Kirstie Jamieson
Kirstie Jamieson

Dr Kirstie Jamieson

Lecturer T&S

Biography

I am a researcher and lecturer in heritage and exhibition design. My disciplinary focus brings together creative methods, critical heritage studies and participatory design. I am Public Engagement Lead for the School of Arts and Creative Industries.

My work is concerned with issues of representation, equality and diversity in the public realm. I adopt inclusive participatory methods in my research with the aim of transcending language barriers and extending the capacity of community agency within research. Most recent publications include 鈥淣egotiating privileged networks and exclusive mobilities: the case for a Deaf festival in Scotland鈥檚 festival city鈥 (2019) in Annals of Leisure Research, 鈥淓xploring Deaf Heritage Futures through critical design and 鈥榩ublic things鈥欌 (2020) in the International Journal of Heritage Studies, and 鈥淭he Deaf Heritage Collective: Collaboration with Critical Intent鈥 (2021) in a special issue of the Journal of Ethnology and Folkloristics.

I am currently working with curators and deaf researchers on the first co-produced national Deaf Heritage Archive at the National Library of Scotland. I am also leading a project that revisits the overlooked work on disability by photographer Franki Raffles (1955-1994). The team is working with children and adults with learning disabilities to curate Raffles' ground-breaking work We Can Take Pictures 1983-84.

I am interested in the inclusive capacity of Public Engagement practices and public pedagogy, especially when paired with creative participatory methods. I am a fellow of the Higher Education Academy and lead MA/MFA modules in Research as Critical Practice, Heritage Interpretation Design and Research Portfolio for Creative Practice.

I am also part of a team developing Public Engagement workshops that bring together feminist interpretation design and co-design methods in the memorialisation of Scotland鈥檚 accused witches. The project invites girls and women of all ages to design and debate the women behind the witchcraft trials in Scotland. Our aim is to create spaces where girls and women can collaboratively design and think about the witch trials in Scotland, and the significance of the pardon granted by the Scottish Government (on the 8th March 2022).

I have developed and co-led Design MA/MFA鈥檚 and supervised five PhD projects to completion. I welcome applications from prospective PhD students in the areas of Critical Heritage, Inclusive Museums, Disability and Heritage , Creative Placemaking and inclusive design methods.

Research Areas

News

Events

Esteem

Advisory panels and expert committees or witness

  • National Partnership For Culture (Scottish Gov)
  • Consultancy: National Lottery Heritage Project

 

Editorial Activity

  • Reviewer Space and Culture

 

Grant Reviewer

  • AHRC Reviewer

 

Invited Speaker

  • 鈥楧esigning Unesco Culture: Internationalism and The Global Imagination鈥 INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON CONTEMPORARY CULTURAL STUDIES

 

Public/Community Engagement

  • Collaboratively Curating the Deaf Museum at Deaf Youth Theatre
  • Edinburgh Science Festival: Festival Frontiers
  • Edinburgh Festival Fringe: Dinner Party Debate
  • Edinburgh Zoo as Heritage Space
  • To Absent Friends Festival
  • Festival of Creative Industries Off Campus Programme
  • Everyday Heritage Exhibition at Edinburgh World Heritage Trust
  • Hidden Edinburgh: Journey Through Stone
  • Phantom Entomologist Exhibition
  • Bound For Glory Exhibition

 

Reviewing

  • Reviewer for Area (Royal Geographical 麻豆社区)
  • REVIEWER FOR URBAN GEOGRAPHY (Taylor Francis)
  • REVIEWER FOR URBAN STUDIES (Sage Publications)
  • REVIEWER FOR SPACE AND CULTURE (Sage Publications)

 

Date


32 results

Composing Festival Timescapes

Presentation / Conference Contribution
Jamieson, K. (2016, April)
Composing Festival Timescapes. Paper presented at Association of American Geographers Annual Meeting, Boston
Composing Festival Timescapes is as the title suggests, a way of approaching the city as a space of composition. The paper develops the subject of urban atmosphere and affecti...

