Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences (KNAW)
Location: Leiden
Max hours per week: 38,00
Max salary: 3.539
Duration of agreement: 1 + 3 years
Apply until: 15 August 2024
Information
The Royal Netherlands Institute for Southeast Asian and Caribbean Studies (KITLV) is searching for the research project TASTE for:
Three PhD researchers (1.0 fte)
The project Trajectories of Taste: An Analytical Framework of Culinary Change after Migration (), a European Research Council-funded Consolidator Grant (ERC CoG) led by Prof. Tom Hoogervorst and hosted by the KITLV in Leiden, is looking for three PhD researchers. The project investigates how culinary traditions change after migration. What factors contribute to new eating patterns? What is the role of traditions, memories, cultural contact and emotion? How do economic, socio-cultural and ecological considerations interact? What is taste and on which levels does it operate? Where do ideas about what food “should” taste like come from?
We address these questions by focusing on and collaborating with communities in Suriname, Sri Lanka, or South Africa with origins in the Indonesian archipelago. As such, the project also studies the role of colonial-era displacement, muted histories, and survival strategies through food. Each of the three PhD candidates will explore the broad issue of culinary change within the context of one specific destination country (Suriname, Sri Lanka, or South Africa).
What will you do?
Within the research project, you will work on your PhD research. You will address the project’s main research question of how culinary traditions change after migration, focusing on the transformations of “Indonesian” food practices, dishes, and recipes in the “diaspora”. Your project contains a historical factor and will also involve extensive fieldwork (a total of six months) in your chosen destination country. During this time, you will collaborate with local consultants by conducting semi-structured interviews, documenting oral histories, engaging in participant observation, collecting relevant written and audiovisual material, and/or employing other methods in which you are experienced (as outlined in your research proposal).
You will also collaborate within a team context, which includes three PhD candidates, a Principal Investigator, and a Postdoctoral Researcher. This collaboration will involve short fieldwork trips and the co-organization of academic and public events, both in the destination countries and in the Netherlands.
What do we offer?
You will work full-time (or at 0,8 fte) at the Royal Netherlands Institute for Southeast Asian and Caribbean Studies (KITLV), an international and transdisciplinary institute in Leiden, the Netherlands. Here, you will participate in the institute’s dynamic academic activities. We believe in long-term collaborations between people from diverse disciplinary and geographical backgrounds. We also value the important research and other work conducted by local universities, cultural organizations, and heritage organizations in Southeast Asia and the Caribbean. We hope you will become a long-term partner in our academic network.
Specifications
Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences (KNAW)
Requirements
What will you bring to the project?
Conditions of employment
Fixed-term contract: 1 year + 3 years.
Terms of employment
Upon commencement of employment, the doctoral candidate will be placed in salary scale P-0 €2,770 for the duration of 12 months. In years 2, 3 and 4, the salary of a PhD candidate increases to ultimately €3,539 (these are fixed amounts that can only be adjusted as a result of a CLA increase). This is exclusive of 8% vacation pay, 8.3% year-end bonus, travel allowance, internet and home working allowance and pension accrual with the ABP.
The KNAW offers its staff an excellent package of secondary benefits. A package that meets the different needs of employees depending on their stage of life, lifestyle or career ambitions. For example, by working an extra two hours a week, it is possible to increase the number of days off from 29 to 41 days a year (with full-time employment).
For a complete overview of the terms of employment, please refer to the web page: .
Applying for a Certificate of Good Conduct can be part of the employment procedure.
Diversity & Inclusion
The KNAW considers a working environment in which everyone feels welcome and appreciated of great importance. A working environment in which attention is paid to individual quality and where development opportunities are paramount. Together we strive for an inclusive culture in which we embrace differences. We would therefore like to invite candidates who want to contribute to this through their background and experience. In the event of equal suitability, preference will be given to the candidate who thus enhances diversity within the Academy.
We will not respond to any supplier enquiries based on this job advertisement.
Employer
KITLV/KNAW
About the KITLV
The Royal Netherlands Institute of Southeast Asian and Caribbean Studies (KITLV-KNAW) is an Academy research institute. The KITLV conducts interdisciplinary and comparative historical research. Its research focus is Southeast Asia and the Caribbean, with an emphasis on Indonesia and the ‘Dutch’ Caribbean. It is particularly interested in such issues as state formation, violence and citizenship, processes of mobility and the formation of ethnic and national identity. KITLV is active in the humanities, social sciences and comparative area studies and works closely with Leiden University.
Department
Project ERC TASTE
The project Trajectories of Taste: An Analytical Framework of Culinary Change after Migration (TASTE), a European Research Council-funded Consolidator Grant (ERC CoG) led by Prof. Tom Hoogervorst and hosted by the KITLV in Leiden, is looking for three PhD researchers. The project investigates how culinary traditions change after migration. What factors contribute to new eating patterns? What is the role of traditions, memories, cultural contact and emotion? How do economic, socio-cultural and ecological considerations interact? What is taste and on which levels does it operate? Where do ideas about what food “should” taste like come from?
We address these questions by focusing on and collaborating with communities in Suriname, Sri Lanka, or South Africa with origins in the Indonesian archipelago. As such, the project also studies the role of colonial-era displacement, muted histories, and survival strategies through food. Each of the three PhD candidates will explore the broad issue of culinary change within the context of one specific destination country (Suriname, Sri Lanka, or South Africa).