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In 2022 and 2023, the following PhD candidates successfully finished and defended their doctoral theses (viva voce):

Youngju Lee, “Feminine Technologies, Women Users, and Female Bodies in South Korea, 1950 – 2000“

Alejandra Osorio Tarazona, “The Hybrid Kitchen: Material Culture, Technical Knowledge, and Cooking Practices in Argentina and Peru, 1940 – 1980“

David Drengk, “People, Materiality, and Nature in Everyday Life: The Technological Landscape of the Rainforest in Côte d’Ivoire, 1890-1930“

Frank Edward, “Circulation and Appropriation of Urban Technologies: Drainage and Traffic Infrastructures in Dar es Salaam, 1913 – 1999“

Emanuel Lukio Mchome, “’Blackout Blues’: A Socio-Cultural History of Vulnerable Electricity Networks and Resilient Users in Dar es Salaam, 1920 – 2020“

Markus Schertler, “Kritische Infrastrukturen in Deutsch-Ostafrika 1884-1918“

Recent Publications

  • Hård, Mikael, Microhistories of Technology Making the World, Palgrave Studies in the History of Science and Technology. Palgrave Macmillan, Cham. Open Access
  • van der Straeten, Jonas. Sustainability’s “Other”: Coming to Terms with the Electric Rickshaw in Bangladesh. Historical Social Research 47 (4), 2022: 139-167. doi: 10.12759/hsr.47.2022.42 or download as pdf (wird in neuem Tab geöffnet)
  • Drengk, David, “Instandhaltung und Reparatur als Rückgrat kolonialer Eisenbahnen. Zentrale und mobile Werkstätten und Krankenstationen im ivorischen Wald„ [“Maintenance and Repair as the Backbone of Colonial Railways. Centralized and Mobile Workshops and Infirmaries in the Ivorian Forest“], Technikgeschichte 89:2 (2022): pp. 149-180. Open Access
  • Osoria Tarazona, Alejandra, „Why Chuño Matters: Rethinking the History of Technology in Latin America“ Technology and Culture 63, no. 3 (2022): 808-829. Link to Journal
  • Mchome, Emanuel Lukio (2022): ‘Blackout Blues’: A Socio-cultural History of Vulnerable Electricity Networks and Resilient Usersen Wald„ in Dar es Salaam, 1920–2020. Darmstadt, Technische Universität Darmstadt [Dissertation]. Link to Dissertation
  • Edward, Frank, “Planned Vulnerabilities? Street Flooding and Drainage Infrastructure in Colonial Dar es Salaam", HoST: Journal of History of Science and Technology 16 (1), 2022: 29-47. Link to Journal

International conference Technology and Material Culture in African History: Challenges and Potentials for Research and Teaching

Dar es Salaam, Tanzania (January 4 – 8, 2023)

Click here for further information on the homepage of the University of Dar es Salaam

or here to get access to a blog post about the conference

The conference seeks to consolidate and foster the further development of history of technology and material culture in Africa. By gathering scholars from Tanzania and across Africa, as well as colleagues from other continents, the conference will demonstrate the discipline’s high degree of relevance—to the research and teaching of history and adjacent fields, as well as to contemporary political agendas. The organizers wish to use this event to discuss how historians of technology and material culture may contribute to the writing of a “usable past” for further generations.

The organizers invited historians, archaeologists, anthropologists, geographers, sociologists, and urban scholars to discuss the potentials of interdisciplinary and international collaboration around present intellectual, social, technological, and environmental challenges in Africa and globally. In the recent past, African countries have increased citizens’ access to up-to-date mobility and communication technologies—electric household items, mobile phones, and engine-driven vehicles. As the variety of terms indicates—daladala, matatu, tro tros, bodaboda, bajaji, and so on—artifacts are not just simply imported, but constantly modified to fit local circumstances and needs. By and large, however, a historical understanding of these processes of domestication and reinvention is still lacking. That present-day historians of technology do not limit themselves to the study of modern, Western machines and systems, but include broader aspects of (pre-colonial, colonial, and post-colonial) “material culture,” also means the discipline plays a central role both in research projects and teaching programs.

