Project Details
Coordination Funds
Applicant
Professorin Dr. Susanne Strätling
Subject Area
General and Comparative Literature and Cultural Studies
Empirical Social Research
European and American Literary and Cultural Studies
Modern and Contemporary History
Political Science
Economic Policy, Applied Economics
Empirical Social Research
European and American Literary and Cultural Studies
Modern and Contemporary History
Political Science
Economic Policy, Applied Economics
Term
since 2026
Project identifier
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 543294515
The research group "Entangled Energies" investigates energies as polyfunctional fuels of cultural, political, social and economic development. At the center of our interest are debates around the extraction, circulation and use of energies, which are associated with profound transformations of environments, social structures and cultural policies. We examine both the challenges posed by these transformations and the approaches to overcoming them, with a specific focus on Eastern Europe and a comparative analysis of neighboring regions. Despite the immense importance of Eastern Europe as an area of energy production and energy transfer, but also as a trigger and arena of escalating energy conflicts, the region has so far played a marginal role in the energy humanities. The research group takes up these virulent debates, but sets new priorities that develop from three interlinked key questions. Firstly, we investigate competing narratives: which terms, topoi and concepts shape energy discourses? Secondly, we examine spatial orders: how do the extraction and circulation of energy and the (re)organization of resource spaces intertwine? Thirdly, we look at the actors: in which formal and informal networks do human and non-human actors shape energy environments? These complex questions can only be adequately addressed in an interdisciplinary context. In the research group, literary and cultural studies, political science, history, sociology and economics are therefore collaborating closely to establish a new research paradigm for Energy Humanities East.
DFG Programme
Research Units
