By bringing together established scholars and doctoral researchers to discuss and develop ongoing conversations about the value, method and impact of recovery research, as well as the need to decolonise its processes and practices, the retreat will foster critical discussions about recuperation research and political commitments to decolonise the humanities.Īdditionally, the residency will foster a sense of interdisciplinary exchange and belonging to a community of practice and cohort identity during and beyond the retreat, through follow-up student-led networks and a day workshop.ĭuring the retreat, participants are encouraged to explore the following key questions: Why? How? For whom? Funded by the CHASE Doctoral Training Partnership, this residency offers an advanced training opportunity for doctoral researchers at all levels and in all humanities discipline areas whose PhD project involves an element of recovery research (research that seeks to bring to light, restore and/or critically recuperate works/individuals/objects that have been lost, obscured, neglected or denied). Decolonising Methodologies for Recovery and Collections-based Research in the C21Ī residential retreat to be held in the Gladstone's Library (Flintshire, Wales) from 11-15 April 2023Īfter a successful first edition of the recovery research retreat which took place in April 2019, we are now welcoming applications to the second edition of the residential retreat, which focuses on questions of decolonising archives and recovery research.
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