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36: Cluttered Pasts and Unruly Heritage with Stein Farstadvoll

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Manage episode 299192651 series 1449740
Content provided by Brute Norse Podcast and Eirik Storesund. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Brute Norse Podcast and Eirik Storesund or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
The present is inevitably haunted by the past. A cluttered past. Order and chaos spill over and onto each other. The past onto the present, and the present onto the past. Academically, this causes many potential problems: Will data saturation force us to reinvent the way we deal with the past? Will the fragility of modern tech create gaps in the knowledge our descendants will have about us? Is linear time a sham? How will we cope with pastness in the inevitable clutter of the Anthropocene? We're just rolling with the punches! But first of all, let us shed some of the historicist paradigms we've grown all too accustomed to. In this episode of high Scandifuturism, archaeologist Stein Farstadvoll (@wasteunearthed)comes on to question the one-track-mind of linearity and explore barbarian ontologies. https://unrulyheritage.com/ Stein Farstadvoll on ResearchGate: https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Stein-Farstadvoll Some referenced works: - Benjamin, Walter (1940). Theses on the Philosophy of History. - Eliade, Mirchea (1949). The Myth of the Eternal Return. - Lund, Thure Erik (2000). Om naturen. - Lund, Thure Erik (2006). Om de nye norske byene. - Mayhem (1994). De Mysteriis Dom Sathanas. - Nietzsche, Friedrich (1896). Thus Spoke Zarathustra. - Storesund, Eirik (2017). The Trollish Theory of Art. - Tusmørke: https://tusm-rke.bandcamp.com.
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52 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 299192651 series 1449740
Content provided by Brute Norse Podcast and Eirik Storesund. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Brute Norse Podcast and Eirik Storesund or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
The present is inevitably haunted by the past. A cluttered past. Order and chaos spill over and onto each other. The past onto the present, and the present onto the past. Academically, this causes many potential problems: Will data saturation force us to reinvent the way we deal with the past? Will the fragility of modern tech create gaps in the knowledge our descendants will have about us? Is linear time a sham? How will we cope with pastness in the inevitable clutter of the Anthropocene? We're just rolling with the punches! But first of all, let us shed some of the historicist paradigms we've grown all too accustomed to. In this episode of high Scandifuturism, archaeologist Stein Farstadvoll (@wasteunearthed)comes on to question the one-track-mind of linearity and explore barbarian ontologies. https://unrulyheritage.com/ Stein Farstadvoll on ResearchGate: https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Stein-Farstadvoll Some referenced works: - Benjamin, Walter (1940). Theses on the Philosophy of History. - Eliade, Mirchea (1949). The Myth of the Eternal Return. - Lund, Thure Erik (2000). Om naturen. - Lund, Thure Erik (2006). Om de nye norske byene. - Mayhem (1994). De Mysteriis Dom Sathanas. - Nietzsche, Friedrich (1896). Thus Spoke Zarathustra. - Storesund, Eirik (2017). The Trollish Theory of Art. - Tusmørke: https://tusm-rke.bandcamp.com.
  continue reading

52 episodes

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