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Mar 15 2023 14:00-19:30

[南アジアセンター共催] 東京大学文化人類学セミナー/ 東文研セミナー(UTokyo Cultural Anthropology Seminar/ Tobunken Seminar)

南アジア研究センター(CSAS)

日時(Date):

2023年3月15日(水曜日)14:00-17:30/ March 15, 2023 (Wednesday) 14:00-17:30

場所(Venue):

オンライン/ 東京大学本郷キャンパス・東洋文化研究所大会議室(ハイフレックス)
Zoom/ Main Conference Room, Institute for Advanced Studies on Asia, The University of Tokyo

*対面、Zoomとも事前登録が必須となります。以下のフォームから、3月13日までのご登録をお願い致します。
*Registration is required for both in-person and Zoom participation; please register by March 13 using the form below.
https://forms.gle/auzCLY4sbiMHhYzz5

報告者(Speaker):

Dr. Mark Turin (The University of British Columbia)
“The Place for Indigenous Languages in Universities: Getting Beyond Territorial Acknowledgements”
Dr. Sara Shneiderman (The University of British Columbia)
“Restructuring Life: Conflict, Disaster, and Transformation in Nepal”

要旨(Abstract):

Dr. Mark Turin (The University of British Columbia)
“The Place for Indigenous Languages in Universities: Getting Beyond Territorial Acknowledgements”
In this talk, Dr. Turin offers a visually striking examination of several sites of colonial contestation and visible Indigeneity on the UBC campus in Vancouver, Canada, and explores the relevance of such interventions for universities more generally. The presenter outlines
the historical context of language oppression and revitalization, and reflects on the ongoing relevance of Indigenous languages in negotiating the relationship between First Nations and the various levels of Canadian government. Dr. Turin asks what it means to unsettle the
university and create more equitable, inclusive and welcoming spaces for Indigenous voices, languages and cultures on a college campus.

Dr. Sara Shneiderman (The University of British Columbia)
“Restructuring Life: Conflict, Disaster, and Transformation in Nepal”
Ten years of Maoist-state civil conflict. Seven new provinces within a restructured secular federal democratic republic. Two devastating earthquakes with over 400 aftershocks. A new constitution. Countless humanitarian and development initiatives. Citizens of Nepal have experienced all of this and more over the last quarter century. How do people actively construct and reconstruct life in the face of such radical, multidimensional change? In times of transition, how do we imagine and build the ideal structures—material, social, and political—that we aspire to live in? Drawing upon more than two decades of ethnographic engagement in Dolakha, Nepal, this presentation explores how people navigate such transformations by taking the audience on a photographic journey through elements of the built environment that have been visibly reshaped over the last two decades, such as houses, temples, and roads.

*対面での参加人数には制限がかかっております。先着順で対応し、制限人数を超えた場合、Zoomでの参加をお願いする形となります。
当日飛び込みでの対面参加は出来ません。
*The number of participants who can attend in person is limited. We will respond on a first-come, first-served basis, and those who apply after the number of applicants for in-person participation exceeds the limit will be asked to participate via Zoom.
In-person participation without prior registration is not available.

使用言語(Language) :

英語(English)

主催
東京大学文化人類学研究室
東洋文化研究所班研究「 南アジア北部における人類学的研究の再検討」「アジアにおける多言語状況と言語政策史の比較研究」

共催
東京大学南アジア研究センター
NIHUプロジェクト「環インド洋地域研究」京都大学拠点(KINDOWS)
科学研究費 基盤研究A「復興の比較研究─南アジアの事例から」(課題番号:19H00558)

Organized by:
Cultural Anthropology Department, The University of Tokyo
Regular Research Project “Reconsidering Anthropological Studies in the Northern South Asia” and “A Comparative Study on Multilingualism and History of Language Policy in Asia”, Institute for Advanced Studies on Asia, The University of Tokyo

Co-organized by:
Center for South Asian Studies, The University of Tokyo
Center for Indian Ocean World Studies at Kyoto University (KINDOWS), NIHU Indian Ocean World Studies Project
Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (A) “Comparative Study of Reconstruction: Cases from South Asia” (19H00558)

問い合わせ Contact: nawa[at]ioc.u-tokyo.ac.jp