Playfully Public: Edinburgh Botanical Gardens as Utopian Spectacle and Neoliberal Project

Presentation / Conference Contribution
Jamieson, K. (2015, June)
Playfully Public: Edinburgh Botanical Gardens as Utopian Spectacle and Neoliberal Project. Paper presented at Conference of European Association of Social Anthropologists, University of Zagreb, Croatia
Edinburgh exists as the pre-eminent city of ambient festival space boasting as it does a calendar of conspicuous cosmopolitan public life that announces the arrival of a self-...

Journal of Design Practice and Research, Volume 3, 2014

Book
Lambert, I., Firth, R., MacLeod, M., Forster, S., Innes, M., Winton, E., 鈥itley, W. (2014)
Journal of Design Practice and Research, Volume 3, 2014. 麻豆社区
Editorial -Welcome to the third issue of the Journal for Design Practice & Research. The last 18 months has been an extremely busy time for us. We have continued to grow as a ...

Tracing festival imaginaries: Between affective urban idioms and administrative assemblages

Journal Article
Jamieson, K. (2014)
Tracing festival imaginaries: Between affective urban idioms and administrative assemblages. International Journal of Cultural Studies, 17(3), 293-303. https://doi.org/10.1177/1367877913487550
This article offers a way of understanding not only Festival Cities, but also the Creative City paradigm and to some extent the practices employed through the convergence of c...

Revelling in Policy: viral Urban Utopias

Presentation / Conference Contribution
Jamieson, K. (2011, November)
Revelling in Policy: viral Urban Utopias. Paper presented at Spaces and Flows: An International Conference on Urban and ExtraUrban Studies, Monash University, Prato
This paper aims to map the prevailing virality of the Creative City paradigm. In so doing, it identifies a highly mobile normative mode of cultural reflexivity within a global...

Journal of Design Practice and Research Volume 1. 2011

Journal Article
Lambert, I., MacLeod, M., Firth, R., Winton, E., Dean, M., Innes, M., 鈥itley, W. (2011)
Journal of Design Practice and Research Volume 1. 2011. Journal of Design Practice and Research, 1, 1-40
What is design and what are designers? Good design can change lives and improve services within the public, private and third sectors. Designers are creative problem solvers w...

Internationalist Urban Imaginaries and 鈥楥reative鈥 Global Geographies

Presentation / Conference Contribution
Jamieson, K. (2011, June)
Internationalist Urban Imaginaries and 鈥楥reative鈥 Global Geographies. Paper presented at EURA 2011 Conference: Cities without Limits, Copenhagen
Predicated on the spatial dialectic of the universal and the local, the internationalist paradigm of the twentieth century implicated designers in communicating the materialit...

Mobile Techno-cosmopolitanism: Between Cultural and Administrative Imaginaries

Presentation / Conference Contribution
Jamieson, K. (2011, June)
Mobile Techno-cosmopolitanism: Between Cultural and Administrative Imaginaries. Paper presented at EURA 2011 Conference: Cities without Limits, Copenhagen
Despite the economic downturn, the highly mobile pseudo-policy first produced by Comedia, the European City of Culture and The Creative City paradigm continues to recast the c...

Designing Unesco Culture: Internationalism and the Global Imagination

Presentation / Conference Contribution
Jamieson, K. (2010, June)
Designing Unesco Culture: Internationalism and the Global Imagination. Paper presented at 8th Crossroads in Cultural Studies Conference (Association of Cultural Studies), Hong Kong
Amidst the rise of sensory rather than creative discourses that seek to categorise and re-evaluate cultural encounters with and within the city, it is timely to explore how fr...

Edinburgh: the festival gaze and its boundaries

Journal Article
Jamieson, K. (2004)
Edinburgh: the festival gaze and its boundaries. Space and Culture, 7(1), 64-75. https://doi.org/10.1177/1206331203256853
This article examines the temporal and spatial boundaries of Edinburgh鈥檚 festival identity. It unravels Edinburgh鈥檚 festivals in terms of the spaces and identities they produc...

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