Joana Dias Pereira
![Imagem de um perfil humano genérico](https://ihc.fcsh.unl.pt/wp-content/uploads/2017/08/anonimo.jpg)
Economia, Sociedade, Património e Inovação
Contacto:
joana.dp@gmail.com
Página pessoal
Biografia
Graduated in History, variant Archaeology (2000), post-graduated in Documental Sciences (2007), defended a master’s (2008) and a PhD in Contemporary History (2013).
Among the issues raised in her research, the role of civil society in the construction of contemporary society stands out. Currently, she examines the evolution of the repertoire of institutionalized collective action looking at the long lasting institutions during contemporary period, in the form of mutual-aid and cooperative societies. Attempting to its internal functioning and institutional details, she wants to recognize and understand their efficiency dealing with the modern ‘social dilemmas’. With this aim, she makes use of new methods tested by the Institutions for Collective Action Research Team in the University of Utrecht, namely comparison between case studies with institutional success.
Integrating global studies, she’s also interested in the dissemination of this institutional designs across the areas of historical Portuguese influence and the transfers and entanglements revealed in the transnational ICA historical evolution.
She has works in the field of documental sciences, particularly in the identification and safeguard of the institutions for collective action historical archives. In these projects she uses a specific methodology, adjusting ISAD (G) to NGO’s archives, and the free software ICA-Atom to assure archival description and on-line disposal. She has been also partnering with public schools, bringing them closer to academy and science, within the IHC’s History Lab and LisbonLab.
Áreas de Investigação
- História Social
- História institucional
- Ciência cidadã
Publicações destacadas
- Freire, Dulce & Joana Dias Pereira, “Consumer Co-operatives in Portugal: Debates and Experiences from the Nineteenth to the Twentieth Century,” in A Global History of Consumer Co-operation since 1850 – Movements and Businesses, editado por Mary Hilson, Silke Neunsinger e Greg Patmore, 296–325. Leiden: Brill, 2017. [link]
- Pereira, Joana Dias, Maria Alice Samara & Paula Godinho (Coords.). Espaços, redes e sociabilidades. Cultura e política no associativismo contemporâneo [Documento Electrónico]. Lisboa: Instituto de História Contemporânea da Universidade Nova de Lisboa, 2016. [PDF]
- Pereira, Joana Dias. “O Ciclo de agitação social global de 1917-1920,” Ler História 66 (2014): 44-55. [PDF]
- Pereira, Joana Vidal de Azevedo Dias. “Espaços industriais e comunidades operárias: o caso de estudo português e a tradição historiográfica europeia,” Revista Brasileira de História 32 (2012): 27-44. [PDF]
Projectos principais
- Membro do projecto “L3 – Lisboa Laboratório Comum de Aprendizagem” — Coordenado por Maria Fernanda Rollo e Maria Inês Queiroz e financiado pela Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian. 2015-2018 [link]
- Investigadora no projecto “A Nova República do Pós-Guerra (1919-1926). O caso português em perspectiva comparada na Europa do Sul” — Coordenado por Fernando Rosas e financiado pela Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia. 2009-2012 [PTDC/HIS-HIS/102287/2008]
- Coordenadora do projecto “Organization of World Federation of Democratic Youth Historic Files‘” — Financiado pela UNESCO – Participation Programme. 2004-2006 [link]
Pesquisa
Agenda
julho, 2024
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![Illustrative banner for the lecture “Rice: ersatz, cultural artifact, object of knowledge, unruly crop”. With Lavinia Maddaluno, from Università Ca’ Foscari , IHC Visting Scholar 2024. The banner includes a photo of Lavinia Maddaluno.](https://ihc.fcsh.unl.pt/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/2024-07-16_Lavinia-Maddaluno_1200x500.jpg)
Detalhes do Evento
Conferência com a IHC Visiting Scholar Lavinia Maddaluno, sobre as respostas socioeconómicas, culturais, científicas, tecnológicas e médicas à expansão da cultura do arroz no Norte de
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Detalhes do Evento
Conferência com a IHC Visiting Scholar Lavinia Maddaluno, sobre as respostas socioeconómicas, culturais, científicas, tecnológicas e médicas à expansão da cultura do arroz no Norte de Itália.
Rice: ersatz, cultural artifact, object of knowledge, unruly crop
A dietary mainstay in non-European societies and a cornerstone of dishes like Northern Italian risotto, rice has diverse culinary significance. However, the timing of its introduction to Northern Italy remains unclear. Examining this event offers insights into the process of integrating new crops into both diet and cultural imagination. This talk is about the socio-economic, cultural, scientific, technological, and medical responses to the expansion of rice cultivation in northern Italy between the sixteenth and the eighteenth/early nineteenth centuries. Bringing together the history of knowledge and environmental history, in this talk I will reflect on how rice was appropriated by several actors, and on how these appropriations were intertwined with perceptions and constructions of the landscape and material environment. By interlacing narratives of rice cultivation and of the landscapes rice forms, alongside discussions of infrastructural development and knowledge systems, I will also delineate the progression of interactions between humans and their environments, as well as the evolution of water management practices, scientific advancements, medical understandings, and political-economic ideologies across different historical periods. Additionally, the talk will highlight how resources were conceptualized in the early modern period, reconnecting to contemporary debates on the Anthropocene and on the agency of non-humans.
About IHC’s 2024 Visiting Scholar:
Lavinia Maddaluno is Assistant Professor in early modern history at the Department of Humanities at Ca’ Foscari, Venice, working on David Gentilcore’s ERC project The Water Cultures of Italy 1500-1900. She is a historian of science interested in exploring the nexus between humans, nature and economy in early modern Europe. Lavinia has just completed her first monograph Science and political Economy in Enlightenment Milan (1760-1805), forthcoming with the Voltaire Foundation in autumn 2024. She is currently editing a book on rice in the Mediterranean with Rachele Scuro and a special issue on Water Knowledge with Giacomo Savani and Davide Martino. Lavinia has held multiple fellowships since the end of her PhD (Cambridge UK, 2018), from a Rome Fellowship at the British School at Rome, to a Max Weber Fellowship at the EUI and a joint Warburg/I Tatti Fellowship in the History of Science. More recently, she has been Fellow at the Fondation Maison des Sciences de l’Homme and the Fondazione Einaudi, working on a new project on rice-related knowledge networks between France and Italy in the Enlightenment.
Attendance is free.
Tempo
(Terça-feira) 10:30 am - 12:30 pm
Organizador
Instituto de História Contemporânea — Faculdade de Ciências Sociais e Humanas da Universidade NOVA de Lisboacomunicacao.ihc@fcsh.unl.pt Avenida de Berna, 26C — 1069-061 Lisboa
Notícias
Terceira Edição da IHC Summer School em Évora
Jul 15, 2024
A IHC Summer School vai regressar para a sua terceira edição
Lavinia Maddaluno é a IHC Visiting Scholar 2024
Jul 11, 2024
A historiadora de ciência vai ser a quarta IHC Visiting Scholar
Quintino Lopes visita Salvador da Bahia
Jul 9, 2024
Quintino Lopes visitou o edifício onde funcionou o antigo Laboratório de Fonética da Universidade Federal da Bahia