Prof. Roman Bartosch
English Department II
Gronewaldstrasse 2
D-50931 Cologne
Office: 1.104a
E-Mail: roman.bartosch@uni-koeln.de
Tel.: +49 (0)221/470 4642
Web: https://anglistik2.phil-fak.uni-koeln.de/en/personen/r-bartosch/r-bartosch
Short Biography
Short CV
2021
Director of the Interdisciplinary Research Centre for Education in the Humanities, University of Cologne
2020
Associate Professor, University of Cologne
2017-2019
Juniorprofessor/ Assistant Professor, University of Cologne
2016
Research Stay at the University of Bath (UK)
2014-2017
pro tempore Professorship Didaktik, University of Cologne
2009-2017
Junior Lecturer at the Department of English II at the University of Cologne
2011
PhD in English Studies, University of Duisburg-Essen
Reseach Focus
- Literature Pedagogy and Literatures and Cultures of the Anglophone World
- Education and the Environmental Humanities
- Inter- and Transcultural Studies
- Human-Animal Studies
- Sustainability and Resilience
- Inclusive Education
Current research projects
Just Futures? - An Interdisciplinary Approach to Cultural Climate Models (DFG/AHRC)
(in collaboration with the Universities of Leeds, Sheffield, and Duisburg-Essen)
The interdisciplinary project responds to calls for more humanities research on climate change by developing an innovative methodological approach to cultural models of climate futures. It focuses especially on the topic of intergenerational justice. The project group brings together literary studies, linguistics, science and technology studies and literature pedagogy to investigate how different texts – cultural forms such as literature, social media, and literature reception in educational contexts – move between seemingly neutral climate facts (“models of”) and normative social values (“models for”). The project is framed by interdisciplinary model theory, which conceives of models as representations of reality that reduce complexity and serve specific purposes. Its approach to climate models (1) understands qualitative cultural modelling of climate change as necessary complement to the dominant quantitative scientific climate models, and (2) analyses the intertwining of descriptive and normative components in climate debates. The closely related sub-projects examine debates of climate change and intergenerational justice in Anglophone dramas and essays (WP 1), in social media (WP 2) and in the reception and communication of literature in criticism and education (WP 3). The project’s key objectives are:
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to investigate how different kinds of texts engage in the cultural modelling of (un)just futures;
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develop an interdisciplinary approach to cultural climate models that will be of wide benefit to researchers.
Julia Hoydis (Cologne)
Roman Bartosch (Cologne)
Carolin Schwegler (Cologne)
Jens Martin Gurr (Duisburg-Essen)
David Higgins (Leeds)
Warren Pearce (Sheffield)
Further information: https://cultural-climate-models.org/
February 2023 - February 2026
ReaCh (Wissenschaftsforum zu Köln und Essen)
As co-speaker of the project group "Cultures of Climate" (Wissenschaftsforum zu Köln und Essen), I am developing a cross-cutting literacy project on climate change literature for young learners of diverse abilities. This includes building a cli-fi library and training modules for teachers as well as research on the selection and assessment of picture- and storybooks in the context of climate action and quality education. The project draws on prior work in the project group as well as results from a previous project, Climate Change Literacy, funded by the VolkswagenFoundation.
More info: Wissenschaftsforum zu Köln und Essen and Cultures of Climate project group
Vom Anthropozän erzählen – historische und narrative Kompetenzen in der Nachhaltigkeitsbildung
Seed funding of the University of Cologne
(with Professor Sebastian Barsch, History Education (PI), and Professor Wiebke Dannecker, German Literature Pedagogy)
The project investigates the effectiveness of pedagogic measures in the context of sustainability education in the field of German, English, and History Education. It will focus on the extent to which both historical and narrative competencies are necessary for learners to grapple with the concept of the Anthropocene and what the investigators are calling (deep-)time awareness. The project includes the development of teaching materials in close collaboration with teachers and schools as well as an explorative study on assessment and evaluation.
EHWell: The Environmental Humanities for Well-being
(in collaboration with the Universities of Nantes (PI), Birmingham, Florence, Leiden and Linnaeus)
The project wants to position EUniWell as a trailblazer for a European space of teaching in EH to foster the well-being and empowerment of students, citizens, and communities in a new climactic regime. It recognizes the centrality of shared curricula development through international collaboration as a pivot for change via research and practice. Specifically, it will develop a rotating field study summer school for in-depth engagements with transnational questions for a sustainable Europe conceptualised and conducted by involved Universities and local communities. It will be an integral part of a transnational EHWell teaching module.
Funded by EUniWell Seedfunding and Research Incubator Grant.
