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Wednesday, December 26, 2012

Fw: H-ASIA: CFP Paradigmatic Conflict & Crisis: Grad Conf on Mideast, South Asia and Africa, Columbia Univ, New York [Feb 28-Mar 1 2013]

----- Original Message -----
From: "Frank Conlon" <conlon@U.WASHINGTON.EDU>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Thursday, December 27, 2012 3:28 AM
Subject: H-ASIA: CFP Paradigmatic Conflict & Crisis: Grad Conf on Mideast,
South Asia and Africa, Columbia Univ, New York [Feb 28-Mar 1 2013]


> H-ASIA
> December 26, 2012
>
> Call for Papers: Paradigmatic Conflict and Crisis: A Graduate Conference
> on the Middle East, South Asia, and Africa, New York,
> Columbia University, [February 28-March 1, 2013]
>
> *******************************************************************
> Ed. note: The original posters did not include the dates of this
> conference anywhee in the text of the announcement--consultation of
> the referenced site indicates the dates to be February 28 and March
> 1, 2013. FFC
> ---------------------------------------------------------------------
> From: H-Net Announcements <announce@MAIL.H-NET.MSU.EDU>
>
> CFP - Paradigmatic Conflict and Crisis: A Graduate Conference on the
> Middle East, South Asia, and Africa
>
> Location: New York, United States
> Call for Papers Date: 2013-01-15 (in 20 days)
> Date Submitted: 2012-12-26
> Announcement ID: 199809
>
> The annual Graduate Student Conference at Columbia University's Department
> of Middle Eastern South Asian and African Studies (MESAAS) is soliciting
> papers exploring the debates and spaces in which paradigms undergo crisis
> and conflict, or challenge the dominant theoretical positions underpinning
> its very constitution. Papers can focus on any topic within the humanities
> and social sciences.
> The concept of paradigm opens broad possibilities for the analysis of
> social and intellectual phenomena across diverse traditions and time
> periods. Paradigm is commonly but not exclusively viewed as a system of
> knowledge with a particular power structure, within which a set of beliefs
> or values plays a dominant and defining role. Studying paradigms may
> consist of analyzing major social transformations to reveal the
> paradigmatic tensions and crises underlying them, or employing paradigms
> as tools to clarify socio-political events. Furthermore, the very notion
> of paradigm can be contested and transformed.
>
> Papers may relate to but need not be bound by the following themes:
>
> -Paradigm as a Comparative Tool: How do paradigmatic elements within
> intellectual traditions allow for historical and cross-cultural
> comparative work?
>
> -Conflict In and Across Paradigms: How is conflict dealt with in a
> paradigm?
>
> -Paradigm Shifts: When and how do paradigms become outdated?
>
> -Critical Theory as Anti-Paradigmatic: How can critical theory challenge
> established paradigms or paradigm shifts?
>
> -Paradigmatic Technology: How does the adoption of a given technology
> challenge, strengthen, or influence the implementation or development of
> different paradigms?
>
> Students interested in presenting a 20-minute paper should submit a
> 300-word abstract and one-page CV to our website by January 15th.
>
> Panel submissions are encouraged.
>
> Exceptional papers will be collected into a digital volume under the
> conference title.
>
> For all inquiries, contact: info@mesaasgradconference.org
>
>
> MESAAS Graduate Conference
> Columbia University in the City of New York
> 401 Knox Hall
> 606 West 122nd St.
> New York, NY 10027
> Email: info@mesaasgradconference.org
> Visit the website at http://www.mesaasgradconference.org
>
>
>
>
> H-Net reproduces announcements that have been submitted to us as a free
> service to the academic community. If you are interested in an
> announcement listed here, please contact the organizers or patrons
> directly. Though we strive to provide accurate information, H-Net (and
> H-ASIA)cannot accept responsibility for the text of announcements
> appearing in this service.
>
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> <webstaff@mail.h-net.msu.edu>.
>
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> *********************************************************************
>
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Fw: H-ASIA: CFA Asian Early Modernities: Empires, Bureaucrats, Confessions, Borders, Merchants, Workshop Istanbul Oct 2-5, 2013

----- Original Message -----
From: "Frank Conlon" <conlon@U.WASHINGTON.EDU>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Thursday, December 27, 2012 2:35 AM
Subject: H-ASIA: CFA Asian Early Modernities: Empires, Bureaucrats,
Confessions, Borders, Merchants, Workshop Istanbul Oct 2-5, 2013


> H-ASIA
> December 26, 2012
>
> Call for Applications: "Asian Early Modernities: Empires, Bureaucrats,
> Confessions, Borders, Merchants," workshop part of the "Conference on
> Inter-Asian Connections IV," organized by the SSRC in Istanbul on October
> 2-5, 2013.
> *****************************************************************
> From: I Kaya Sahin <iksahin@yahoo.com>
>
> Dear colleagues,
>
> I am organizing, together with Hendrik Spruyt (Northwestern/Political
> Science), a workshop called "Asian Early Modernities: Empires,
> Bureaucrats, Confessions, Borders, Merchants." The workshop will be
> part of the "Conference on Inter-Asian Connections IV," organized by the
> SSRC in Istanbul on October 2-5, 2013. Applications for presentations have
> to be submitted via the SSRC website, and the deadline is February 11,
> 2013.
>
> As workshop organizers, we are eager to receive applications
> from a large pool of scholars whose work deals with comparative imperial
> history in the early modern period. We hope you will consider joining us
> in Istanbul.
>
> Conference website:
>
> http://www.ssrc.org/programs/pages/interasia-program/conference-on-inter-asian-connections-iv-istanbul-october-2-5-2013/
>
> Link for our workshop:
>
> http://www.ssrc.org/programs/pages/interasia-program/inter-asian-
> connections-iv-workshop-asian-early-modernities-empires-bureaucrats-
> confessions-borders-merchants/
>
> The site will begin accepting online applications in early
> January 2013.
>
> Thank you for your help, and best
> regards,
>
> Kaya Sahin
> Indiana University
> ******************************************************************
> To post to H-ASIA simply send your message to:
> <H-ASIA@h-net.msu.edu>
> For holidays or short absences send post to:
> <listserv@h-net.msu.edu> with message:
> SET H-ASIA NOMAIL
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Fw: H-ASIA: Position Environmentally Sustainable Development Asia, Kobe College, Visiting Professor

----- Original Message -----
From: "Frank Conlon" <conlon@U.WASHINGTON.EDU>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Thursday, December 27, 2012 2:34 AM
Subject: H-ASIA: Position Environmentally Sustainable Development Asia, Kobe
College, Visiting Professor


