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根特大学博后职位叙述网格:当代小说中的生态学和非人类相关

2017年03月20日
来源:知识人网
摘要:

Job description
We invite applications for a post-doc position within the ERC Starting Grant Project “Narrating the Mesh.” The envisioned start date is 1 October 2017, but a later date can be negotiated. The initial contract will be for two years, with the possibility of renewal up to four years in total. The position includes an internationally competitive salary and social security coverage. 

Project background
The “mesh” is Timothy Morton’s metaphor for the interrelation between humans and a large gamut of “nonhuman” realities, from the bacteria in our guts to macro-entities such as climate change. “Narrating the Mesh” (NARMESH in short) is a multidisciplinary research project interrogating contemporary narrative and its potential for staging, challenging, and expanding the human imagination of the nonhuman. How can narrative, in both literary fiction and oral storytelling, capture the ways in which humans are dependent upon the climate or the geological history of our planet? How can we narrativize entities that elude the human scale? How can stories undercut anthropocentric ideologies and foster a sense of respectful coexistence with realities beyond the human?

NARMESH addresses these questions by bringing together literary studies, narrative theory, and narrative approaches in the social sciences. The 1.1-million-euro project is funded by the European Research Council and based at Ghent University in Belgium, whose Literary Studies department hosts a wide range of innovative research projects, including two other ERC grants. The Principal Investigator is Marco Caracciolo (marco.caracciolo@ugent.be), who is Assistant Professor in English and Literary Theory at UGent.

The team will include the PI, a post-doc, two PhD students, and two student assistants.

Applicants are encouraged to visit this website for further details on the project, including the submitted proposal. 

Job profile
The post-doc will focus on oral narratives of personal experience. He or she will have a track record of research in fields such as sociolinguistics, social psychology, or ethnography, and specific expertise in qualitative research and narrative interview methods. Ideally, the candidate will have an interest in—and basic knowledge of—key questions and methods in literary scholarship. Additional expertise in quantitative research is desirable.

The post-doc will carry out a series of interviews in an English-speaking context. The details of the interviews, such as location, methodology, and choice of participants, will be defined by the post-doc in collaboration with the PI. The objective is to study how participants relate episodes of their lives in which they experienced a connection with the nonhuman world, and later to compare these oral narratives to contemporary fiction.