There have been growing initiatives to integrate Africa into the global history of technology and material culture, but such efforts rarely focus on teaching. Considering the ongoing curricular review at African universities, it is a pressing concern to discuss the potentials of including the history of technology and material culture in Bachelor and Masters programs. The organizers are convinced that the discipline of history needs to include an African perspective and showcase Africa’s contribution to global history of technology and material culture. Therefore, the conference focuses on policies, practices, and use to rethink the historiographic role played by material artifacts and systems. We believe there is a certain urgency in researching, writing, and teaching the history of technology and material culture from a truly African perspective. The organizers hope that the workshop will provide important additions to the nationalist and materialist views which have dominated African history research, writing, and teaching since independence.

By giving participants an opportunity to discuss existing research projects and teaching programs, the comference aims at laying the foundation for an international network of historians of technology and material culture in Africa.

This unique event was organized by the History Department of the University of Dar es Salaam in collaboration with the ERC-funded research project “A Global History of Technology, 1850-2000” at the Technical University of Darmstadt in Germany, the Society for the History of Technology (SHOT), Eindhoven University of Technology and the Foundation for the History of Technology in the Netherlands.

Conference Organizers

Emily Brownell,SHOT Representative, University of Edinburgh

Frank Edward, History Dept., University of Dar es Salaam

Mikael Hård, ERC Global HoT Project, Darmstadt University of Technology

Jan Korsten, Society for the History of Technology and Foundation for the History of Technology

Emanuel Mchome, History Dept., University of Dar es Salaam

Workshop “Writing Global History of Technology from a Local Perspective: Stories from the South”

In July 2019 Global-HoT organized a three-day workshop entitled “Writing Global History of Technology from a Local Perspective: Stories from the South” in Darmstadt. The event gathered forty researchers from all parts of the world. The workshop sought to facilitate an interdisciplinary discussion of the question how historians ought to go about bridging analyses of the global circulation of commodities with narratives of the embeddedness of their production and consumption in local social sites. Discussions were carried out in six different groups, each focusing on a specific methodological challenge or a specific area of technology; see program below.

View the workshop program (wird in neuem Tab geöffnet)

Call for Abstracts for a Special issue „Technology, Temporality and the Study of Central Asia“

Dear colleagues,

we are planning a special issue of the journal Central Asian Survey on „Technology, Temporality and the Study of Central Asia“ and invite authors to submit abstracts of no more than 800 words until May 31, 2019. Authors of accepted abstracts will be invited to a workshop in Bishkek at the French Institute for Central Asian Studies (IFEAC) in April 2020.

Please find the full Call for Abstracts below or for download as a pdf here. (wird in neuem Tab geöffnet)

Для загрузки pdf-версии на русском языке, щелкните здесь (wird in neuem Tab geöffnet).

Sincerely yours,

Julia Obertreis and Jonas van der Straeten

Technology, Temporality and the Study of Central Asia

Call for Articles for a Special Issue of “Central Asian Survey”

The study of Central Asia has been mostly a study of people. Debates have largely revolved around concepts like ethnicity, identity, religion and – increasingly – statehood, governance or networks of trade and labor migration. Besides, environmental aspects have attracted more attention in recent years.

Scholarship on technology and infrastructure in Central Asia is emerging but still needs to be related more closely to current theoretical debates in fields such as history of technology, science and technology studies, and infrastructure history (for an overview see van der Straeten 2019). With this special issue we aim at facilitating an interdisciplinary discussion of interpretive frameworks that can integrate studies on technology and material culture in the region and allow for formulating more inclusive research questions. The conceptual point of departure is the notion that the permanent structures in which people live are more than a backcloth for the analysis of social change and movement. They deserve attention on their own as they constitute the material base of state, sociality and daily life in Central Asia. By dedicating a special issue to these structures, we aim at achieving a more comprehensive understanding of Central Asia as a region and its specific patterns and trajectories of technological and infrastructural change. At the same time, the case studies of the special issue will feed into more general debates on technology and material culture in the context of the power imbalance, ontological domination and economic inequality that are characteristic for many (post)colonial and (post-)Soviet societies.

This endeavor resonates well with a current turn in the historiography of technology, a discipline that is gradually overcoming its preoccupation with novelty in favor of a more differentiated engagement with the emergence, persistency and disappearance of technology. This debate revolves around what is framed as the temporality of technology and aims at unpacking and critically reflecting the relationship between technology, time and historical change (for an overview see Weber 2019). It has emerged as a critique of a way of thinking about technology that is largely preoccupied with novelty (Lindqvist 1994; Edgerton 2006). Authors highlight the co-existence of allegedly “old” and “new” technologies in daily life and the notion that the often very long phases of use, of gradual decay and the afterlife of certain technologies deserves as much attention as their innovation phase. They are calling for a perspective that is grounded in the material world of technology-in-use that surrounds us, not in abstract imaginations of technologies that succeed each other on a modernisation path.