> H-ASIA
> December 26, 2012
>
>
> Position: Environmentally Sustainable Development, Asia ,Visiting
> Professor (2013-14), Kobe College
> ********************************************************************
> From: H-Net Job Guide:
>
> JOB GUIDE NO:
> https://www.h-net.org/jobs/job_display.php?id=
>
> Kobe College, Biosphere Sciences
>
> Drake Visiting Professor in Environmental Sustainability
>
>
> Institution Type: College / University
> Location: Japan
> Position: Visiting Professor
>
>
> Call for Applications for Visiting Professor, Kobe College
>
>
> Kobe College (http://www.kobe-c.ac.jp/ekc), a liberal arts and sciences
> college and one of the oldest educational institutions for women in Japan,
> is accepting applications for a one-year Visiting Professor in the
> Department of Biosphere Sciences, School of Human Sciences, for the period
> 2013-2014. This position is financially supported by the Japanese
> Education Exchange Program of Kobe College Corporation-Japan Education
> Exchange (KCC-JEE), a supporting organization of Kobe College in the
> U.S.A. Please access the following pages for more information:
>
> www.kccjee.org
>
> www.kccjee.org/pages/program_pages/bryantdrakepage.htm
>
>
>
> The successful applicant is expected to actively participate in its
> educational program, Woman Leaders Promoting ESD based on Local Community.
> This program accepts several female graduate students from Asia and Africa
> for one year and gives them the opportunity to study and conduct research
> with our faculty and graduate students.
>
>
> Details of the Position
>
> Period of Employment: October 1, 2013-September 30, 2014
>
> Qualifications:
>
> 1. At least 3-years teaching and research experience in the
> tertiary and graduate level in the related fields of Education
> for Sustainable Development (ESD). This could include Natural
> Sciences, Social Sciences, and Pedagogy.
>
> 2. Currently teaching at a university or college in North America
> or Asia.
>
> 3. Good English language skills.
>
> 4. Sympathetic with the educational ideals of Kobe College, which
> are based on its Christian identity.
>
> Responsibilities:
>
> 1. Willing to actively participate in the educational program for
> graduate students, Woman Leaders Promoting ESD based on Local
> Community (program brochure is viewable at
> www.kccjee.org/pages/program_pages/bryantdrakepage.htm).
>
> 2. Willing to teach the following classes:
>
> a. Comparative Class on ESD issues (for graduate
> students).
>
> b. Preservation of Environment in Asia (omnibus class for
> graduate students,).
>
> c. Special Lecture for graduate students.
>
> d. Related topics on Asian studies (for graduate
> students).
>
> e. Environmental Sociology for undergraduate students.
>
> The overall teaching load (comparable to that of a US liberal arts college
> or university) and content of lectures will be determined further based on
> the successful applicants career.
>
> Benefits:
>
> 1. Competitive salary based on the applicants career, including
> health insurance.
>
> 2. Housing and utilities.
>
> 3. Roundtrip airfare to Japan and reasonable moving expenses.
>
>
> Documents to be submitted:
>
> 1. Curriculum vitae.
>
> 2. List of publications.
>
> 3. Copies of two representative publications in English.
>
> 4. One page Summary of Teaching and Areas of Research.
>
> 5. Name, affiliation, and e-mail address of one referee to be
> directly contacted.
>
> Send all pertinent documents in electronic form BY JANUARY 10, 2013
>
> (though applications will be considered until position is filled) to:
>
> rmason@temple.edu
>
> (Robert J. Mason, Professor, Geography & Urban Studies, Temple University)
>
>
>
> Contact: Robert J. Mason
>
> Professor, Geography & Urban Studies, Temple University
>
> rmason@temple.edu
>
> Website: www.kccjee.org/pages/program_pages/bryantdrakepage.htm
> Primary Category: Environmental History / Studies
>
> Secondary Categories: Asian History / Studies
>
> Posting Date: 12/26/2012
> Closing Date 02/10/2013
>
>
> The H-Net Job Guide is a service to the profession provided by H-Net. The
> information provided for individual listings is the responsibility of the
> organization posting the position. If you are interested in a particular
> position, please contact the organization directly. Send comments and
> questions about this service to H-Net Job Guide.
>
> Humanities & Social Sciences Online Copyright 1995-2013
> **********************************************************************
> To post to H-ASIA simply send your message to:
> H-ASIA@h-net.msu.edu
> For holidays or short absences send post to:
> <listserv@h-net.msu.edu> with message:
> SET H-ASIA NOMAIL
> Upon return, send post with message SET H-ASIA MAIL
> H-ASIA WEB HOMEPAGE URL: http://h-net.msu.edu/~asia/

Sunday, December 23, 2012

Fw: H-ASIA: CFP Violence and Resistance, Syracuse Graduate History Conference

----- Original Message -----
From: "Ryan Dunch" <ryan.dunch@UALBERTA.CA>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Saturday, December 22, 2012 1:06 PM
Subject: H-ASIA: CFP Violence and Resistance, Syracuse Graduate History
Conference


H-ASIA
December 22, 2012

CFP Violence and Resistance, Syracuse Graduate History Conference
Deadline Extended to January 15, 2013
************************************************************************
From: Alexandra Marie Elias <amelias@maxwell.syr.edu>

Dear colleagues,

Please find below and attached the call for papers for "Violence and
Resistance," the fifth annual graduate conference hosted by the Syracuse
University Department of History Future Professoriate Program. The
conference will take place March 29th, 2013 in Syracuse, New York.
Responses may be sent to amelias@maxwell.syr.edu.

Alexandra Elias
Doctoral Candidate
Syracuse University Department of History

The Future Professoriate Program for the Department of History
at Syracuse University invites graduate students at all levels to submit
paper proposals for its Fifth Annual Syracuse Graduate History Conference,
to be held on March 29th, 2013. Our organization's goal is to help graduate
students grow as professionals within the academic community. Graduate
students are welcome to propose either individual or panel presentations.
This year's theme is "Violence and Resistance." These have
become increasingly central to scholarship and have been a palpable
presence both on the news and in our classrooms. We define violence and
resistance broadly. Submitted papers may focus upon the subject and the
connotations thereof in various forms. Topics may include but are not
limited to:
· Memory
· Religion
· Gender
· Military
· Community Identity
· Popular Culture
· Family
· Imperialism/Colonial Experiences
· Landscape
· The Self
· Politics
Presentations will be 20 minutes long in three-person panels.
Priority will be given to panels representing multiple institutions. For
individual paper proposals, please submit abstracts no longer than 300
words and a C.V. For panel proposals, please also submit a 200-word panel
abstract. The proposal deadline is January 15th, 2012. Please submit all
materials to Alexandra Elias at amelias@maxwell.syr.edu

Participants will be responsible for their own travel and meal expenses,
but some refreshments will be provided. We are a welcoming graduate
community and will be happy to answer any questions.


