Apologies, but no results were found.
Natalie Forssman
(She, Her, Hers)Assistant Professor of Teaching
Anthropology
Office: ART 249Office Hours: Please reach out to me via email for this term’s office hours.
Email: natalie.forssman@ubc.ca

Research Summary
Feminist science and technology studies; environmental humanities; multispecies anthropology; science communication; epistemic cultures; ethnography; embodiment and materiality; participatory methods; educational leadership
Courses & Teaching
Cultural anthropology; environmental humanities; science and technology studies; communication, writing, and research methods.
Biography
I hold a PhD in Communication and Science Studies from the University of California, San Diego, where I researched histories and practices of knowledge production, particularly the roles of objects, mediational technologies, landscapes, and human and nonhuman bodies in constructing environmental knowledges.
I conducted collaborative research as part of Aarhus University Research on the Anthropocene, a transdisciplinary research project which brought anthropology, environmental history, biodiversity and conservation, and arts practice methods into contact to understand human-altered landscapes. A central object of study was an abandoned and “re-wilded” former lignite mine in Western Denmark.
Before joining CCGS, I taught communication at UBC Okanagan’s School of Engineering, with a focus on equity, justice, participatory methods, and interdisciplinarity in engineering research, design, and professional practice. I helped to design and manage the MURPH program to enhance undergraduate research experiences at UBC Okanagan, was involved in the integration and development of indigenization curriculum, and was a key member in launching a review of communication teaching in the School of Engineering.
I encourage students from programs and disciplines both within and beyond Anthropology to reach out to me and take my classes. I am interested in collaborations across departments and the university that explore the politics and practices of interdisciplinarity in research and pedagogy.
Degrees
PhD, Communication and Science Studies, University of California, San Diego
MA, Communication, University of California, San Diego
BA, Philosophy, University of British Columbia
Selected Publications & Presentations
Root-Bernstein, M., Bertoni, F., Forssman, N., & Overstreet, K. (2022). Becoming disturbed in disturbing landscapes: Methodology and epistemology in Anthropocene wastelands. In N. Bubandt, A.O. Andersen, & R. Cypher (Eds.), Rubber boots methods for the Anthropocene: Curiosity, collaboration, and critical description in the study of co-species worlds. University of Minnesota Press.
Eikenaar, J., Eisenstein, A., Forssman, N., Webb, G., & Patterson, L. (2022). Indigenous reconciliation in the engineering curriculum: The Indigenous Community Consultation Project (ICCP). International Society for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning Conference: At the Intersections of SoTL: Transfer and Transfomation, Diversity and Inclusivity, Kelowna, BC.
Eikenaar, J., Forssman, N., Webb, G., Patterson, L., & Eisenstein, A. (2022). Preparing engineering students for their professional obligations for meaningful engagement with Indigenous communities in Canada. Canadian Engineering Education Association Conference: Transforming Learners to Transform Our World, Toronto, On.
Forssman, N., & Eikenaar, J. (2019). Reflecting on an initiative to Indigenize the engineering curriculum. UBC Okanagan Experience Learning Conference, Kelowna, B.C
Forssman, N., & Root-Bernstein, M. (2018). Landscapes of anticipation of the other: Ethno-ethology in a deer hunting landscape. Journal of Ethnobiology 38(1), 71-87.
Selected Grants & Awards
Aspire-2040 (ALT-2040) Learning Transformations Fund. Project team member for “Cultivating Environmental Attention: Course Development for Accessible Environmental Humanities Field Methodologies,” 2022-2023.
UBC Research and Innovation’s Program for Undergraduate Research Experience (PURE). Management team member for a 2-year funded project, “Multidisciplinary Undergraduate Research Projects in Health (MURPH),” 2019-2021.