This approach can be fruitfully related to theoretical considerations in infrastructure history: infrastructure systems can be seen as mediators between the sphere of technology and people’s everyday lives and are in different ways related to political power (Engels/Schenk 2015; Högselius/Kaijser/van der Vleuten 2015). Studies on urban infrastructure have examined the interface of the human body, city spaces, landscapes, and technology in view of power relations and social pressures (Gandy 2014). Socio-technical change is understood as a contested discursive process, highlighting contingency and agency (Moss 2014). Infrastructure as well as environmental history have challenged existing chronologies because the planning, construction, and use of infrastructure as well as environmental problems do not fit neatly into political periodization but often transcend it (on the example of water infrastructure: Obertreis/Malinova 2019).

From a Western modernist perspective, the timelines of technological change in Central Asia must appear as a series of ruptures and tensions that arise from asynchronicity between changes in the technological landscape and the societies living in them. A first set of narratives revolves around the implementation of technologies that are – at least in the eyes of contemporary commentators – believed to be “ahead” of their receiving societies. Scholars of Tsarist, Soviet, and post-Soviet Central Asia have studied the large-scale, mostly state-driven (and partly forced) modernization projects that have, to a great extent, shaped the region’s technological and infrastructure landscape. Irrigation systems and cotton growing have attracted much attention. Politics, practices and paradigms of development have been examined recently.

The second set of narratives are storylines of technologies being or falling “behind” the societal requirements or expectations towards them. As much as the initial transformative character of the Soviet modernization project in Central Asia, historians have highlighted its shortcomings and deficiencies. After all, the Soviet command economy’s lack of innovative capacity has been widely cited as the root cause for it falling behind the Western market economy and for its eventual collapse. For post-Soviet Central Asia, studies in this category largely are concerned with the deterioration of infrastructures, the corrosion of large, formerly state-owned enterprises, and the shrinking or demise of whole industries. As a typical reaction to these processes, consumers rely on or even return to “outdated” technologies.

Several recent studies, many of them from anthropologists, have complicated these two sets of narratives and provided instructive counter-examples. They highlight not only the persistence of allegedly “old” technologies in everyday life but also their intentional and deliberate use. For post-Soviet Central Asia authors have recently emphasized the agency of people in maneuvering their way through technological landscapes, that are characterized by a highly heterogenous temporality. These studies call for a more differentiated analysis of temporality of technology in Central Asia. They illustrate the inadequacy of qualifiers like “old” and “new”, “modern” and “traditional” to make sense of the ensemble of technologies that shapes everyday realities in the region. There is a need for more case studies to lay the groundwork for a debate on the temporality of technology that is truly emancipated from the modernization paradigm.

Potential contributions to the special issue could engage with one (or a combination of) the following questions with a geographical focus on Central Asia:

  • How do people perceive, cope with, or capitalize on the simultaneity of technologies that are of different ages and in different stages of their life cycles? How do they maintain the functionality in often adverse environments? The focus should be on what Weber has coined the polychronic qualities of technology (Weber 2019).
  • Which temporal dynamics can be identified for technologies in different economic sectors or spheres of everyday life? Do we observe a clear succession or a coexistence of different technologies? Are those technologies operated rather independently from each other or are they interrelated? Especially for infrastructures and buildings, can we unpack different technological layers that have added up over time? Can we identify fault lines, breaks or missing layers? What role do concepts and ideologies play that are inscribed in older layers of technology?
  • What are common practices of disposal, reuse and recycling, both on individual and state level? What are technical and cultural criteria for obsolescence of technology in Central Asia? When does waste become a resource? How has industrial decline opened up new scope of action and who has made use of these new possibilities? This set of questions also offers a promising interface with the environmental history of Central Asia.
  • How did the way in which Central Asia was integrated in Soviet command economy had impact on the implementation and the life cycles of technology? What were the effects of the disintegration of a highly interwoven economic space after the dissolution of the Soviet Union? How has the accelerating circulation of products and tastes changed the lifespan of different technologies, both positively (e.g. through the better availability of spare parts) and negatively (e.g. through an increasing desire for novelty/perceived obsolescence of “old” products)? Are technological lifecycles contracting along with the acceleration of global flows?

