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Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Fw: Announcement from Books and Writers --- Promocave Update

 
Thanking you.
 
 
Divine Books
40/13.Shakti Nagar.
Delhi-110007.
India.
Ph.no..No..011 6519 6428
divinebooksindia@gmail.com
www.divinebooksindia.com
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Wednesday, January 30, 2013 5:14 AM
Subject: Announcement from Books and Writers --- Promocave Update

LinkedIn Groups

  • Group: Books and Writers
  • Subject: Announcement from Books and Writers --- Promocave Update

Promocave.com is growing and getting better. We are now releasing v 2.1 with some bugs fixed, and a help system designed to provide better and faster help to our users.

Join Promocave now! And be part of the only book marketing community online, completely FREE.

Promocave is a book marketing platform that helps writers promote them selves and their books. Once you enter our platform, you automatically reach all of our social networks. We are working to build our followers organically, which means that all of our followers and friends are 100 % real.
www.facebook.com/promocave
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Thank you, and happy Networking!

Changelog for Promocave v 2.1
=======================================
*User registration error --- fixed.
*Book not uploading --- fixed.
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=======================================
New Features for Promocave v 2.1

*Help and ticketing system now available

http://promocave.com/help.html
=======================================
New Statistics for Promocave

http://promocave.com/network.html
(updated to January 29th, 2013)

Posted By Luis Mendoza

View or add comments »

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This email was intended for Naresh Gupta (Divine Books). Learn why we included this. © 2012, LinkedIn Corporation. 2029 Stierlin Ct. Mountain View, CA 94043, USA

Fw: H-ASIA: Pacific Asia Inquiry vol. 3 released

Thanking you.


Divine Books
40/13.Shakti Nagar.
Delhi-110007.
India.
Ph.no..No..011 6519 6428
divinebooksindia@gmail.com
www.divinebooksindia.com
----- Original Message -----
From: "Andrew Field" <adfield@BU.EDU>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Tuesday, January 29, 2013 1:50 PM
Subject: H-ASIA: Pacific Asia Inquiry vol. 3 released


H-ASIA
Jan 29 2013

Pacific Asia Inquiry vol. 3 released
***********************************
From: James D. Sellmann, Dean, <jsellman@uguam.uog.edu>

The University of Guam College of Liberal Arts and Social Sciences is
proud to announce the release of Pacific Asia Inquiry, Volume 3, Number 1,
Fall 2012. The on-line journal, featuring research on a wide range of
historical and contemporary topics relevant to the Pacific Asian region
features 8 articles and 2 book reviews by such renowned Pacific Asia
authors as Mary Spencer, Ying-Chun Liu, Dennis Erasga, Lan-Hung Nora
Chiang, Hao-Li Lin, Michael Bevacqua, Chen Yuping and Unaisi Nabobo-Baba,
to name a few.

Edited by faculty members at the University of Guam, Volume 3 of Pacific
Asia Inquiry was launched in December 2012. The online journal is the
first of its kind for the University of Guam, contributing to the
development of UOG's reach which goes far beyond the Micronesian
region. The electronic publication of historical and contemporary articles
is a new and exciting venture for UOG, and makes available to large
audiences much needed scholarship on the Pacific Asia region. PAI's Volume
3 e-publication focuses on migration issues, child development, cultural
ways of learning, spatial relations, uneven development, the political
realities of sovereignty, community development, local entrepreneurship,
micro-finance and epistemological underpinnings of qualitative research.
The authors' works are based on first-hand research, observations and
secondary analysis conducted in Taiwan, Fiji, the Philippines, Guam, Chuuk
Lagoon,Yap State, and Palau. All articles in Volume 3 represent the much
needed scholarship on the Pacific Asia region that this on-line journal
has come to represent.

Literary critiques continue in an impressive book review section. Two
contemporary books - one focusing on Japan, the other on the Marshall
Islands - are analyzed based on content and contribution to specific topic
areas. The section starts with a compelling and insightful review
of Japanese studies, German intellectual models and hermeneutic
scholarship. The second review is an intriguing interpretation of the
author's poems which expressively illustrate life in the Marshall Islands
by focusing on the environment, ethnicity, cultural survival and political
dependence. Both book reviews are versed analyses of literary and
artistic works.

Electronic publication is bringing this impressive journal out into the
public in an unprecedented way and advancing, on a global level,
knowledge and understanding of the Pacific Asia region. For a free full
text download go to www.uog.edu/dynamicdata/CLASSPacificAsiaInquiry.aspx\
For more information concerning Volume 3 please contact Dr. Ann Ames,
Editor at aames@uguam.uog.edu .

James D. Sellmann
Dean
College of Liberal Arts
and Social Sciences
University of Guam


*************************************************************************

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: H-ASIA: Dissertation Reviews - Week 15 Digest (including Asian Art, China, Inner Asia, Japan, South Asia)

Thanking you.


