EAHN conferences
news from the field
Find out what’s happening in the world of architectural history – including conferences, exhibitions, seminars, employment and news about recent publications. We welcome contributions. Please send items to be posted here to news@eahn.org
Call for Applications for Editor-in Chief and Editorial Assistant of Architectural Histories
Architectural Histories, the international, blind peer-reviewed, open access scholarly journal of the European Architectural History Network (EAHN) is now seeking to appoint a new Editor-in-Chief and Editorial Assistant to start on 1 January 2025, each for a four-year term.
Post-doctoral Research Fellow at the Oslo School of Architecture and Design
The Oslo School of Architecture and Design offers a 3-year postdoctoral fellowship within the research project Provenance Projected. Architecture Past and Future in the Era of Circularity at the research centre OCCAS (the Oslo Centre for Critical Architectural Studies).
Media and Objects of the Home since 1700
For the EAHN 2024, the Focus Group Building Word Image wants to continue its ongoing thematic discussion on ‘Mediatising the Domestic’ by focussing on untold and original material histories of home objects through modern and contemporary media. We invite proposals for 20-minute papers, spanning the last three centuries and including a global geographical scope.
Footprint 36: Who’s Stupid Now: Architecture, Intelligence and Transdisciplinarity
Footprint 36 seeks to explore architectural technicities that overcome poorly defined problems and
reinvigorate (post)critical thinking, requiring a transdisciplinary mode of operation that breaks with
the anti-intellectualist tradition of specialisation, professionalisation, and knowledge fragmentation.
Schwarz Fellowship at the Gennadius Library for Research on Urban Architecture
The Schwarz Fellowship for Research on Urban Architecture supports innovative and cross-disciplinary research on architecture, urban planning, and the history of the built environment in Greece from 1821 to the present.
Power
The exhibition and accompanying program challenges viewers to consider how contemporary infrastructure relates to everyday life across intersecting concerns, including political institutions, citizen participation, geopolitics, energy transition, and climate justice.