March 2022-February 2023: Mediating Socioecological Emergencies (lead: Linneaus University)
June 2023-February 2024: Across Nature and Culture - The City of Florence as a Case Study for Natural-Cultural Conservation and Preservation Issues (lead: University of Florence)
Extinction and the Environmental Humanities
The project investigates cultures of death and imaginaries as well as practices of dying in light of the existential threats of climate catastrophe and biodiversity loss and explores the pedagogic implications for a sustainability education in times of large-scale species extinction and the pre-trauma of run-away climate change.
Output (selection):
Research article: "Dying to Learn: Teaching Human-Animal Studies in an Age of Extinction". Multispecies Futures. New Approaches to Teaching Human-Animal Studies. Eds. Andreas Hübner, Micha Edlich and Maria Moss. Berlin: Neofelis, 2022.
Keynote presentation: “Teaching Animality in the Face of Extinction” (Teaching Human-Animal Studies, Leuphana University Lüneburg, 2020).
Conference presentation: “‘to die will be an awfully big adventure’? Death, Extinction, and the Limits of Competence Orientation” (Taboo Topics in Foreign Language Education, Würzburg University, 2020).
Lecture Seminar: “The Pandemic Imagination: Reading and Teaching Fictions of Crisis" (University of Cologne, Winter 2020)
Lecture Series (with Ute Planert): "a.r.t.e.s. moriendi" (as part of the a.r.t.e.s. Research Master programme) (University of Cologne, Summer 2021)
The project is associated with MESH, the University of Cologne's research hub for Multidisciplinary Environmental Studies in the Humanities.
"Diversitätsorientierte Literatur-, Kultur- und Sprachdidaktik" (dilikus)
(mit Prof Andreas Köpfer, Freiburg)
Die Reihe „Diversitätsorientierte Literatur-, Kultur- und Sprachdidaktik“ (Wissenschaftlicher Verlag Trier) stellt sowohl anwendungsbezogene Forschung der Schulentwicklung und Unterrichtsforschung in Zeiten erhöhter bzw. verstärkt wahrgenommener Heterogenität als auch für Grundlagenforschung in den Bereichen der Inter-/Transkulturalität vor, der Mehrsprachigkeit und einer Pädagogik der Vielfalt und Anerkennung, die sich dezidiert mit den Implikationen für und Möglichkeiten der fachdidaktischen Praxis auseinandersetzt.
Band 1: Inklusion und Nachhaltigkeit (Hg. Roman Bartosch und Andreas Köpfer).
Band 2: Language Awareness bei mehrsprachigen Kindern (Johanna Jördening).
Band 3: Towards Transformative Literature Pedagogy (Hg. Roman Bartosch).
Band 4: Inklusion und Deutsch als Zweitsprache als Querschnittsaufgabe in der Lehrer*innenbildung (Hg. Anna Grosshauser, Andreas Köpfer und Hanna Siegismund).
Band 5 (i.V.): Englisch ganz praktisch. Eine Ermutigung (Ulla Schäfer).
Past Projects
Climate Change Literacy
The project makes a necessary intervention within the rapidly expanding field of interdisciplinary climate change communication and against the background of science-centred literacy debates, which largely ignore the contribution of the humanities. It thus responds to urgent calls by scholars and policy-makers to address the challenge of climate change by paying attention to the complex embeddedness of climate change in individual and sociocultural contexts. Rather than offering ‘cli-fi’ book recommendations and reducing the function of literature either to a more pleasurable form of information transfer or to the affective dimension of evoking sympathy or concern, it develops a new notion of climate change literacy that is built on a reassessment of the cognitive, affective, and pedagogic potentials of literary writing. After laying the necessary theoretical groundwork, it moves to illustrate the specific contribution literary studies can make to an adequate understanding of and response to climate change through the analysis of a selection of popular contemporary climate novels. The project group consists of three scholars with expertise in interdisciplinary literary studies, cultural literacies, and education for sustainability.
(Volkswagen Stiftung Az.: 9A794)
Death Writ Large: Extinction and The Environmental Humanities
The project investigates cultures of death and imaginaries as well as practices of dying in light of the existential threats of climate catastrophe and biodiversity loss and explores the pedagogic implications for a sustainability education in times of large-scale species extinction and the pre-trauma of run-away climate change.
On Wellbeing and Resilience in Humanist Teacher Education: Literature; Pedagogy; and the Modelling of Mindful Futures (Erich Auerbach Institut)
The project launches an interdisciplinary research initiative on wellbeing and resilience by facilitating exchange between philological and pedagogical researchers in Germany and Canada. It draws on the potential of literary fiction to model future imaginaries and formulate moments of resistance that cater to wellbeing and resilience.