Research group for the ethnographic inquiry into ecologies, infrastructures, bodies and knowledges
Laboratory: Anthropology of Environment | Human Relations

About

The Laboratory: Anthropology of Environment | Human Relations brings together like-minded scholars with an interest in ethnographically inquiring into and theorising how the multiple entanglements of material worlds and social practices shape the ways ‘we’ live our lives – or processes of socio-material ordering, if you will. Our members’ interests fall, broadly speaking, into two fields: Life sciences, medicine and medical technologies, psychiatry – sustainability, global land use, the role of modelling in human-environment systems, political ecology. The lab bridges the Institute of European Ethnology and the IRI THESys.

What’s in a name?

Laboratory:
The lab was founded in 2004 by Stefan Beck and Jörg Niewöhner as the Collaboratory: Social Anthropology and Life Sciences. It has since continuously shifted, but remained true to the idea of co-labor(at)ing with each other and with our various epistemic partners in our fields of research.

Anthropology:
We see our approach within the broad and multi-facetted tradition of social and cultural anthropology, including its German-speaking strand of European Ethnology. We have dropped the ‘social and cultural’ to reference our background in science and technology studies, the material turn and our understanding of ‘the social’ as always already entangled with environments, artefacts, infrastructure and bodies.

Environment | Human Relations:
Human-Environment relations or interactions is a term largely occupied with ecological and systemic thinking in the biological and human sciences. While we co-laborate with these thought styles, we are keen to explore ethnographically how these relations are enacted rather than assuming them within a particular epistemological position. We also want to emphasise the environment to avoid its reduction to symbol or metaphor. (cf. Niewöhner & Lock 2018) The vertical bar ‘|’ marks our inquiry into an open, dynamic and often ambivalent and excessive relationship. We take our cue here from Stefan Beck’s inaugural lecture at Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin entitled “Nature | Culture: Thoughts on a relational anthropology”. ‘Relations’ summons elective affinities including Gregory Bateson, Marilyn Strathern, Stefan Beck, Annemarie Mol, to name but a few with a lifelong interest in relentlessly relational research and thought.

Who?

The group includes everyone who is interested in its theme from MA and graduate students to post-docs and staff at Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin and beyond. We meet on a weekly basis during term time to discuss our own and others’ work, invite guests and try as best we can to minimise our thought constraints.
See who we are

Contact

Feel free to contact us about projects, full-text publications, co-laboration, research visits, or anything else.

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If you would like to be updated about our weekly lab sessions (not during recess), see the “events” section and feel free to subscribe to our mailing list.
Please note that this is not a newsletter providing you with general updates on the activities of our group or keeping track of the news posted on this website. The main purpose of the mailing list is to inform you about updates on the lab and our meetings in Berlin. We use a mailing list service provided by the Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin (Humboldt University Berlin).
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