******************************************************************
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<H-ASIA@h-net.msu.edu>
For holidays or short absences send post to:
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SET H-ASIA NOMAIL
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Fw: H-ASIA: REVIEW Brown on Peattie and Drea and van de Ven, _The Battle for China: Essays on the Military History of the Sino-Japanese War of 1937-1945_

----- Original Message -----
From: "Frank Conlon" <conlon@U.WASHINGTON.EDU>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Saturday, December 22, 2012 10:12 PM
Subject: H-ASIA: REVIEW Brown on Peattie and Drea and van de Ven, _The
Battle for China: Essays on the Military History of the Sino-Japanese War of
1937-1945_


> H-ASIA
> December 22, 2012
>
> Book Review (orig pub. H-War) by Roger H. Brown on Mark R. Peattie,
> Edward J. Drea and Hans J. van de Ven, eds. _The Battle for China: Essays
> on the Military History of the Sino-Japanese War of 1937-1945_
>
> (x-post H-Review)
> **********************************************************************
> From: H-Net Staff <revhelp@mail.h-net.msu.edu>
>
> Mark R. Peattie, Edward J. Drea, Hans J. van de Ven, eds. The Battle
> for China: Essays on the Military History of the Sino-Japanese War of
> 1937-1945. Stanford Stanford University Press, 2010.
> Illustrations, maps. 664 pp. $65.00 (cloth), ISBN 978-0-8047-6206-9.
>
> Reviewed by Roger H. Brown (Saitama University)
> Published on H-War (December, 2012)
> Commissioned by Margaret Sankey
>
> The Sino-Japanese War of 1937-45 was immense both in its scale and
> consequences. Nevertheless, Western military histories of World War
> II have focused overwhelmingly on the campaigns of the European and
> Pacific theaters, and those specialized studies of the conflict that
> do exist deal primarily with such matters as diplomacy; politics;
> mass mobilization; and, in more recent years, Japanese atrocities and
> public memory. Indeed, as the editors of the volume under review
> attest, "a general history of the military operations during the war
> based on Japanese, Chinese, and Western sources does not exist in
> English" (p. xix). In 2004, Japanese, Chinese, and Western scholars
> gathered to remedy this situation and in the belief that such a close
> study of the operations and strategy of the Sino-Japanese War would
> "illustrate that, in this period, warfare drove much of what happened
> in the political, economic, social, and cultural spheres in China and
> Japan." They further recognized that because "much of the best
> scholarship on WWII in East Asia is naturally produced in China and
> Japan," there was a need to "bring the fruits of Chinese and Japanese
> work to the attention of a wider public" (p. xx). Granting that the
> resulting volume is not exhaustive, the editors seek to bridge the
> inevitable gaps with "a general overview of the military campaigns,
> an accompanying chronology, and introductions to the several sections
> into which the chapters are grouped" (p. xxi). With that caveat
> behind them, coeditors Mark R. Peattie, Edward J. Drea, and Hans J.
> van de Ven declare that the contributors have provided "an
> authoritative introduction to the military course of one of the
> greatest conflicts of the twentieth century" (p. xx). Their
> confidence is not misplaced, for _The Battle of China_ beautifully
> fulfills the objectives they have laid out for it and will be
> gratefully utilized by readers interested in the history of the
> Sino-Japanese War, World War II, and modern warfare in general.
>
> The contributors' essays are grouped into six parts, the first of
> which includes the chronology mentioned above and overview of the
> war, as well as the book's fourteen maps. Drea and van de Ven open
> this section with solid general coverage of the major campaigns
> between 1937 and 1945. Peattie then discusses the origins of the war,
> placing particular emphasis on the role played by Japanese field
> officers and other "contending interest groups" in perpetuating a
> dysfunctional strategy in China, and on the "structural and political
> weaknesses within Japan that confused the development of a clear-cut
> policy" toward that country (p. 52). Moreover, while also dealing
> with the chaotic domestic conditions in China, he astutely points to
> Japan's failure to learn that its "formula for a dominant position in
> China--a united China submissive to Japanese dictates--was impossibly
> self-contradictory" (p. 60).
>
> The essays in part 2 examine the Chinese Nationalist Army and the
> Imperial Japanese Army on the eve of the war. Chang Jui-Te
> demonstrates that the Chinese army, while making "real progress in
> many areas," continued to be plagued seriously both by internal
> political and military divisions and by unevenness in leadership and
> training (p. 85). In contrast, Drea's survey of the Japanese army's
> tactical and doctrinal proficiency reveals an organization that was
> tough, confident, well trained, and well armed, albeit preparing to
> fight the Soviet Union, rather than China. As part of these
> preparations, the Japanese army updated its infantry tactics in 1937
> to incorporate greater use of firepower and maneuver in assaulting
> fixed positions. Consequently, as Drea points out, when war came with
> China instead, Japanese units, contrary to popular imagination, did
> not rely solely on frontal assaults and the spirit of the bayonet,
> but "brought to bear superior firepower and modern equipment in
> combined arms warfare, relying on regimental heavy weapons and
> artillery to soften enemy positions before infantry assaults" (p.
> 115). Nevertheless, while "the ability of Japanese forces to react
> quickly, maneuver rapidly, and fight skillfully, just as they had
> been trained, equipped, and indoctrinated to do, proved initially
> advantageous," Chinese resilience and the failure to develop a
> long-range strategy made it all "ultimately futile" (p. 134).
>
> Part 3 contains detailed coverage of specific battles and campaigns
> during the first year of the conflict. Yang Tianshi assesses the role
> of Nationalist leader Chiang Kai-shek in the battles of Shanghai and
> Nanjing in the final months of 1937, stressing the generalissimo's
> initiative in using these campaigns to expand the war in order to
> relieve pressure on the North and demonstrate to the world Chinese
> resolve to resist Japanese aggression. Hattori Satoshi and Drea
> collaborate in covering these same operations from the perspective of
> Japanese army units, providing readers a stark infantryman's view of
> the bitter, bloody fighting that took place in the drive from
> Shanghai to Nanjing. While the infantry engaged in close combat,
> higher headquarters on both sides struggled to exercise command and
> control over insubordinate officers. Ultimately, the Chinese would
> have greater success in this vital area than the Japanese. Although
> losing many of their best divisions and control over the capital, the
> Chinese side "slowly, painfully, and often brutally ... fashioned a
> political-military strategy to stave off Japanese victory" (p. 140).
> Indeed, Japan's failure to achieve a rapid victory ensured that the
> war became, contrary to Japanese expectations and to Chinese
> advantage, a war of attrition. Paying particular attention to the
> defense of Wuhan in the summer of 1938, Stephen MacKinnon explains
> how determination to resist the Japanese assault facilitated
> improvement in cooperation among high-level Chinese commanders, the
> implementation of a strategy of attrition, and the growth of
> self-confidence within the Chinese rank and file. Such unity was
> missing on the Japanese side. Carrying the story forward from 1938 to
> 1941, Tobe Ryoichi examines the role of the Eleventh Army, Japan's
> primary fighting forced in central China, demonstrating how a unified
