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The Cultural History section of the Department of History and Art History, in collaboration with the Utrecht University Botanic Gardens, invites applications for a postdoctoral position on the colonial history of Botanic Gardens within the EU-HORIZON-funded project “Colonial Legacies of Universities: Materialities and New Collaborations” (COLUMN).
In recent years, universities and museums across Europe have become more attuned to their colonial entanglements and developed innovative approaches to reflect and deal with their colonial heritage, including the renaming of buildings and the decolonisation of curricula. Such steps have often, though not exclusively, been taken in collaboration with partners from former colonised countries. COLUMN brings together partners from the creative industries, seven European universities from the Coimbra network, and partner universities from across the globe to explore further how we can effectively decolonise university heritage. Through analyses of anthropological collections, botanical gardens, university campuses, and intangible heritage practices, COLUMN aims to develop policy recommendations and good practices for decolonial and inclusive collaborations around European university heritage.
You will join a team of scholars from the Netherlands, Italy and Suriname, which will explore Botanic Gardens as colonial university heritage. In the last decade, a variety of Botanic Gardens, like universities more broadly, have grappled with their colonial legacies and investigated to what extent they shaped and were shaped by European colonialism. Working with archival materials in the Netherlands and Suriname, you will conduct research into the colonial history of the Utrecht University Botanic Gardens and explore in what ways this institution has contributed to colonial science, including collecting practices and botanical explorations. You will also explore the possible relationship between the UU Botanic Gardens and private traders who introduced plants from all over the world into the early modern and modern Dutch homes. This includes plants from Suriname and South Africa, two areas from which many known house and office plants in the Netherlands and Europe more broadly originate.
Your research should primarily offer further insight into the colonial history of the Utrecht University Botanic Gardens. More broadly, the project will contribute to the key aim of developing policy recommendations and educational interventions on Botanic Gardens as colonial university heritage.
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