Message posted on 25/01/2024

Starting in 35 min: webinar on images, ageing and care with Inge Daniels

Just a reminder that Inge Daniel's presentation from the webinar series on images, ageing and care is starting soon today (Thursday, January 25):

18.00-19.30 Central European time 17.00-18:30 Greenwich Mean time 12.00-13:30 Eastern, North America

The Zoom link is here.


From: Pieta , Barbara Sent: Wednesday, January 24, 2024 12:05 PM To: AGENET List Subject: Tomorrow: webinar on images, ageing and care with Inge Daniels

Dear AgeNet-ers,

Please join us on Thursday for the inaugural webinar on images, ageing, and care with Inge Daniels.

Thursday, January 25, 2024 18.00-19.30 Central European time 17.00-18:30 Greenwich Mean time 12.00-13:30 Eastern, North America

The Zoom link is here.

Inge Daniels film She Waves at Me explores what it feels like to be an aging body in an aging housing estate in Central London. The film, based on 18 months of ethnographic fieldwork (2020-2022), juxtaposes the intricate care that goes into maintaining the buildings and their surroundings with elderly inhabitants struggles and strategies to create safe and comfortable homes for themselves and their loved ones. The webinar will be 90 minutes long, starting with Inges short introduction to the film, followed by our watching the film together (20 minutes long), and ending with a Q&A for 20-30 minutes.

Inge Daniels is a visual anthropologist based at the Institute of Social and Cultural Anthropology at the University of Oxford. Her research interests include housing, atmosphere, and the built environment. She has conducted several ethnographies in Japan culminating in a 2010 monograph The Japanese House. She has also had an ongoing interest in curation and exhibitions, which resulted in the book What are Exhibitions for? (2019) which is based on an ethnography of visitors to the 2012 exhibition at the Museum of the Home in London. She is currently the Principal Investigator of the Disobedient Buildings project, which looks at housing, well-being and welfare in the U.K., Romania and Norway, and was funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council for four years from January 2020 (see www.disobedientbuildings.com

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