> military strategy continued to elude Japanese leaders in the field
> and in Tokyo as the prospect of rapid military victory evaporated.
>
> The essays of part 4 begin with Hagiwara Mitsuru declaring that the
> Sino-Japanese War was "the first major conflict in which air power
> played a significant role from the beginning of hostilities" and
> which "saw the initiation of long-range over-water strategic
> bombardment by one side against major urban centers of its enemy" (p.
> 237). Addressing the paucity of writing on this topic in
> Western-language accounts, Hagiwara details the Imperial Japanese
> Navy's leadership of a campaign that, despite penetrating deeply into
> the country and achieving local air superiority, failed to achieve
> its strategic objective of destroying Chinese air power.[1] Edna Tow
> follows Hagiwara with a look at what it was like to live and
> persevere in the provisional capital of Chongqing, the primary target
> of Japanese navy bombers and one of the first of the world's cities
> to suffer under the sustained terror bombing of civilians. Tow
> concludes that the aerial assault, which peaked between 1939 and
> 1941, "was insufficient by itself to effect the desired military
> outcome" and "serves as a valuable case study for illuminating the
> range of challenges, tensions, and dilemmas regarding total war and
> the limits of mass aerial bombardment to achieve total victory" (p.
> 282). It was not, however, an example that was then fully appreciated
> in the West.
>
> Zhang Baijia evaluates the military aid provided to China by Germany,
> the Soviet Union, and the United States from the mid-1930s until the
> end of the war, characterizing Nazi assistance as disinterested,
> pragmatic, and effective, and Soviet support as clearly driven by
> strategic self-interest but otherwise largely beyond reproach. He
> judges American aid efforts as riven with misunderstanding and
> largely ineffective and, moreover, asserts that "the United States
> provided little material aid to China" before 1945, when aid
> quadrupled (pp. 299, 303). Although the Sino-Japanese War saw Mao
> Zedong's forces pioneer the concept of "People's War," Yang Kuisong
> revises the picture of guerrilla warfare as the sole preserve of the
> Chinese Communist Party (CCP) by focusing on the less well-known
> unconventional operations of the Nationalist government (KMT). More
> in line with standard understanding of the KMT is Yang's conclusion
> that, despite concerted efforts in this area, Nationalist forces
> never adapted well to the fundamentals of guerrilla warfare, but
> instead alienated local populations by seizing large quantities of
> supplies and often "continued to fight in large units" and attempted
> "to defend large territorial positions" (pp. 308-309).
>
> In the final essay of part 4, Kawano Hitoshi puts a human face on
> Japanese infantrymen and reveals their many similarities with
> soldiers everywhere (including a rate of psychiatric casualties that,
> while on the low side, was roughly in line with that of other
> armies). However, while they shared, for instance, the close personal
> bonds, powerful sense of mutual responsibility, and fatalism common
> to combat units everywhere, Kawano argues that further motivation--or
> perhaps pressure--arose from a powerful concern with preserving
> familial and hometown honor. As for the supposedly supreme motivation
> of fighting and dying for the emperor, one veteran dismissed it as
> follows: "Hell, no. The emperor? I didn't give a damn" (p. 343).
> While perhaps extreme, such reflections are important in tempering
> likewise extreme and persistent stereotypes regarding the motivations
> of Japanese soldiers and sailors. Kawano also touches on, but might
> have pursued further, given its relevance to campaigning and
> pacification, the needless brutality exemplified in such criminal
> practices as "bloodying" new soldiers by having them bayonet Chinese
> prisoners of war.[2]
>
> Asano Toyomi opens part 5 with an examination of how Japanese forces
> shifted from the offensive to the defensive in Yunnan and northern
> Burma following the Fifteenth Army's disastrous Imphal operation
> (March to July 1944) by utilizing their knowledge of the terrain and
> well-constructed fortifications to blunt Chinese drives into the
> region and, later, to mount limited counterattacks in support of the
> Ichigo operation (April 1944 to February 1945). Zhang Yunhu
> looks--albeit briefly in five pages--at the campaign from the
> perspective of the American-trained and American-supplied Y-Force,
> which, despite initial setbacks and leadership shakeups, eventually
> succeeded in isolating Japan's Thirty-third Army and mostly reopening
> the Ledo Road. Hara Takeshi assesses the Ichigo operation as
> successful but strategically pointless because of developments in the
> Pacific; moreover, he concludes, the poor performance and losses of
> the Nationalists undermined American faith in the KMT, while the
> removal of both Nationalist and Japanese forces from north China left
> a vacuum to be filled by the CCP, whom he identifies as the ultimate
> winner. Looking at the battles of Henan and Hunan, Wang Qisheng finds
> evidence for Nationalist failings in this period from the pen of
> Chiang, who wrote that "1944 is the worst year for China in its
> protracted war against Japan.... I'm fifty-eight years old this year.
> Of all the humiliations I have suffered in my life, this is the
> greatest" (p. 403). Wang bolsters his case for KMT failures in
> "strategy and tactics, officers and soldiers, training, logistics,
> and mobilization of civilians" with further observations from Chiang,
> who lamented that the local population "attacked our own forces and
> seized their arms, just as happened with the czar's army in imperial
> Russia during World War I. Such an army cannot win! Our military
> trucks and horses smuggled goods, not ammunition.... During the
> retreat, some troops lost discipline, looting and raping women" (p.
> 417). "Our biggest humiliation in the battles of Henan and of Hunan,"
> Chiang concluded, "was that the Japanese used Chinese people as
> plain-clothes personnel, while we were not able to do so. With the
> exception of one general, no Nationalist army unit was able to
> mobilize our own people in our service" (p. 418).
>
> Part 6 concludes the volume with three perspectives on the larger
> historical significance of the war. Despite the collaborative spirit
> behind their project, the editors acknowledge that the continued
> sensitivity of the topic resulted in occasional flashes of irritation
> among the Chinese; Japanese; and--more surprisingly--American
> participants. Perhaps no issue is more contentious than that of
> assessing China's role in determining the outcome of World War II.
> For instance, many in the West have been influenced by Barbara
> Tuchman's biographical channeling of General Joseph Stilwell's
> dislike for Chiang and disparagement of the Nationalist war effort.
> Meanwhile, for millions of Chinese the war was one of tremendous
> bloodshed and destruction and, naturally enough, an unavoidably
> Sino-centric affair. The influence of political ideology has often
> been apparent in evaluating the war's significance, too, even from
> the first days of the conflict. Shortly after the Marco Polo Bridge
> incident of July 7, 1937, the Japanese left-wing journalist, China
> hand, and Comintern spy Ozaki Hotsumi wrote that the war in China
> "can hardly fail to develop on such a scale as to prove of utmost
> significance in world history" and, in the years leading up to his
> 1944 execution for espionage, insisted that China, rather than the
> Pacific or Europe, was the key theater of the war (p. xix).
> Subsequently, the People's Republic of China (PRC) has promoted the
> idea that, as the editors put it, "the China theater was not merely
