BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
PRODID:-//TYPO3/NONSGML News system (news)//EN
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:news-81187@css.au.dk
DTSTAMP:20250121T133346Z
DTSTART:20250226T131500Z
DTEND:20250226T144500Z
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR




<div class="news news-single">
	<div class="article" itemscope="itemscope" itemtype="http://schema.org/Article">
		
	
			<script type="text/javascript">
				const showAllContentLangToken = "Show all content ";
			</script>

			
			

			<article class="typo3-delphinus delphinus-gutters">

				<!-- News PID: 31941 - used for finding folder/page which contains the news / event -->
				<!-- News UID: 81187 - the ID of the current news / event-->

				<div class="news-event">
					<div class="news-event__header">
						<!-- Categories -->
						

						<!-- Title -->
						<h1 itemprop="headline">CSS colloquium: Marion Godman, Aarhus University</h1>
						
							<!-- Teaser -->
							<p class="text--intro" itemprop="description">The Nordic racial hygiene studies: Science, reactivity and cultural domination</p>
						
					</div>

					
						<!-- Top image -->
						
					

					<div class="news-event__content">

						<!-- Events info box -->
						
								

								<div class="news-event__info theme--dark" id="event-info">
									<h2 class="screenreader-only">Info about event</h2>

									
											<!--- Same date -->
											<div class="news-event__info__item news-event__info__item--time">
												<h3 class="news-event__info__item__header text--label-header">Time</h3>
												<div class="news-event__info__item__content">
													<span class="u-avoid-wrap">
														Wednesday 26  February 2025,
													</span>
													<span class="u-avoid-wrap">
														&nbsp;at 14:15 -  15:45
													</span>
													<p class="news-event__info__item__ical-link"><a href="/en/news/news-item/artikel/css-colloquium-marion-godman-aarhus-university?tx_news_pi1%5Bformat%5D=ical&amp;type=9819&amp;cHash=eae125c3333d34490e265ad451cec0aa">Add to calendar</a></p>
												</div>
											</div>
										

									<!-- Location detailed -->
									
											<!-- Location Simple -->
											
												<div class="news-event__info__item">
													<h3 class="news-event__info__item__header text--label-header">Location</h3>
													<div class="news-event__info__item__content">
														<p> Aud. D1 (1531-113)</p>
													</div>
												</div>
											
										

									<!-- Organizer detailed -->
									
											<!-- Organizer Simple -->
											
										

									<!-- Price -->
									

									<!-- Event link -->
									

									<!-- Registration -->
									
								</div>
							

						
							<!-- Media -->
							
								



							
						

						
							<div class="news-event__content__text">
								<span class="text--byline" id="byline">
									

									<!-- Author -->
									
										<span itemprop="author" itemscope="itemscope" itemtype="http://schema.org/Person">
											
													By
												

											
													<a href="mailto:randi@math.au.dk">
														<span itemprop="name">Randi Mosegaard</span>
													</a>
												
										</span>
									
								</span>

								

									<!-- Body text -->
									<p>In this piece, I want to look at a historic research program of physical anthropology and especially its field studies in so-­ called “racial hygiene” in the Nordic region that I believe cast a long shadow over the research institutions in this part of the world. More precisely, I want to think about the epistemic and moral wrongs involved in these racial hygiene studies, not least for drawing the right morals going forward. I will argue that the central wrong came about because scientists and scientific institutions neglected central duties that were part of the epistemic authority invested in them. This indirectly led them to become institutions of cultural domination where local self-knowledge and ways of knowing were crowded out by those of scientific institutions and their practice. I argue that this becomes possible through a compelling case for cultural reactivity that particularly targeted (and targets) indigenous groups of Sámi. Although this reactivity was unintentional, I argue that it instantiates a case of culpable ignorance on the part of the scientists that indirectly led them to transgress certain moral norms to become agents of cultural domination.</p>
<p><em>Coffee, tea, cake and fruit will be served before the colloquium @ 2 pm</em></p>
								
							</div>
						
					</div>

					
						<!-- Content elements -->
						
					
				</div>
			</article>

			
				
				
			

			<!-- related things -->
			
		

	</div>
</div>