Applications are welcome from different disciplines including history, technology studies, economics, environmental studies and cultural studies. Please send abstracts of no more than 800 words and a short CV, both documents in English or Russian, to by May 31, 2019. Full article manuscripts will have to be provided by March 1, 2020. We will have the chance to discuss manuscripts in detail at a workshop in Bishkek at the French Institute for Central Asian Studies (IFEAC) in April 2020. The deadline for revised manuscripts is July 31, 2020.

References and relevant literature

  • Abašin, Sergey. 2015. Sovetskij kišlak. Meždu kolonializmom i modernizaciej. Moscow: Novoe literaturnoe obozrenie.
  • Botoeva, Aisalkyn, and Regine A. Spector. 2013. “Sewing to Satisfaction: Craft-Based Entrepreneurs in Contemporary Kyrgyzstan.” Central Asian Survey 32 (4): 487–500. doi:10.1080/02634937.2013.862963.
  • Chiovenda, Melissa Kerr. 2014. “The Illumination of Marginality: How Ethnic Hazaras in Bamyan, Afghanistan, Perceive the Lack of Electricity as Discrimination.” Central Asian Survey 33 (4): 449–62. doi:10.1080/02634937.2014.987967.
  • Edgerton, David. 2006. The Shock of the Old: Technology and Global History Since 1900. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Eisenstadt, S. 2000. “Multiple Modernities.” Daedalus 129 (1): 1–29.
  • Engels, Jens Ivo, and Gerrit Jasper Schenk. 2015. Infrastrukturen der Macht – Macht der Infrastrukturen. Überlegungen zu einem Forschungsfeld // Wasserinfrastrukturen und Macht von der Antike bis zur Gegenwart / Hg. B. Förster, M. Bauch. Historische Zeitschrift, Beiheft 63. Berlin; München; Boston, S. 22–58.
  • Féaux de la Croix, Jeanne, and Mokhira Suyarkulova. 2015. “The Rogun Complex: Public Roles and Historic Experiences of Dam-Building in Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan.” In “Water in Central Asia: Contemporary Issues and Challenges.” edited by Alain Cariou. Special issue, Cahiers d’Asie centrale 25: 103–32.
  • Gandy, Matthew. 2014. The fabric of space. Water, modernity, and the urban imagination. Cambridge; London: The MIT Press.
  • Gullette, David, and Jeanne La Féaux de Croix. 2014. “Mr Light and People’s Everyday Energy Struggles in Central Asia and the Caucasus: An Introduction.” Central Asian Survey 33 (4): 435–48. doi:10.1080/02634937.2014.989754.
  • Högselius, Per, Arne. Kaijser, and Erik van der Vleuten. 2015. Europe’s Infrastructure Transition: Economy, War, Nature. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK.
  • Kalinovsky, Artemy. 2018. Laboratory of Socialist Development: Cold War Politics and Decolonization in Soviet Tajikistan. Ithaca: Cornell University press.
  • Kassymbekova, Botakoz. 2011. “Helpless Imperialists: European State Workers in Soviet Central Asia in the 1920s and 1930s.” Central Asian Survey 30 (1): 21–37. doi:10.1080/02634937.2011.554052.
  • Kraudzun, Tobias. 2014. “Bottom-up and Top-down Dynamics of the Energy Transformation in the Eastern Pamirs of Tajikistan’s Gorno Badakhshan Region.” Central Asian Survey 33 (4): 550–65. doi:10.1080/02634937.2014.987516.
  • Laszczkowski, Mateusz. 2015. “Scraps, Neighbors, and Committees: Material Things, Place-Making, and the State in an Astana Apartment Block.” City and Society 27 (2): 136–59. doi:10.1111/ciso.12057.
  • ———. 2016. ‘City of the Future’: Built Space, Modernity and Urban Change in Astana. Integration and Conflict Studies v.14. New York, NY: Berghahn Books. http://gbv.eblib.com/patron/FullRecord.aspx?p=4197980.
