About this blog.

Here, researchers from the University of Oldenburg and guest authors write about how societies perceive and thematise themselves, how they reassure themselves of their respective present and, in doing so, project themselves into the future.

How are these self-perceptions and self-designs connected to institutions, media and techniques for shaping nature, society and subjectivity? How do they model everyday life and encourage people to behave in a certain way? How are these interventions in the given justified and legitimised, but also criticised, rejected or undermined?

These questions, whose interdisciplinary reflection is one of the central concerns of the Research Centre "Genealogy of the Present", are explored by the bloggers from different specialist perspectives and contexts of activity with a view to controversial topics such as migration, inequality, digitalisation, crime, health and ecology.

If you have any questions or comments, please write to

Workshop "Genealogy of the subject"

from Team

from Team

Workshop "Genealogy of the subject"

Looking at subjectivity from a genealogical perspective means analysing its emergence from social, intellectual-historical and, above all, cultural constellations. In line with this understanding, the workshop will examine the interrelationship between European and Japanese perspectives on understandings of subjectivation. The philosophical history and the concept of subjectivity will be presented and analysed using empirical topics such as the respective understanding of culture and the body. The change in Japanese self-image following the Fukushima disaster will also be scrutinised.

The workshop will take place from 01 to 03 December 2015.

REGISTRATION is requested at is requested.

Further information can be found in the programme.

(Changed: 11 Feb 2026)  Kurz-URL:Shortlink: https://uol.de/p49148n7794en
Zum Seitananfang scrollen Scroll to the top of the page

This page contains automatically translated content.