and Environment on a Disrupted Planet

Feminist Theories in the Arctic (FemArc)

Fuglan veit

Giellatekno

Place, power and mobility

Research on Sámi Research and on Representation of Sámi Cultural Heritage (SamForsk)

UiT Environmental Humanities Network

Urban Transformation in a Warming Arctic – The continued effects of Nordic colonialism in urban planning and development (UrbTrans)

Worlding Northern Art (WONA)

XARC. Exploration, Exploitation and Exposition of the Gendered Heritage of the Arctic 

more soon

News

July: Riddu Riddu

UiT has for many years been a central collaboration partner for the Riddu Riddu festival. This year, as usual, the arts and humanities contribute in several areas. This year's UiT seminar is titled Indigenous Knowledge on the Queer Side. We ask: How can we increase knowledge and ensure that it is for, with, and by both queer and indigenous people? We also award the Árdnaprisen for the best master's thesis on Sami or indigenous-related topics. In addition, we are present in the UiT lavvu at the festival area with several of our academic environments.


June: Traveling exhibition

What does it mean to live with the ocean? What will the seafood of the future look like? How are we going to live by or in the sea? What will the grandchild's job in Harstad be in 2050? The exhibition 'Living with the Ocean' combines visual experiences with thought-provoking questions. The exhibition was discussed among others with UiT's Environmental Humanities group and the local community. It is part of a larger EEA project on coastal culture and is an innovative collaboration between the Sesimbra Maritime Museum in Portugal and CRAFT-Lab. It is an example of innovative research dissemination. It was previously shown in Sesimbra, Portugal, earlier this year and will move on to Brussels in October. Everyone can see and draw on it in Svalbardparken in Harstad throughout the summer. Read more.


June: Network Meeting at Arctic Congress

The Centre for Arctic Humanities organises an international network meeting during the Arctic Congress in Bodø. Everyone is welcome. The meeting gives a possibility for scholars working within the Arctic Humanities to connect with UiT's newly established Centre for Arctic Humanities and express their interest in collaboration. The meeting will take place on Saturday the 1st of June 2024 from 1:00 to 1:30 pm in the communal areas next to 'Kammersalen' in Stormen Concert Hall.


May: Special Issue on 'Maps' in Ottar 

Few things express past worldviews as vividly as old maps. With their imaginative depictions of mountain formations, maelstroms, monsters, and people, these old maps are poorly suited as guides in actual geography, but as guides in another sense of the word, they are fabulous. The maps provide us with rich information about what people before us believed, knew, and understood about the world. A broadly conceived Ottar booklet, Gamledagers forestillingsverden om det nordlige: Nordområdekart fra perioden 1480–1750 (Old Days' Worldview of the North: Northern Area Maps from the period 1480–1750), has recently been released. Through six articles, old maps of the northern areas—many from the university's own collections—are studied and discussed. Ottar can be read for free at UiT's publishing service, Septentrio Academic Publishing. A paper copy can be ordered for a reasonable fee from UiT's printing service.


February: Sandbox symposium 

The 21. and 22. of February 2024 the first ArcHum sandbox symposium served as a kick-off for the Centre for Arctic Humanities at UiT. Sverker Sörlin (KTH) gave a keynote on Arctic Humanities: The Rise and Future of an Integrative Knowledge Field. Colleagues with an interest in the Arctic humanities created ripple effects between various research environments at UiT and gathered ideas for new forms of collaboration and meeting places for humanities researchers with an interest in interdisciplinary work within the Arctic humanities. Read the full programme here.



January: Side event at Arctic Frontiers

Vice-Dean for Research Marie-Theres Federhofer has taken the initiative for the side event 'The Arctic in the Anthropocene' organized by Archum in collaboration with Prof. Cristoph Schneider from Humboldt University of Berlin during Arctic Frontieres 29th January 2024. The event was attended by about 50 people and the panel received a lot of spontaneous positive responses after the session. The event was streamed and is publicly available on Youtube.



December: Centre for Arctic Humanities opened at UiT

The 6th of December 2023 the Centre for Arctic Humanities was opened by rector Dag Rune Olsen and traditional joik by Niko Valkeapää in Árdna. The opening was accompanied by an international press release. Welcome addresses has been given by Ingeborg Høvik & Sigfrid Kjeldaas from the  RCN funded project Arctic Voices and Fern Wickson from the Arctic Sustainability Lab. You can read the whole program here (in Norwegian).

Steering group

Anne Britt Flemmen, dean of the Faculty of Humanities, Social Sciences and Education

Lena Aarekol, director at The Arctic University Museum of Norway and Academy of Fine Arts

Johanne Raade, director at the University Library


Reference group

Silje Gaupseth, associate professor of polar cultural studies and managing director at the Polar Museum

Per Pippin Aspaas, head of research publication support

Marie-Theres Federhofer, professor of German literature and cultural studies and vice-dean for research


Eldery Council

Marit Anne Hauan, folklorist

Joar Vittersø, happiness researcher

Ann Therese Lotherington, dementia researcher

Jorge Santos, ecologist


Scientific coordinator

Lilli Mittner

Center for Arctic Humanities


archum@uit.no
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