Karin Priem is Professor Emerita at the Luxembourg Centre for Contemporary and Digital History. She is a former President of the German History of Education Research Association (2007鈥2011) and of the (2018颅鈥2022). Her work focuses on digital public history; history of education; visual and material history; the history of media-ecologies (currently with a focus on UNESCO); and the history of entrepreneurship and social-educational reform.
Karin is co-editor of the book series , and of . She serves as a member of the international advisory board of (Taylor & Francis) and corresponding international member of the at the 8xav福利导航 of Birmingham.
Karin Priem since her early career has won prestigious awards (, , and the ). She has curated exhibitions and was invited as tutor of international doctoral and summer schools. For many years, she has served as PI of two third-party funded projects at the 8xav福利导航 of Luxembourg entitled Fabricating Modern Societies: Industries of Reform as Educational Responses to Societal Changes (FAMOSO and FAMOSO-2, 2012鈥2018).
At the beginning of these projects stood a huge holding of approximately 2,400 glass plate negatives and positives archived at the Centre national de l鈥檃udiovisuel (CNA 鈥 National Audiovisual Centre). Based on this archival holding and by including more archival material, the project team developed research questions that focused on the social-educational reform initiatives launched by the Aci茅ries r茅unies de Burbach-Eich-Dudelange (ARBED 鈥 United Steelworks of Burbach-Eich-Dudelange) and on how the image of future workers as good citizens of an industrialized modern Luxembourg was established, promoted and communicated by modern technologies. The FAMOSO projects therefore move beyond traditional social histories of industrialisation, labour history, social work, social welfare and social hygiene. Instead, the projects elaborated on socio-cultural and body-sensorial technologies of modernity that were mediated by various modes of (re)presentation (including promotional brochures, popular magazines and visual media such as photography and film, as well as scientific practices of experimentation, display and visualisation). At the centre of these technologies were the human body, human-machine relationships, the shaping of modern subjects and their sensory interactions with the technosphere. The intellectual focus of FAMOSO and FAMOSO-2 is therefore the materialities, mechanisms, and interconnections of those technologies that gave birth to the 鈥渃omplex鈥 of modern life. Project results have been summarized in a and in an open access book entitled that appeared in 2019.
Since 2020 Karin Priem is coordinating a team that curates the . In this context she currently works on the history of the COVID-19 pandemic as a specific cultural ecology of memory making, archiving, and forgetting.