Scholar

Dolly Jørgensen

Dolly Jørgensen is Professor of History at University of Stavanger, Norway and co-editor in Chief of Environmental Humanities. She served… more

H-index: 24
Environmental science 24%
History 18%
dollyjorgensen.bsky.social
Hilarious. In my academic genealogy, he’s my academic grandfather - was advisor to my advisor Sally Vaughn.
dollyjorgensen.bsky.social
This editorial by a professor of media studies at UVA is worth reading to understand the position universities are in at this moment.
dollyjorgensen.bsky.social
Quite the honor to give “More-than-human histories: Changing whose histories matter” as my Gad Rausing prize lecture at the Vitterhetsakademien meeting this evening in Stockholm.
Woman in front of doorway with arch which says Vitterhetsakademien
jeffmanuel.bsky.social
It's the official publication day for ETHANOL: A HEMISPHERIC HISTORY FOR THE FUTURE OF BIOFUELS. Want to know why the US turns 40 percent of the corn crop into fuel? How the US and Brazil became the world's two largest ethanol producers? Tom Rogers and I have answers.
www.oupress.com/978080619601...
Ethanol - University of Oklahoma Press
Though ethanol, a liquid fuel made from agricultural byproducts, has generated controversy in recent years—good or bad for the environment? a big-ag boon o...
www.oupress.com

Reposted by: Dolly Jørgensen

mcps-philsci.bsky.social
A month to go to submit abstracts for the 2nd HPS of Biodiversity meeting in Copenhagen, 30.04–2.05.26. Deadline: Fri 7 Nov 2025. Contributions welcome “that reflect on the conceptualization/quantification/classification/measurement/valuation/crisis/conservation of biodiversity.”
Second HPS of Biodiversity Meeting
We are inviting abstracts for the Second HPS of Biodiversity Meeting.
buff.ly
dollyjorgensen.bsky.social
Oh yes! And of course I reference your article on that exhibition.
dollyjorgensen.bsky.social
Yes! The whole thing (every page) is color.

Reposted by: Dolly Jørgensen

asapartsnow.bsky.social
First up in our shortlist for the ASAP/16 Book Prize is Sarah Dimick’s UNSEASONABLE: CLIMATE CHANGE IN GLOBAL LITERATURES from @columbiaup.bsky.social. We will announce the winner at this year’s conference in Houston, TX. Please join us!
dollyjorgensen.bsky.social
Had you seen this one I had posted from Palermo? bsky.app/profile/doll...
dollyjorgensen.bsky.social
Very fascinated by the table the gospel writers are using in the mosaics. It appears to have a screw mechanism to allow the height to be adjusted.
Gospel writer at desk Gospel writer at desk. Ink pot on table Another gospel writer at desk
dollyjorgensen.bsky.social
It’s real!!
I just got my first copy of Ghosts Behind Glass and it is beautiful. You all really need to order your copies. You will not regret it. press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/bo...
Author holding copy of book Page with birds on left, text on right Double page spread with a photo of diorama Chapter 3 Cursed treasures on left, lion on right
dollyjorgensen.bsky.social
Tomorrow Monday Oct 6, we’ll be talking to @royscranton.bsky.social about Impasse: Climate Change & the Limits of Progress on the @greenhouseuis.net book talk.

Join us for the live discussion at 4pm Central European time / 10am Eastern
newnatures.org/greenhouse/e...
Book cover of Impasse by Roy Scranton with swirls of color like a wave or dragon
dollyjorgensen.bsky.social
I ask because I’m reading a history text that goes back and forth between migrant & immigrant when I wouldn’t. I think it’s related to contemporary discourse which I see mixes up the two terms. I see that as something which should be resisted by historians because words have precision.
Thoughts?
dollyjorgensen.bsky.social
Whereas an immigrant is someone who left one place and moved somewhere else with the intent of staying there.
This person is also an emigrant from the place they left.
/2
dollyjorgensen.bsky.social
Question for historians: Have people always used immigrant & migrant interchangeably?
I would only use migrant for someone who goes back & forth between places, or moves around. A migrant worker is a person who moves around to work, usually seasonally, maybe returning “home” regularly. /1
dollyjorgensen.bsky.social
Apply for this free PhD course on Energy Humanities in Stavanger, Norway!

Please pass the opportunity on to students you know. Students from anywhere are welcome.

#envhum #envhist
melinabuns.bsky.social
I am really excited to announce the call for the PhD Course in Energy Humanities!

Held at the @greenhouseuis.net from 1-5 December.

Applications are welcome until 24 October.

#envhum #envhist #energyhistory
Poster showing a wind turbine from frog perspective. The picture is in light pink and blue nuances and announces a PhD course in energy humanities. More information can be found in this website. https://www.uis.no/en/research/collaboration/the-greenhouse-centre-for-environmental-humanities/humanities/apply-for-phd
dollyjorgensen.bsky.social
Below the pig feeding labor for October, November shows pig slaughter.
It’s a very interesting image with the butcher putting one carcass into a barrel and another hanging nearby.
A butcher holding a pig by the tail. The pig’s hind feet are visible on the edge of a barrel. Another pig carcass is hanging head down on a tree.
dollyjorgensen.bsky.social
It is now October, which means it is medieval pig feeding in woodlands time!

I had the chance to visit the Basilica of St Denis in Paris today, which shows pig feeding in a stone carving on the jamb of the right portal of the west façade.

I write about the practice in my book The Medieval Pig.
Man stands on left holding a stick and knocking down acorns for two pigs who stand under the tree
dollyjorgensen.bsky.social
I have published three edited volumes and two monographs with university presses. They are definitely awesome supporters of scholarship.
You get so much better support & service than with those big commercial presses that charge a fortune for their books (you know who I mean!).
greenhouseuis.net
Today’s Greenhouse lunch was packed! The main event was to celebrate our colleague Marie-Theres Fojuth, who was just awarded funding from the Research Council of Norway for her project «Into the Fjords: Blue Museums as Arenas of Learning about Vulnerable Ecosystems». Congratulations!
Woman holding a plant standing in front of bookcases full of books

Reposted by: Dolly Jørgensen

edwardworthlib.bsky.social
birds.edwardworthlibrary.ie is launched! Thanks to Dr Dominique Crowley (artist), Ms John McGarry and Ms Maria McGarry (Webworks), Mr Paolo Viscardi (Keeper of Natural History at NMI); Dr Elizabethanne Boran (Librarian), Mr Derek O’Reilly (member, BirdWatch Ireland), and Dr Éanna Ní Lamhna.
dollyjorgensen.bsky.social
Interesting read!
I encountered lots of free-range / street dogs in Cairo and surroundings. Many are tagged because they have been vaccinated.

References

Fields & subjects

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