  • Lindqvist, Svante. 1994. “Changes in the Technological Landscape: The Temporal Dimension in the Growth and Decline of Large Technological Systems.” In Economics of Technology, edited by Ove Granstrand, 271–88. Amsterdam: Emerald Group Publishing Limited.
  • Moss, Timothy. 2014. “Socio-technical Change and the Politics of Urban Infrastructure: Managing Energy in Berlin Between Dictatorship and Democracy.” Urban Studies 51(7): 1432-1448.
  • Mostowlansky, Till. 2017. Azan on the Moon: Entangling Modernity along Tajikistan's Pamir Highway. University of Pittsburgh Press.
  • Obertreis, Julia. 2017. Imperial Desert Dreams: Cotton Growing and Irrigation in Central Asia, 1860-1991. 1. Auflage. Kultur- und Sozialgeschichte Osteuropas 8. Göttingen, Niedersachs: VetR unipress.
  • Obertreis, Julia and Ol’ga Malinova-Tziafeta. 2019. “Istorija gorodov i vodnye infrastruktury v Rossijskoi imperii i SSSR.” Noveishaia istoriia Rossii 9 (1): 173–201. http://modernhistory.ru/f/obertreis_malinova-tziafeta.pdf. (wird in neuem Tab geöffnet)
  • Payne, Matthew J. 2001. Stalin’s Railroad: Turksib and the Building of Socialism. Pittsburgh Pa. Univ. of Pittsburgh Press.
  • Penati, Beatrice. 2012. “Adapting Russian Technologies of Power: Land-and-Water Reform in the Uzbek SSR (1924–1928).” Revolutionary Russia 25 (2): 187–217. doi:10.1080/09546545.2012.731196.
  • ———. 2014. “Life on the Edge: Border-Making and Agrarian Policies in the Aim District (Eastern Fergana), 1924–1929.” Ab Imperio (2): 193–230. doi:10.1353/imp.2014.0056.
  • ———. 2016. “The Hunt for Red Orient: A Soviet Industrial Trest Between Moscow and Bukhara (1922-1929).” cbp, no. 2406. doi:10.5195/CBP.2016.205.
  • Peterson, Maya. 2016a. “Engineering Empire: Russian and Foreign Hydraulic Experts in Central Asia, 1887-1917.” Cahiers du monde russe, 57 (1): 125–46.
  • ———. 2016b. “US to USSR: American Experts, Irrigation, and Cotton in Soviet Central Asia, 1929–32.” Environmental History 21 (3): 442–66. doi:10.1093/envhis/emw006.
  • Sgibnev, Wladimir, and Andrey Vozyanov. 2016. “Assemblages of Mobility: The Marshrutkas of Central Asia.” Central Asian Survey 35 (2): 276–91. doi:10.1080/02634937.2016.1145381.
  • Stronski, Paul. 2010. Tashkent: Forging a Soviet City, 1930-1966. Pitt series in Russian and East European studies. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press.
  • Teichmann, Christian. 2016. Macht der Unordnung: Stalins Herrschaft in Zentralasien 1920-1950. Studien zur Gewaltgeschichte des 20. Jahrhunderts. Hamburg: Hamburger Edition.
  • Trevisani, Tommaso. 2018. “Work, Precarity, and Resistance: Company and Contract Labour in Kazakhstan’s Former Soviet Steel Town.” In Industrial labor on the margins of capitalism: Precarity, class, and the neoliberal subject, edited by C. M. Hann and Jonathan P. Parry, 85–110. Max Planck studies in anthropology and economy volume 4. New York: Berghahn Books.
  • van der Straeten, Jonas. 2019 (forthcoming). “Borderlands of Modernity: Explorations into the History of Technology in Central Asia, 1850-2000.” Technology and Culture 60 (3).
  • van der Straeten, Jonas, and Mariya Petrova. 2019 (forthcoming). “Mud Bricks in a Concrete State. Building, Maintaining and Renovating Individual Houses in Soviet Samarkand, 1960-1992.” In Histories of Technology’s Persistence: Repair, Reuse, and Disposal, edited by Stefan Krebs and Heike Weber. Bielefeld: transcript.
  • Weber, Heike. 2019 (forthcoming). “Zeitschichten des Technischen: Zum Momentum, „Alter(n)“ und Verschwinden von Technik.” In Provokationen der Technikgeschichte. Zum Reflexionsdruck historischer Forschung, edited by Martina Heßler and Heike Weber.