#14 Technoscience & the limits of life w/Martin Eggen Mogseth & Fartein Hauan Nilsen

#14 Technoscience & the limits of life w/Martin Eggen Mogseth & Fartein Hauan Nilsen

In this episode, we speak with Martin Eggen Mogseth and Fartein Hauan Nilsen about their first edited volume, Limits of Life: Reflections on Life, Death, and the Body in the Age of Technoscience (Berghahn Books, 2024). The book explores how fundamental concepts such as life, birth, selfhood, religion, death, and ancestry are being reshaped in an era of rapid technological changes, from a transhumanist movement seeking to disrupt death, to digital avatars ‘replicating’ deceased loved ones and widely accessible DNA tests revealing hitherto unknown genetic relatives. We discuss the book’s genesis in a smoky pub in Denmark; different ways of understanding ‘life’ and ‘limits’; how advancements in artificial intelligence and genetic testing have led to a revival of interest in ancestry in Euroamerican contexts; sperm ‘superdonors’; why California is such fertile ground for exploring topics at the intersection of scientific imagination, technology, and the self; and more. Martin Eggen Mogseth is a PhD Candidate at the Department of Social Anthropology, University of Bergen, where he works with the experiences of people involved with assisted conception in the US, primarily in California. His research begins with the moment a person learns that they are donor conceived, what might be called "reconception", and expands to consider the various actors somehow affected by and affecting the trajectories that thus ensue, be they temporal, "non-human", or relational. The project is concerned with topics such as identity, kinship, technology, and biology, and deals intimately with phenomena such as personal misrecognition in the mirror, familial secrecy, familial disruption and connection, and the shifting of fundamental sense-making elements. Martin is also interested in the limits and possibilties of language in conveying ethnographic occurences, thus he tinkers as well with poetry and "the literary" and the idea that "language is technology". Fartein Hauan Nilsen is a PhD Candidate in the Department of Social Anthropology at the University of Bergen. He has previously conducted ethnographic research in Iceland for his MA where he explored the impact of modernity and technological advancements on religious revivalism, particularly pagan revivalism, in Iceland and the broader Euro-American context. Currently, Fartein is part of the RCN-funded project "Human Futures: A study of Technoscientific Immortality" led by professor Annelin Eriksen at the University of Bergen. As part of this project, Fartein has conducted 13 months of fieldwork in California focusing on how Generative Artificial Intelligence, mainly in the form of chatbots, is being used for memorial purposes. Initially, his research centered on death, but fieldwork revealed that the current AI boom is equally about life, both in representing a new form of life and in facilitating a specific way of life. Fartein's research interests span a wide range, including the Anthropology of Technology, the Anthropology of Religion, Posthumanism, Transhumanism, Digital Anthropology, Artificial Intelligence, New Religious Movements, and the interplay between Science and Religion. More about the book, released 1 June 2024, here: https://www.berghahnbooks.com/title/MogsethLimits Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Avsnitt(25)

Digestive Belonging, Trans-Species Sensing & Care in America’s Dairyland

Digestive Belonging, Trans-Species Sensing & Care in America’s Dairyland

In this episode, we speak with Assistant Professor of Environmental Humanities at the University of Copenhagen, Katy Overstreet. Katy is coordinator for the Landscapes, Senses, and Ecological Research...

13 Feb 58min

“Rurality 2.0”: How City Migrants are Reshaping Norway’s Rural Regions with Tom Bratrud

“Rurality 2.0”: How City Migrants are Reshaping Norway’s Rural Regions with Tom Bratrud

In today’s episode, we talk to Tom Bratrud about his ongoing, long-term work with city-dwellers who migrate to rural parts of Norway. This research forms the basis of Tom’s forthcoming book project, w...

8 Dec 20251h 11min

#23 Amber, China & Geological Anthropology w/ Alessandro Rippa

#23 Amber, China & Geological Anthropology w/ Alessandro Rippa

In this episode, we speak with Alessandro Rippa about amber – a fossilised resin that not only allow us a glimpse into prehistoric lifeforms and climatic conditions millions of years ago but also work...

23 Sep 202543min

#22 Ethnographic Poetry & Migration w/ Hans Lucht

#22 Ethnographic Poetry & Migration w/ Hans Lucht

In this episode, we are in company with Hans Lucht to talk about ethnographic poetry. Hans is a senior researcher, and the head of migration research at the Danish Institute for International Studies ...

25 Mars 202555min

#21 Slavery and Genocide: Jamaica, the US South & the Historical Sociology of Evil w/ Orlando Patterson

#21 Slavery and Genocide: Jamaica, the US South & the Historical Sociology of Evil w/ Orlando Patterson

Welcome to a special two-episode series of Anthropology on Air!   In this and the previous podcast, you will listen to selected parts of a lecture series on the subject of slavery and freedom with pro...

24 Feb 20251h 31min

#20 The Paradoxes of Freedom: a Socio-Historical Approach w/ Orlando Patterson

#20 The Paradoxes of Freedom: a Socio-Historical Approach w/ Orlando Patterson

In this and the following podcast, you will listen to selected parts of a lecture series on the subject of slavery and freedom with professor of Sociology at Harvard University, Orlando Patterson. The...

11 Feb 20251h 53min

#19 Journeying anew, with or without knowledge w/ Marilyn Strathern

#19 Journeying anew, with or without knowledge w/ Marilyn Strathern

Welcome to a special episode of Anthropology on Air.In this episode you will hear the recordings of the 2024 Fredrik Barth Memorial Lecture, held by Professor Dame Marilyn Strathern. The episode begin...

10 Dec 20241h 9min

#18 Muskoxen, reindeer, and performing wilderness in Norway w/Karin Lillevold

#18 Muskoxen, reindeer, and performing wilderness in Norway w/Karin Lillevold

In this episode, we speak with Karin Lillevold, a PhD candidate in Cultural Studies at the Department of Archaeology, History, Cultural Studies, and Religion at the University of Bergen. As part of th...

20 Nov 202440min

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