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A Lost Mitten and Other Stories

The project, Lost Mitten and Other Stories, examines a new sense of neighbour relations that transpires as a result of growing mobility. The project focuses on the ways in which these new neighbour relations or a sense of neighbourliness emerge from stories related to personal items of significance, and the way in which these stories are perceived. Lost Mitten and Other Stories is an interdisciplinary project that seeks collaboration between art and science. The project is carried out in eastern Finland.

The main concern of the project is to find out how the items of personal significance and the stories related to them help establish dialogue and, consequently, new kinds of mobile and cross-border neighbour relations and a sense of neighbourliness. Furthermore, the purpose is to explore how dialogic interaction helps promote, for example, the construction of cultural citizenship and create new, migrating, deterritorial cultural heritages. The items of personal significance as well as the stories relating to them are examined through a materialistic, cultural, linguistic, and narrative point of view and are, additionally, exhibited through artistic, interactive displays. The items of personal significance are understood as a poetic and political medium of various dialogues between past and present, between immigrants and natives, between different generations, between mobile and sedentary people.

The approach and the subject matter of the project are topical: immigration, different mobilities, the encounter of languages and cultures, and thereby, emerging new neighbour relations and a sense of neighbourliness. The multidisciplinary approach, combining different methods of science and art, enables new ways of examining the issue of neighbour relations and a sense of neighbourliness.

The project combines science and art innovatively and, therefore, generates new methods to investigate the current issues of different mobilities, language and cultural encounters, and challenges arising from new neighbour relations.

The project is funded by the Kone Foundation.

Abraham Woubie Zewoudie (abraham.zewoudie@uef.fi)

Abraham Woubie completed his Bachelor and Master of Science Degrees in Computer Science with very great distinctions from Arba Minch and Addis Ababa Universities, respectively. He completed his PhD on September 2017 in Speech Signal Processing from the Technical University of Catalonia in Barcelona, Spain. His research interests include speech signal processing, machine learning and deep reinforcement learning.

Adam Kositsky (adam.kositsky@uef.fi)

Research interests:

  • Structure and function of soft tissues in health and disease
  • Neuromusculoskeletal consequences to tendon harvesting for orthopaedic procedures
  • Development of new methodology for in vivo measurement of human soft tissue properties
  • Comparative anatomy and biomechanics