> important, it was _the_ critical theater in World War II" (p. 422,
> emphasis in the original).[3]
>
> Tohmatsu Haruo tackles this issue head-on by examining the
> interrelationship between the Chinese and Pacific theaters of the
> war, demonstrating that while developments in the Pacific often
> affected the war in China, the opposite was seldom the case.
> Likewise, the continued stationing of large numbers of Japanese
> troops on the continent in the final stages of the war reflected not
> their requirement to combat Chinese armies but the reality that most
> of Japan's transport vessels lay on the bottom of the Pacific. The
> fact that they rested there primarily because of American submarine
> warfare further illustrates the military significance of the Pacific
> campaign. And it was Allied success in seizing island bases and
> taking control of the sea and air that brought physical destruction
> to the Japanese armed forces and, ultimately, to the homeland,
> thereby bringing about Japan's military defeat.
>
> Assessing China's contribution to victory, van de Ven takes issue
> with the Western consensus that the Nationalists "were a politically
> debilitated 'husk' who had wasted the United States' 'supreme' try in
> China" (p. 449). He counters--in accord with other essays in this
> volume--that the Nationalists were in fact quite determined to resist
> Japan and further argues that "the slighting of the Nationalists as
> militarist, backward, feudal, and incompetent derived in part from a
> Western-centric interpretation of the war and, more generally, from
> an understanding of warfare that judged societies by their ability to
> generate modern industrialized offensive warfare" (p. 464). In
> support of his argument, van de Ven contends that the Nationalists'
> "accommodation with local warlords, the exploitation of historically
> shaped methods of military mobilization, and the use of the frontier
> regions" did not constitute "evidence of feudal backwardness" but
> rather demonstrated "sensible ways of pursuing a difficult war
> against an overwhelmingly superior enemy in a largely rural society
> with limited industrial resources and a weak state" (p. 465). In
> short, the KMT's strategic objective was to outlast Japan's assault
> and this was pursued within the constraints and realities of Chinese
> society at the time.
>
> In the book's final essay, Ronald Spector surveys the contributors'
> efforts and judiciously concludes that despite the fact that the
> Sino-Japanese War's "sheer scale, length, and destructiveness" placed
> it "in a class by itself," China's contribution to Allied victory in
> World War II was "at best, secondary" (pp. 467, 478). Among the
> reasons for this were the herculean logistical challenges facing
> Allied support efforts; the Allied strategic priority of defeating
> Germany first; the naval character of the primary counterattack
> against Japan; and, thanks to the success of the Pacific
> island-hopping campaign and the development of the B-29 heavy bomber,
> the declining need to use China as an avenue for attacking the
> Japanese homeland. At the same time, Spector cogently points out that
> "if the strategic impact of the war in China on the Unites States'
> war against Japan was small, this outcome was not true of the
> political and psychological contribution that China made to the
> Allied cause simply by staying in the war. The Japanese claim to be
> fighting a war to liberate all Asians from the Western imperialists
> could never be given full credence as long as Asia's most populous
> and largest nation was ranged on the side of the Allies." Moreover,
> "millions of Chinese did not endure the hardships and losses of seven
> long years of war to ensure an Allied victory but to liberate their
> country from the Japanese" and the achievement of that goal was "the
> vindication of their sacrifices and the ultimate victory of their
> cause" (p. 479).
>
> Despite its length, this review has only scratched the surface of the
> wealth of information and interpretation provided by this collection
> of essays. While the contributors and editors get the credit for that
> content, Stanford University Press should be commended for producing
> an attractive volume of this length and one that, in addition to the
> aforementioned chronology, maps, and photographs, even includes an
> annotated bibliography. Perhaps the most unfortunate and noteworthy
> editorial flaw in this otherwise solid publication is the excessive
> number of mistakes in the transliteration of Japanese terms,
> particularly in the book's character list; one hopes these will be
> addressed should the opportunity present itself.
>
> In sum, _The Battle for China_ is a very welcome contribution to the
> military history of the second Sino-Japanese War and World War II, as
> well as to the general historiography of modern China and Japan. I
> highly recommend it.
>
> Notes
>
> [1]. A notable exception, as Hagiwara points out, is Mark R. Peattie,
> _Sunburst: The Rise of Japanese Naval Air Power, 1909-1941_
> (Annapolis: Naval Institute Press, 2001).
>
> [2]. The editors address the matter of war crimes as follows:
> "Although Japan's record of war crimes is a topic of great current
> interest, Japanese atrocities are mentioned only if pertinent to a
> particular campaign or strategy. Thus, no paper specifically
> addresses war crimes, in part because the topic is a subject unto
> itself that has been dealt with in a range of books, monographs, and
> journals. The recently published National Archives and Records
> Administration report to Congress on the subject is a good place to
> start for those interested in Japanese war crimes" (p. xxi).
>
> [3]. While the editors do not mention it, the view of Ozaki and the
> PRC also gained considerable traction among left-wing Japanese
> scholars in the decades following the war. Historian Ienaga Saburo,
> for instance, wrote in 1968 that the "invasion of China and the
> subsequent military operations there were the core of the Pacific
> War, in my view. China remained the main war theater even after the
> hostilities with America and England began. The principal opponent in
> China was not the Nationalist government's armies but the Communist
> units. Because of the Communists' tenacious resistance, Japanese
> forces became bogged down in China." Ienaga further credited "the
> democratic power of the Red armies" with overcoming Japanese
> superiority in weapons and concluded dubiously that while "America's
> material superiority may have struck the decisive blow,... Japan had
> already been defeated by Chinese democracy." Ienaga Saburo, _The
> Pacific War, 1931-1945_ (New York: Pantheon Books, 1978), 95-96. In
> an appended commentary to a recent reprint of Ienaga's book,
> historian Yoshida Yutaka identified this perspective as one of
> Ienaga's key contributions and one that delivered a shocking and
> "powerful message" to him as a young college student enamored of U.S.
> military strength. Yoshida Yutaka, commentary in _Taiheiyo senso_, by
> Iengaga Saburo(Tokyo: Iwanami shoten, 2002), 459, 462-463.
>
> Citation: Roger H. Brown. Review of Peattie, Mark R.; Drea, Edward
> J.; van de Ven, Hans J., eds., _The Battle for China: Essays on the
> Military History of the Sino-Japanese War of 1937-1945_. H-War, H-Net
> Reviews. December, 2012.
> URL: https://www.h-net.org/reviews/showrev.php?id=35560
>
> This work is licensed under a Creative Commons
> Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States
> License.
> ******************************************************************
> To post to H-ASIA simply send your message to:
> <H-ASIA@h-net.msu.edu>
> For holidays or short absences send post to:
> <listserv@h-net.msu.edu> with message:
> SET H-ASIA NOMAIL
> Upon return, send post with message SET H-ASIA MAIL
> H-ASIA WEB HOMEPAGE URL: http://h-net.msu.edu/~asia/

