The Niels Bohr Professorship Lectures in Cultural Psychology
The Niels Bohr Professorship Lectures in Cultural Psychology series aims to highlight and develop new ideas in cultural psychology. They are the main annual event of the Centre for Cultural Psychology at Aalborg University, established in 2013 by the Danmarks Grundforskningsfond (Danish National Research Foundation).
Each year early to mid career cultural psychologists, who have demonstrated originality and productivity, are selected to give the lecture. And other cultural psychologists, from around the world are invited, to attend and comment on it.
The Kitchen Seminar
The “K-seminar” (“kitchen seminar”) is a “think tank” that has been continuously running through weekly face-to-face and videoconference meetings since 1997 (first at Clark University; since 2013 at Aalborg; and in Salerno from 2019). Its focus is on discussion of new or unfinished projects (research designs, drafts of publications, new ideas for research). It has created (through weekly deliveries of discussion materials directly into e-mail boxes) a dynamic international research community that counts more than 600 members worldwide. It operates on the basic principles of full equality of expression of constructive ideas independent of seniority or discipline. Its key restriction is the explicit avoidance of political discussions (of science, as well as of society). While these are important issues for sure, they also can divert scientists from concentration on research problems that need to be solved. The general rule is: everybody can come and go whenever one desires, so the focus that keeps people together is joint interest in the topic discussed.
The person, whose work is to be discussed on the following Wednesday, sends the materials to the list voluntary keeper (one’s own draft together with background readings) by the previous weekend. The list keeper distributes these on directly to all e-mail addresses in the K-Seminars List to all members.
The K-seminar event happens every Wednesday from 15 to 17 hours (CET Time). The time is selected to allow both the Americas and the Orient to take part via videoconference. The author of the materials under discussion gives a short (10 minutes or so) introduction that further specifies in which direction s/he wishes the discussion could go. It is assumed that the participants will have read the materials—in reality it may sometimes be quick reading, requiring reminders of the relevant details. The discussion then starts, with some specific features.
Email: gmarsico@unisa.it / pina.marsico@gmail.com