Are you interested in how social collectives and political communities are brought together by firearms? Are you particularly interested in how these communities (re)produce power structures through their everyday practices? Would you like to experiment with multisensorial methods? Do you have a background in cultural anthropology or a related discipline and ethnographic research experience in Brazil, South Africa or Germany? If you would like to be part of a dynamic team carrying out research on communities of arms, one of these positions may be right for you.
Your jobARMIES is
a five-year project supported by a European Research Council (ERC) Starting Grant. The project aims to establish a new research agenda that centralises the firearm as a sensational actant that shapes everyday practices and relations, creates divergent communities, and (re)produces power structures within local and global spheres. The project centres around an ethnographic analysis of the everyday deployment of firearms and their societal impact. It examines and compares the various ways firearms produce communities and focuses on groups that are overlooked in the field of gun studies, such as gun owners' associations and hunting clubs. ARMIES hypothesises that these communities are disruptive and transformative ones that exert tremendous power.
The project members are guided by the following research question: 'How do firearms produce communities, how do these communities relate to one another, and what is their societal impact?' This question will be answered through a comparative and multiscalar analysis of such communities and their members in Brazil, Germany, and South Africa, and global communities, such as international disarmament organisations. Due to the highly embodied, sensational, and affective nature of firearms, ARMIES will use and develop a multisensorial ethnographic approach (and toolkit) that comprises ethnographic methods that explicitly target the senses.
We seek three PhD candidates who have the necessary research experience and language skills to conduct one of the subprojects in Brazil, South Africa and Germany.
Tasks for each PhD candidate:
- You will conduct ethnographic fieldwork in one of the field sites for at least 9 months.
- You will write and submit a PhD dissertation, and submit at least one peer-reviewed journal article for publication, within four years. You will write and submit a PhD dissertation and submit at least one peer-reviewed journal article for publication, within four years.
- You will use and experiment with multisensorial research methods to contribute to the creation of a multisensorial toolkit and public outreach activities.
- You will actively participate in the meetings and proceedings of the project (such as reading groups, feedback sessions, workshops, etc.) and the wider activities of the Department of Cultural Anthropology's Sovereignty and Social Contestation (SoSCo) research programme.
- You will present and share your research results in (international) conferences.
- You will collaborate with your team members in comparing the data of the different field sites and engaging in 'team ethnography'.
- You will (co)-organize academic events related to the project, such as workshops and public events.
You will be part of team comprising three PhD candidates and the principal investigator (PI). The three PhD candidates will focus specifically on 'communities of arms' in the respective locations (Brazil, Germany, and South Africa). The PI will focus on international communities of arms and be responsible for conducting the comparative analysis of the different research sites. Based on an ethos of team ethnography, the team members will collaborate on addressing larger theoretical questions, developing a multisensorial toolkit, and organising academic events. The entire team is expected to reside in the Netherlands and work from Utrecht for the duration of project, except for the fieldwork periods.
Throughout this project, you will be well guided and supported by your supervisors. Your primary promotor is
Dr Tessa Diphoorn, the PI of this project, and the co-promotors of each respective sub-project are
Dr. Marlene Schäfers (sub-project Germany),
Dr Willy Sier (sub-project South Africa), and
Dr Martijn Oosterbaan (sub-project Brazil).