Fw: [AASTibet] resource: Endymion Wilkinson's Chinese History: A New Manual

 
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Monday, December 24, 2012 1:12 AM
Subject: [AASTibet] resource: Endymion Wilkinson's Chinese History: A New Manual

From: Victor H. Mair <vmair@sas.upenn.edu>

The day has finally arrived!  Endymion Wilkinson's Chinese History:  A New Manual has been published at long last.  Twelve years in the making, it is worth every minute of the wait.

We are all indebted to the previous two editions of the Manual, the blue and the yellow:  this one is red, in keeping with its coverage, which goes up through the PRC.  It is printed in two colors (red for section headings so that they are easily spotted) and in a larger format with double columns and smaller type (which is still easily readable).  Consequently, although it has fewer pages (xxiii, 1,124) than the yellow edition, it includes much more material.

Weighing in at around seven pounds, A New Manual is simply breathtaking.  Encyclopedic in scope and coverage, A New Manual provides detailed information about all aspects of Chinese civilization (language; people; geography and environment; government and education; ideas, beliefs, literature, arts, architecture, and archeology; agriculture, food, and drink; technology and science; trade and foreign relations; dating and calendars; weights and measures; etc., including close attention to all periods of history, from the Paleolithic to the Present), plus the best and most up-to-date references to books and articles for further investigation.  One of the hallmarks of A New Manual is its substantial introduction to the various types of sources available for the study of premodern and modern history, together with an exposition of how to actually use them.  Considering that Endymion did all of the research, writing, compilation, and typesetting by himself, A New Manual is truly a wonder to behold.

In my estimation, A New Manual may be considered the Bible of Sinology for our time and should constitute the core of all serious courses on Chinese historiography.

I do not wish to turn this into a full-dress review of A New Manual, which it richly deserves, but simply want to express my pleasure in having this stupendous resource at my disposal and my gratitude to Endymion for producing it.  If anyone wants to write a review article of A New Manual for Sino-Platonic Papers, I'll be happy to provide a copy.

Incidentally, at a mere $45, A New Manual is a steal.  Buy it here:

http://www.hup.harvard.edu/catalog.php?isbn=9780674067158

Best wishes for the holiday season (A New Manual would make the perfect gift for anyone who is interested in the history and culture of China)!

Victor

P.S.:  If you want to get a glimpse of Dr. Endymion Wilkinson, European Union Ambassador to the PRC (1994-2001), he appears in the video of the public lecture on Sinology that I delivered at Peking University on June 7, 2012:

http://youtu.be/VkoPGEHaqPo

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VkoPGEHaqPo&feature=youtu.be

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uk92zznkC9c

P.P.S.:  Please feel free to circulate this brief announcement to your colleagues, students, and friends.
--     Victor H. Mair, Professor of Chinese Language and Literature  Department of East Asian Languages and Civilizations  847/9 Williams Hall  University of Pennsylvania  255 South 36th St.  Philadelphia, PA 19104-6305  USA    Tel.:  215-898-8432 (**please leave a message!**)  Dept. office:  215-898-7466 (for messages and inquiries)  Fax:  215-573-9617 (mark for the attention of Prof. Victor H. Mair)  e-mail:  vmair@sas.upenn.edu  (read infrequently)  *****do not use any gmail account that may exist for me; I never look at them*****    For a complete catalog of SINO-PLATONIC PAPERS (SPP) and information about ordering, go to www.sino-platonic.org      New issues published regularly on the Web; all back issues still in print.  

Fw: H-ASIA: A course on 'Everyday Life in Twentieth-Century India'

----- Original Message -----
From: "Frank Conlon" <conlon@U.WASHINGTON.EDU>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Saturday, December 22, 2012 10:07 PM
Subject: H-ASIA: A course on 'Everyday Life in Twentieth-Century India'


> H-ASIA
> December 22, 2012
>
> Query re: a course on "Everyday Life in Twentieth-Century India"
> *********************************************************************
> Ed. note: Dr. Kamtekar has come up with a great idea here and I do
> hope that many of you can make suggestions on both the lecture
> organization, the student readings and research sources. I will
> try to come up with some suggestions myself later this week. Please
> do share your posts with H-ASIA as well as Dr. Kamtekar. FFC
> --------------------------------------------------------------------
> From: Indivar Kamtekar <indivar@mail.jnu.ac.in>
>
> Dear Colleagues,
>
> I write this post to seek your help and advice with a course I hope to
> teach on 'Changes in everyday life in twentieth-century India.'
> The course will be taught to M.A. level students in modern history at
> the Jawaharlal Nehru University in Delhi.
>
> The beginning and end of the twentieth century will be the two
> boundaries. At the end of the course I would like my students at JNU
> to be able to compare the lives of people from various social classes
> at these two points in time, and to have a sense of what occurred in
> between.
>
> There is a tentative list of topics below. I would particularly
> appreciate suggestions for readings, both for myself and for potential
> students. Also, if you have come across nuggets of information which
> we might now find surprising, please do share them.
>
> TENTATIVE LIST OF TOPICS:
>
> 1. Housing, furniture, water supply and sanitation, electricity
> 2. Food: daily diets, methods of cooking, storage, refrigeration
> 3. Dress: styles and materials
> 4. Health, diseases and medicines
> 5. Work and production
> 6. Items of mass consumption
> 7. Communications and transport
> 8. Marriage, gender relations, and the family
> 9. Social hierarchies
> 10. Avenues of entertainment
> 11. Sources of information and education
> 12. Relationships with government and the city
>
> Advice about other themes which I should cover, and how lectures
> (there would be about fourteen two-hour lectures) could be structured,
> would also be welcome. I would also wish to offer a research seminar
> to M. Phil. students, so please do suggest primary sources which might
> be mined profitably.
>
> The subject is vast, but it also seems far too important to ignore.
> I?m excited at the prospect of a discussion within the wide and
> diverse H-Asia community. So, in advance - thanks a lot!
>
> Best wishes,
>
> Indivar Kamtekar
> Centre for Historical Studies
> Jawaharlal Nehru University
> New Delhi
>
>
> ******************************************************************
> To post to H-ASIA simply send your message to:
> <H-ASIA@h-net.msu.edu>
> For holidays or short absences send post to:
> <listserv@h-net.msu.edu> with message:
> SET H-ASIA NOMAIL
> Upon return, send post with message SET H-ASIA MAIL
> H-ASIA WEB HOMEPAGE URL: http://h-net.msu.edu/~asia/

Fw: [Y-Indology] EJVS 19-3: M. Fushimi, Mantras in Kapisthala-S.

 
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Sunday, December 23, 2012 5:33 AM
Subject: [Y-Indology] EJVS 19-3: M. Fushimi, Mantras in Kapisthala-S.

