EIGHTH COLOGNE WHALING MEETING
Cologne, Germany
Friday, 13 – Sunday, 15 November, 2009
 
The triennial Cologne Whaling Meetings are one of only two regular
international conferences on the cultural history of human-cetacean
relations, worldwide, from prehistoric times to the present day.
 
Presentations traditionally cover topics from mythology, literature, art,
archaeology, music, law, technology of whale products and whaling methods,
the history and maintenance of whaling collections and monuments, historical
strandings, early cetology, whaling history, personal recollections of
whaling veterans, to current whaling policy.
 
In the past, they have attracted between 60 and 80 participants from up to
13 countries. 
 
The program customarily starts on Friday evening with the traditional
„greasy gossip“, a casual warm-up reunion in a Cologne pub, where you can
meet old friends and make new ones from all over the whaling world.
 
Saturday will feature an all-day conference programme of eight
presentations, with coffee and lunch breaks in between. There will be a
Saturday night dinner (at participants’ own expense), followed by a concert
of whaling-related music.
 
Sunday morning will be devoted to four more presentations. The conference
will close between noon and 1:30 PM.
 
As usual, participants can expect to see a specially arranged exhibition.
Current plans aim at compiling a pioneering, ambitious exhibition on „Tales
of humans and whales as told by the Dieter Kuesgen collection of whaling
postcards“.
 
This year, speakers from seven European and overseas countries have
volunteered to give the following presentations:
 
1. Matthias Bode, Marburg, Germany: “Mediterranean cetacean lore and whale
use in Antiquity” 

2. Susan A. Lebo, PhD, Honolulu, Hawaii: “Photographic evidence of whale
bone architecture among Iñupiat communities of Arctic Alaska, 1880 – 1960”

3. Dr. Uwe Schnall, German Maritime Museum (retired): “Witches, sorcerers,
and whales. The marine monsters of old Norse literature”

4. Prof. Bernhard Stonehouse, Scott Polar Research Institute, Cambridge:
“Triumph and disaster: British whalers in Baffin Bay, 1817-1840”

5. Dinah Molloy Thompson, Scott Polar Research Institute, Cambridge:
“Whalers forecasting our climate"

6. Dale Chatwin, Brisbane, Australia: “’A Trade so Uncontrollably
Uncertain’. English whaling in the South Pacific, 1815-1860”

7. Thierry du Pasquier, Paris, France: “The last French involvements in
whaling, 1860s – 1960s”

8. Seiji Ohsumi, PhD, Taiji Whale Museum, Taiji, Japan: “History and present
status of dolphin fisheries in Japan”

9. Ole Sparenberg, University of Göttingen: “New research on German whaling
in the 1930s” 

10. Dale Vinnedge, Director, and past president of the Friends of the
National Maritime Museum Library, San Francisco, California: “The Onassis
connection to northern California whaling”

11. Dr. Rip Bulkeley, Exeter College, Oxford: “Cold War whaling: the origin
and early deployment of the SLAVA flotilla”

12. Dr. Joost Schokkenbroek, Dutch Maritime Museum, Amsterdam: “Moving a
whaling collection. The transfer of the Zuiderzeemuseum’s whaling artefacts
and books to the Dutch Maritime Museum”
 
Dinner talk: Nick Redman, Whales’ Bones Worldwide, London: “The whales’
bones of Germany”
 
After-dinner concert: Sigrid Alvestad, Bergen, Norway: Tunes on the
Hardanger fiddle.
 
The CONFERENCE FEE will be 100 Euros per person, regardless of the duration
of your participation, student status, personal, professional or
institutional affiliation.
 
The fee i.a. covers snacks and beverages during conference breaks, and
conference lunch on Saturday, as well as your conference package with name
badge, handouts, and a souvenir.
 
Not included in this fee is the optional buffet-style dinner on Saturday
night.
 
PLEASE NOTE THAT PARTICIPATION IS BY PERSONAL INVITATION ONLY!
 
If you are not already known to the convener, Klaus Barthelmess, you have to
apply for an invitiation, outlining your interest in the history in
human-cetacean relations, naming institutional affiliations & websites,
giving references, etc., in an email without attachments. The convener
reserves the right to refuse participation. Upon invitation, participants
hitherto unknown may be expected to remit the non-refundable conference fee
by bank transfer or Paypal (no checks, no credit cards). Upon receipt of
payment, you will be sent directions, list of conference hotels, etc. Thank
you for your understanding!
 
Cheers
 
Klaus Barthelmess
Cologne, Germany
barthval at t-online.de



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