Elena Burgos Martinez
University Lecturer South and Southeast Asian Studies
- Name
- Dr. E.E. Burgos Martinez
- Telephone
- +31 71 527 5273
- e.e.burgos.martinez@hum.leidenuniv.nl
- ORCID iD
- 0000-0001-5939-7418
I am an environmental anthropologist and a political ecologist based at Leiden University's Institute for Area Studies: School of Asian Studies, where I coordinate and lecture in a variety of theoretical and methodological courses at BA, MA and PhD level, including courses focused on ecofeminism on islands in Asia and Oceania, the politics of decoloniality in academia, and environmental politics. My courses and research are transdisciplinary at all levels: from conceptual inception and methodological affinities to ethical considerations. Positionality and reflexivity are central to my research and teaching. I am available to supervise the work of Research Masters, Master students and PhD candidates, whose research focuses on maritime encounters in the Pacific, the Indian Ocean and the Atlantic, environmental colonialism, contemporary (non-positivist) notions of sustainability and toxicity, the political ecology of waste and crisis, and any ideas that offer critical and contextualised perspectives to environmental topics and problematic.
Research
For more than a decade, I have extensively researched in cross-regional, local and collaborative processes of environmental knowledge production and human-environment relations in multi-lingual, multi-religious and multi-cultural islands across Indonesia, the UK and Spain- through the lenses of critical research methods: such as positionality, storytelling, photo-voice, spot-observation (regulated by daily rhythms) and reflective participant observation. I have more specifically focused on the semantic expansion of local conceptions and practices of (un) sustainability and toxicity across seas in Northeastern Indonesia and the English Channel. The figure of the so-called ‘small island’ works as a method which challenges state-centric constructions of socioenvironmental identity and relations, at the same time as it helps re-read environmental problematic in historical continuity and beyond dichotomies of land and sea, human and hon-human, nature and society. More recently, I have conducted collaborative research on the politics of waste management and dependency networks within capitals in the Netherlands. My interest in waste as a figure that visibilises existing inequalities and legacies of environmental racism extends to the accumulation of plastic waste in maritime settings in Southeast Asia. Currently, my research aims to incorporate local oral (hi)stories and anthropological approaches to archival theory and methodologies to contribute to a fairer understanding of transoceanic and maritime relations that were and are defining for what we now call environmental history. I am interested in the archival journeys of 'invisible actors': human and inhuman.
I am also actively engaged in the re-conceptualising and re-theorising of formalised notions of relationality, place and space within fields like Island Studies, and the Environmental Social Sciences and Humanities.
Curriculum vitae
- BKO (Basiskwalificatie Onderwijs)- Leiden University (Netherlands)
- Fellow of the Higher Education Academy (Durham University, England)
- PhD in Environmental Anthropology, Durham University (in progress)
- PhD in Sociolinguistics (Edinburgh University, Scotland)
- MSc in Social Anthropology (Edinburgh University, Scotland)
- MSc in Education and Language (Edinburgh University, Scotland)
- MA in Pedagogy (Granada University, Spain)
- BSc in Geology (Granada University, Spain)
Teaching
- Political Ecology: Human-Environment Relations and Caring (BA)
- Politics in South and Southeast Asia (BA)
- Ecofeminism in Island Asia and Ocenia (MA and Res MA)
- PhD Seminar: the Politics of Decolonisation in Academia
University Lecturer South and Southeast Asian Studies
- Faculty of Humanities
- Leiden Institute for Area Studies
- SAS Indonesie
- Burgos Martinez E.E. (14 March 2024), Hoe een vulkaan de wetenschapper in mij veranderde. Leids Universitair Weekblad Mare.
- Burgos Martinez E.E. (2024), Containing the intertidal island: negotiating island onto-epistemological visibility and plurality, Political Geography 113: 103145.
- Vicherat Mattar D., Thrivikraman J. & Burgos Martinez E.E. (2023), Un-settling the frontiers of food waste in the Netherlands: infrastructural stories of food waste transformation in the Hague, Frontiers in Sustainability 4: 1259793.
- Nadarajah Y., Burgos Martinez E.E., Su P. & Grydehøj A. (2022), Critical reflexivity and decolonial methodology in islandstudies: interrogating the scholar within, Island Studies Journal 17(1): 3-25.
- Burgos Martinez E.E. (2021) Review of [Intertidal history in Island Southeast Asia: submerged genealogy & the legacy of coastal capture] by [Jennifer L. Gaynor]. Review of: Jennifer L. Gaynor (2016), Intertidal History in Island Southeast Asia: Submerged Genealogy & the Legacy of Coastal Capture. Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press. Bijdragen tot de taal-, land- en volkenkunde / Journal of the Humanities and Social Sciences of Southeast Asia 177(1): 141-143.
- Burgos Martinez E.E. (2021) Review of [Waves of knowing: a seascape epistemology] by [K.A. Ingersoll]. Review of: Ingersoll K.A. (2016), Waves of knowing: A seascape epistemology. Durham: Duke University Press. Island Studies Journal 16(1): 392-393.
- Burgos Martinez E.E. (2021), On storiation and what is washed ashore: The Anthropocene as big kahuna, Dialogues in Human Geography 11(3): 439-442.
- Burgos Martinez E.E., Ecoracism in times of Covid-19 rhetoric: an environmental humanities perspective. Environmental Humanities Centre: Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam. [blog entry].
- Burgos Martinez E.E. (2020), Is this a relapse of ‘The West and the rest’?. Leids Universitair Weekblad Mare.
- Burgos Martinez E.E., COVID-19’s Narratives of (In)Vulnerability: Islam, Water, and Success in Small Indonesian Islands. Leiden Islam Blog. Leiden: LUCIS. [blog entry].
- Burgos Martinez E.E. (2020), TOWARDS A COVID-19 LEXICON OF CONCEPTUAL OFF-SHOOTS: LOCKING SOCIALITY DOWN IN THE NETHERLANDS AND SPAIN, Allegralaboratory.net : .
- Burgos Martinez E.E. (2020), Theoretical Dancing, Liquidity and Positioning: (Re) institutionalising ‘Nature’. Hau Journal of Ethnographic Theory.
- Burgos Martinez E.E. (2019), Learning anthropology in transitory spaces: uncertain knowledge(s) as frictions in HE, Teaching Athropology 8(1): .
- Burgos Martinez E.E., Accent profiling, power imbalances and access to Higher Education: A case for the return of anthropology to schools. Teaching Anthropology. London: The Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and the Commonwealth. [blog entry].
- Sleeboom-Faulkner M., Simpson B., Burgos Martinez E.E. & McMurray J. (2017), The formalization of social-science research ethics How did we get there?, Hau Journal of Ethnographic Theory 7(1): 71-79.
- Burgos Martinez E.E. (2016), Our ice is vanishing. Sikuvut Nunquliqtuq. A history of Inuit, newcomers, and climate change, Social Anthropology 24(1): 134-135.
- Burgos Martinez E.E. (2015), Review of: Schielke Samuli (2012), The Perils of Joy: Contesting Mulid Festivals in Contemporary Egypt. New York: New York: Syracuse University Press. Allegralaboratory.net .
- Co-editor (editorial board)
- Associate Editor
- Member of the Editorial and Academic Board
- Co-coordinator for the Pre-University College Programme in Den Haag
- Reviewer
- Reviewer