The The crowded and empty Arctic: Examining research practices, spatial imaginaries, and infrastructures in Kiruna, Sweden

We will provide a professionally translated abstract of the final version upon successful peer review, reflecting any revisions, if needed. We, as four foreign researchers with research commitments in Kiruna, Sweden, reflexively examine the imaginaries of Kiruna as either empty or crowded while prob...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Lychnos: Årsbok för idé- och lärdomshistoria
Main Authors: Klinger, Julie, Bennett, Mia, Adams, Ria-Maria, Armstrong, Eleanor
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:Swedish
Published: Lärdomshistoriska samfundet 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://tidskriftenlychnos.se/article/view/25085
https://doi.org/10.48202/25085
Description
Summary:We will provide a professionally translated abstract of the final version upon successful peer review, reflecting any revisions, if needed. We, as four foreign researchers with research commitments in Kiruna, Sweden, reflexively examine the imaginaries of Kiruna as either empty or crowded while problematizing the Arctic as a homogenous region. While our scholarly interests (mining, space, education, transport infrastructure) and disciplines are distinct, we reflect on how their convergence in the city indicates broader historical shifts in Arctic imaginaries and the political economies of research, which follow and shape climate geopolitics, development, and cultural practices. In the interstices of these currents, the Arctic – imagined as empty and remote from global metropoles – becomes crowded and connected through mobility to and from as well as within the Arctic, which shapes processes of knowledge production. We will provide a professionally translated abstract of the final version upon successful peer review, reflecting any revisions, if needed. We, as four foreign researchers with research commitments in Kiruna, Sweden, reflexively examine the imaginaries of Kiruna as either empty or crowded while problematizing the Arctic as a homogenous region. While our scholarly interests (mining, space, education, transport infrastructure) and disciplines are distinct, we reflect on how their convergence in the city indicates broader historical shifts in Arctic imaginaries and the political economies of research, which follow and shape climate geopolitics, development, and cultural practices. In the interstices of these currents, the Arctic – imagined as empty and remote from global metropoles – becomes crowded and connected through mobility to and from as well as within the Arctic, which shapes processes of knowledge production.