Project Details
FOR 2600: Ambiguität und Unterscheidung: Historisch-kulturelle Dynamiken
Subject Area
Humanities
Term
since 2018
Website
Homepage
Project identifier
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 322729370
The DFG Research Unit 2600 “Ambiguity and Distinction. Historical and Cultural Dynamics” ties the concept of ambiguity to the concept of distinction. In doing so, it focuses on the ambiguity of gender, race, and religion. According to the Research Unit's hypothesis, it is in this relation between ambiguity and distinction that dynamics are triggered. The exploration of these dynamics opens up fundamentally new insights. At the same time, the Research Unit assumes that observers - be they persons, institutions, works of art, religions, etc. - repeatedly encounter phenomena that they cannot grasp with the distinctions with which they prefer to operate. The Research Unit's concept of ambiguity is thus strictly constructivist. Phenomena are not "inherently" ambiguous. Rather, ambiguity always exists only in observation. What one observer perceives and communicates as ambiguous can therefore be quite unambiguous for another. For the Research Unit, situations of ambiguity represent, as it were, "primal scenes" that force the respective actors to act on the ambiguity they perceive. Ambiguity opens up the possibility of following both sides of a distinction, so that the usual path dependencies are interrupted. The Research Unit is interested precisely in this openness of ambiguous situations and in the almost unpredictable dynamics they trigger. In its second funding period, the Research Unit focuses on interferences of ambiguities. It asks whether and how the ambiguity of one distinction influences the operation of another distinction. Do overlaps occur which reinforce or level contrasts at certain places, or with respect to certain phenomena? What interactions of ambiguities and the use of distinctions can be observed and what influence do these interferences have on the historical-cultural dynamics that emanate from ambiguity? Are there certain social relays that make such interference effects probable?By answering these questions, the Research Unit aims to differentiate the concept of ambiguity, which has so far mostly been used as a diagnosis of epochs or cultures, in order to use it to uncover the manifold and complex dynamics triggered by ambiguity.
DFG Programme
Research Units
Projects
- Ambiguity and Disambiguation of Belonging – The Regulation of Alienness in the Caribbean during the Revolutionary Era (1780s–1820s) (Applicant Jansen, Jan Christian )
- Between Black and White: South Africa's Coloureds and Apartheid (Applicant Marx, Christoph )
- Coordination Funds (Applicant Scheller, Benjamin )
- Dis/ambiguating Religious Affiliations: Sectarians, Agnostics, and Secularists in the late Ottoman Empire and Turkey (Applicant Konuk, Kader )
- Geschlechtliche Ambiguität in der Medienberichterstattung der Bundesrepublik Deutschland von den 1970er Jahren bis zur Jahrtausendwende (Applicant Becker, Frank )
- 'neophytes', 'renegados', 'creoles': Dynamics of (Dis)ambiguation in Early American Discussions of the Transition from Colonialism to Nationhood (Applicant Buchenau, Barbara )
- Orientalism in Colonial Australia, 1770-1901: A Transimperial Perspective (Applicant Plummer, Patricia )
- Practices of Neo-Ottomanism in Art and Art History: Media of Sacralization between Anachronistic Affirmation and Subversion (Applicant Genge, Gabriele )
- The Ambiguity of the Turkish in Early Modern German Narrative Literature (Applicant Wesche, Jörg )
- The Ambiguous Century: Gender, "Movements," and Ambiguity Aesthetics in the USA, 1800-1900 (Applicant Furlanetto, Elena )
- The Sea of the New Christians: Mobility and Ambiguity of converted Jews and their Descendant in the late medieval and early modern Adriatic (Applicant Scheller, Benjamin )
- Undetermined baroque poetry. Poetic and confessional ambiguity in Silesia as cultural dynamic factors of a new German poetry (1620-1742) (Applicant Wesche, Jörg )
Spokesperson
Professor Dr. Benjamin Scheller