 

We are happy to announce a new issue of the Electronic Journal of Vedic Studies:

Makoto Fushimi,
Mantras in Kapiṣṭhala Saṃhitā : Another Addition to 'A Vedic Concordance'
EJVS 19-3, pp. 11-101

[These mantras are listed alphabetically, accorded to the new edition, and corrected where necessary]

http://www.ejvs.laurasianacademy.com/

----

Earlier issues this year include:

Caley Smith
Obituary: Manfred Mayrhofer (1926-2011)
EJVS 19-2

and

Marcos Albino
Śaunakīya Saṃhitā 7.55.1
EJVS 19-1

-----------

Another issue is due soon:

Francesco Brighenti
Hindu Devotional Ordeals and their Shamanic Parallels

--------

Happy Holidays!

Michael

> ============
> Michael Witzel
> witzel@fas.harvard.edu
> <www.fas.harvard.edu/~witzel/mwpage.htm>
> Wales Prof. of Sanskrit &
> Director of Graduate Studies,
> Dept. of South Asian Studies, Harvard University
> 1 Bow Street,
> Cambridge MA 02138, USA
>
> phone: 1- 617 - 495 3295, 496 8570, fax 617 - 496 8571;
> my direct line: 617- 496 2990

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

__._,_.___
Reply via web post Reply to sender Reply to group Start a New Topic Messages in this topic (1)
Recent Activity:
    .

    __,_._,___

    Friday, December 21, 2012

    Fw: H-ASIA: CFP Journal of Current Southeast Asian Affairs (JCSAA)

    ----- Original Message -----
    From: "Linda Dwyer" <dwyer@MAIL.H-NET.MSU.EDU>
    To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
    Sent: Saturday, December 22, 2012 4:28 AM
    Subject: H-ASIA: CFP Journal of Current Southeast Asian Affairs (JCSAA)


    > H-ASIA
    > December 21, 2012
    >
    > CFP: Journal of Current Southeast Asian Affairs (JCSAA)
    > *****************
    > From: Christine Berg <christine.berg@giga-hamburg.de>
    >
    > Journal of Current Southeast Asian Affairs (JCSAA)
    > OPEN ACCESS <http://www.currentsoutheastasianaffairs.org>
    >
    >
    > Call for Papers
    >
    > The Journal of Current Southeast Asian Affairs (JCSAA) is an
    > inter­nationally refereed academic journal published by the GIGA
    > Institute of Asian Studies, Hamburg. Aside from the print edition JCSAA
    > will also be available online as an open access journal. Articles to be
    > published should be written in English and submitted exclusively to this
    > publica­tion.
    >
    > The Journal of Current Southeast Asian Affairs is devoted to the
    > trans­fer of scholarly insights to a wide audience. The topics covered
    > should therefore not only be orientated towards specialists in
    > South­east Asian affairs, but should also be of relevance to readers
    > with a practical interest in the region.
    >
    > The editors welcome contributions on contemporary Southeast Asia that
    > are concerned with the fields of international relations, politics,
    > economics, society, education, environment or law. Articles should be
    > theoretically grounded, empirically sound and reflect the state of the
    > art in contemporary Southeast Asian studies.
    >
    > All manuscripts will be peer-reviewed for acceptance, and the editors
    > will respond within three months. Research articles should not exceed
    > 10,000 words (incl. footnotes and references). The Journal of Current
    > Southeast Asian Affairs only accepts English-language articles.
    >
    > Manu­scripts should be submitted to the editors Marco Bünte, David
    > Cam­roux, and Andreas Ufen in electronic form:
    > <jcsaa@giga-hamburg.de<mailto:jcsaa@giga-hamburg.de>>.
    > For detailed submission guidelines see:
    > <www.CurrentSoutheastAsianAffairs.org<http://www.CurrentSoutheastAsianAffairs.org>>.
    >
    > Please don't hesitate to ask further questions.
    > We look forward to receiving your stimulating contributions.
    >
    >
    > Sunny Greetings and Merry X-Mas,
    >
    > Christine Berg
    > -----------------------
    >
    > Ms. Christine Berg, M.A. / Editorial Management / Publications
    > GIGA German Institute of Global and Area Studies/
    > Leibniz-Institut für Globale und Regionale Studien
    >
    > Neuer Jungfernstieg 21 / D-20354 Hamburg
    > Tel. +49 40 42825-583<tel:%2B49%2040%2042825-583>, Raum 319
    > E-mail:
    > christine.berg@giga-hamburg.de<mailto:christine.berg@giga-hamburg.de>
    > Internet: www.giga-hamburg.de<http://www.giga-hamburg.de>
    > Register to receive new online publications:
    > www.giga-hamburg.de/mailinglist<http://www.giga-hamburg.de/mailinglist>
    >
    > Towards a Sustainable Earth: Print Only When Necessary. Thank You.
    >
    > ******************************************************************
    > To post to H-ASIA simply send your message to:
    > <H-ASIA@h-net.msu.edu>
    > For holidays or short absences send post to:
    > <listserv@h-net.msu.edu> with message:
    > SET H-ASIA NOMAIL
    > Upon return, send post with message SET H-ASIA MAIL
    > H-ASIA WEB HOMEPAGE URL:http://h-net.msu.edu/~asia/

    Fw: Indian History and Architecture

     
    ----- Original Message -----
    Sent: Saturday, December 22, 2012 7:32 AM
    Subject: Indian History and Architecture

    Indian History and Architecture


    Bagali – A Town in Oblivion

    Posted: 21 Dec 2012 10:36 AM PST

    Bagali – It would be hard to explain and understand that how a village, which remained a center of attraction almost for about six centuries, lost its glory and went into oblivion. Bagali narrates its story in about forty-five odd inscriptions spanning across six centuries and four great dynasties, though at present it has been reduced to a small village. The earliest inscription found here is of the early ninth century CE pertaining to the times of the Rashtrakutas. Later inscriptions are of the Chalukyas of Kalyana, Hoysalas and Vijayanagara rulers. Bagali is referred as Balaguli in inscriptions. Though most...

    Fw: H-ASIA: CFP "Alone But Not Marginal: Figures of Unrelatedness in Southeast Asia", Lisbon ECSEAS, Jul 2-5, 2013

    ----- Original Message -----
    From: "Frank Conlon" <conlon@U.WASHINGTON.EDU>
    To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
    Sent: Saturday, December 22, 2012 4:50 AM
    Subject: H-ASIA: CFP "Alone But Not Marginal: Figures of Unrelatedness in
    Southeast Asia", Lisbon ECSEAS, Jul 2-5, 2013


    > H-ASIA
    > December 21, 2012
    >
    > Call for papers: "Alone But Not Marginal: Figures of Unrelatedness in
    > Southeast Asia", panel 84 European Conference on Southeast Asian Studies,
    > Lisbon, July 2-5, 2013
    >
    > *******************************************************************
    > From: H-Net Announcements <announce@MAIL.H-NET.MSU.EDU>
    >
    >
    > ALONE BUT NOT MARGINAL: FIGURES OF UNRELATEDNESS IN SOUTHEAST ASIA
    >
    >
    > Location: Portugal
    > Call for Papers Date: 2013-07-02
    > Date Submitted: 2012-12-18
    > Announcement ID: 199638
    >
    >
    > CALL FOR PAPERS, EUROSEAS CONFERENCE, LISBON JULY 2-5 2013
    > PANEL 84: ALONE BUT NOT MARGINAL: FIGURES OF UNRELATEDNESS IN SOUTHEAST
    > ASIA
    >
    > Convenors: Silvia Vignato; Matteo Alcano (University of Milano- Bicocca)
    >
    > This panel addresses solitude as a minor, though meaningful, feature
    > within contemporary Southeast Asian societies. Researches in both urban
    > and rural modern context (growing cities as well as transforming
    > agricultural environments) point to the existence of individuals who do
    > not refer to traditional webs of relations such as kinship or a common
    > residential origin in the first place. Some of these people are
    > structurally alone and sometimes feel emotionally lonely but are not
    > necessarily marginal or excluded from either productive or family life.
    > They can belong to categories like for example migrants, umarried women,
    > students, criminals or to places like survivors to catastrophes, street
    > children and others.
    >
    > We invite the participants to bear in mind Janet Carsten's fundamental
    > book, Cultures of relatedness but also Leo Coleman's challenging article
    > ("Being Alone Together: From Solidarity to Solitude in Urban
    > Anthropology", _Anthropological Quarterly_, Vol. 82, No. 3, , 2009, pp.
    > 755-778), in order to question what encrusts an individual into a specific
    > social bond and what, in the process, is culture-specific.
    >
    > Contributions should be deeply rooted in fieldwork or documentary
    > researches of modern Southeast Asia.
    >
    > Matteo Alcano
    > Universit degli Studi di Milano - Bicocca
    > P.za Ateneo Nuovo 1
    > 20126 Milano
    > Italy
    > Email: m.alcano@campus.unimib.it
    >
    >
    > H-Net reproduces announcements that have been submitted to us as a free
    > service to the academic community. If you are interested in an
    > announcement listed here, please contact the organizers or patrons
    > directly. Though we strive to provide accurate information, H-Net (and
    > H-ASIA)cannot accept responsibility for the text of announcements
    > appearing in this service.
    >
    > Send comments and questions to H-Net Webstaff:
    > <webstaff@mail.h-net.msu.edu>.
    >
    > H-Net Humanities and Social Sciences Online
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    > Hosted by Matrix at Michigan State University
    > Copyright (c) 1995-2013
    > *********************************************************************
    >
    > To post to H-ASIA simply send your message to:
    > <H-ASIA@h-net.msu.edu>
    > For holidays or short absences send post to:
    > <listserv@h-net.msu.edu> with message:
    > SET H-ASIA NOMAIL
    > Upon return, send post with message SET H-ASIA MAIL
    > H-ASIA WEB HOMEPAGE URL: <http://h-net.msu.edu/~asia/>

    Fw: 'Exploring modern South Asian history with visual research methods' Cambridge, UK, March 2013

    ----- Original Message -----
    From: "Linda Dwyer" <dwyer@MAIL.H-NET.MSU.EDU>
    To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
    Sent: Saturday, December 22, 2012 4:31 AM
    Subject: CFP: 'Exploring modern South Asian history with visual research
    methods' Cambridge, UK, March 2013


    > H-ASIA
    > December 21, 2012
    >
    >
    > CFP: 'Exploring modern South Asian history with visual research methods'
    > (Cambridge, March 2013)
    > *************
    > From: Charles V. Reed <cvreed@mail.ecsu.edu<mailto:cvreed@mail.ecsu.edu>>
    >
    >
    > Please find below information about the first international conference on
    > 'Exploring modern South Asian history with visual research methods',
    > Cambridge, UK, 15-16 March 2013.
    >
    > Conveners: Dr Annamaria Motrescu-Mayes (University of Cambridge) and Prof.
    > Marcus Banks (University of Oxford).
    > Full details at http://www.crassh.cam.ac.uk/events/2066/
    >
    > The Centre of South Asian Studies, University of Cambridge, and the Centre
    > for Research in the Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences (CRASSH) are
    > organising the first international conference on 'Exploring modern South
    > Asian history with visual research methods: theories and practices'.
    >
    > This conference aims to investigate the ways in which visual research
    > methods support the development of new perspectives on modern South Asian
    > history. It will explore the strategies employed by historians and
    > scholars of visual (digital) culture, film and visual anthropology when
    > incorporating representations of South Asian history within the framework
    > of traditional historical scholarship. Also, the role of interdisciplinary
    > research in terms of producing, distributing, re-interpreting and
    > repatriating visual records of South Asian history will be assessed
    > throughout several roundtable discussions.
    >
    > The conference will create for the first time the opportunity to
    > strengthen the network of historians, anthropologists, visual and digital
    > scholars and artists concerned with the re-examination of modern South
    > Asian history across visual records. It proposes four themes of
    > investigation that will support new scholarly developments:
    >
    > ▪ digital humanities and issues of South Asian history, visuality
    > and ethnographic enquiry
    > ▪ theories of visual anthropology relevant to historiographical
    > research of South Asia
    > ▪ examples of historical scholarship strengthened by visual research
    > methodologies
    > ▪ historical and anthropological practices replicated in visual
    > artwork inspired by South Asian history
    >
    > Keynote addresses will be delivered by Professor Marcus Banks (University
    > of Oxford) and by Professor Christopher Pinney (University College
    > London). Papers, panels and roundtable discussions led by international
    > scholars such as Professor Denis Vidal (École des Hautes Études en
    > Sciences Sociales, Paris), Dr Clare Harris (University of Oxford) and
    > Professor Ravi Vasudevan (CSDS, Delhi) will explore new perspectives on
    > visual research methods and modern South Asian history. Also, there will
    > be three exclusive presentations by the renowned visual artists Pushpamala
    > N., Rajkamal Kahlon and Ayisha Abraham. The opening address will be
    > delivered by Professor Sir C.A. Bayly, Director of the Centre of South
    > Asian Studies.
    >
    > Location: CRASSH, Alison Richard Building, 7 West Road, Cambridge CB3 9DT.
    >
    > The conference organisers invite proposals for papers or presentations of
    > 20 minutes in length. Abstracts of 300 words and an author biography of
    > max. 100 words (including institutional affiliation) should be submitted
    > via email to
    > exploringsouthasianhistorycsas@gmail.com<mailto:exploringsouthasianhistorycsas@gmail.com><mailto:exploringsouthasianhistorycsas@gmail.com<mailto:exploringsouthasianhistorycsas@gmail.com>>
    > by 31 December 2012.
    >
    > Any questions and concerns can be directed to Dr Annamaria Motrescu-Mayes
    > at amm230[at]cam.ac.uk<http://cam.ac.uk>
    >
    >
    >
    > ----
    > Dr Annamaria Motrescu-Mayes
    > University of Cambridge
    >
    > ******************************************************************
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