Divine Books
40/13.Shakti Nagar.
Delhi-110007.
India.
Ph.no..No..011 6519 6428
divinebooksindia@gmail.com
www.divinebooksindia.com
----- Original Message -----
From: "Andrew Field" <adfield@BU.EDU>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Tuesday, January 29, 2013 1:52 PM
Subject: H-ASIA: Dissertation Reviews - Week 15 Digest (including Asian Art,
China, Inner Asia, Japan, South Asia)


H-ASIA
Jan 29 2013

Dissertation Reviews - Week 15 Digest (including Asian Art, China, Inner
Asia, Japan, South Asia)
***************************************
From: Thomas S. Mullaney <tsmullaney@stanford.edu>

DISSERTATION REVIEWS

Week 15 (January 21 - January 27, 2013)

[Asian Art, China] LESLIE WALLACE, "Chasing the Beyond: Depictions of
Hunting in Eastern Han Dynasty Tomb Reliefs (25-220 CE) from Shaanxi and
Shanxi" (University of Pittsburg, 2010), reviewed by Vincent S. Leung
(University of Pittsburg)
http://dissertationreviews.**org/archives/2174<http://dissertationreviews.org/archives/2174>

[Asian Art, China, Inner Asia, Tibetan Himalayan] AURELIA CAMPBELL, "The
Impact of Imperial and Local Patronage on Early Ming Temples in the
Sino-Tibetan Frontier" (University of Pennsylvania, 2011), reviewed by
Wen-Shing Chou (Hunter College, CUNY)
http://dissertationreviews.**org/archives/1871<http://dissertationreviews.org/archives/1871>

[Islamic Studies, South Asia] CHRISTOPHER RYAN PERKINS, "Partitioning
History: The Creation of an Islami Pablik in Late Colonial India, c.
1880-1920" (University of Pennsylvania, 2011), reviewed by Justin Jones
(University of Exeter)
http://dissertationreviews.**org/archives/1872<http://dissertationreviews.org/archives/1872>

[China] TIE XIAO, "In the Name of the Masses: Conceptualizations and
Representations of the Crowd in Early Twentieth-Century China" (University
of Chicago, 2011), reviewed by Roy Chan (The College of William and Mary)
http://dissertationreviews.**org/archives/1891<http://dissertationreviews.org/archives/1891>

[Chinese Lit] YIJU HUANG, "Wounds in Time: THe Aesthetic Afterlives of
the Cultural Revolution" (University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, 2011),
reviewed by Yiching Wu (University of Toronto)
http://dissertationreviews.**org/archives/2249<http://dissertationreviews.org/archives/2249>

[Japan] WILLIAM FLEMING, "The World Beyond the Walls: Morishima Chūryō
(1756-1810) and the Development of Late Edo Fiction" (Harvard University,
2011), reviewed by Kelly Hansen (San Diego State University)
http://dissertationreviews.**org/archives/1614<http://dissertationreviews.org/archives/1614>

[Russia] JEFFREY S. HARDY, "Khrushchev's Gulag: The Evolution of
Punishment in the Post-Stalin Soviet Union, 1953-1964" (Princeton
University, 2011), reviewed by Wilson T. Bell (Thompson Rivers University)
http://dissertationreviews.**org/archives/2273<http://dissertationreviews.org/archives/2273>

[Med Anthro, Science Studies] JENNIFER CUFFE, "An Empirical Study of
Scientists' Reasoning in the Canadian Regulatory Evaluation of Traditional,
Homeopathic, Herbal, and Other 'Natural' Medicines" (McGill University,
2010), reviewed by Daniel Hollenberg (Royal College of Physicians and
Surgeons of Canada)
http://dissertationreviews.**org/archives/2270<http://dissertationreviews.org/archives/2270>

[Science Studies] STINE SLOT GRUMSEN, "Casting for Good Will: Profession,
Trade and Identity in American Dentistry, c. 1910-1950" (Aarhus University,
2012), reviewed by Elizabeth Mertz (University of California, San Francisco)
http://dissertationreviews.**org/archives/1943<http://dissertationreviews.org/archives/1943>

[Islamic Studies] MEHMET KADRI KARABELA, "The Development of Dialectic
and Argumentation Theory in Post-classical Islamic Intellectual History"
(McGill University, 2011), reviewed by Alexander Key (Stanford University)
http://dissertationreviews.**org/archives/2370<http://dissertationreviews.org/archives/2370>

[Print Media, Science Studies] FIONA YVETTE PETTIT, "Freaks in Late
Nineteenth-Century British Media and Medicine" (University of Exeter,
2012), reviewed by Monika Pietrzak-Franger (Universität Siegen)
http://dissertationreviews.**org/archives/2300<http://dissertationreviews.org/archives/2300>

---

From the Dissertation Reviews Editorial Board
http://dissertationreviews.**org/about-us/editorial-board<http://dissertationreviews.org/about-us/editorial-board>

If you are interested in having your dissertation reviewed, reviewing a
dissertation, contributing an article, or helping our team in some other
way, please
contactinfo@**dissertationreviews.org<contactinfo@dissertationreviews.org>

*************************************************************************

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: H-ASIA: CFP for Pacific Asia Inquiry vol. 4

Thanking you.


Divine Books
40/13.Shakti Nagar.
Delhi-110007.
India.
Ph.no..No..011 6519 6428
divinebooksindia@gmail.com
www.divinebooksindia.com
----- Original Message -----
From: "Andrew Field" <adfield@BU.EDU>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Tuesday, January 29, 2013 1:47 PM
Subject: H-ASIA: CFP for Pacific Asia Inquiry vol. 4


H-ASIA
Jan 29 2013

CFP for Pacific Asia Inquiry vol. 4
******************************************
From: James D. Sellmann, Dean, <jsellman@uguam.uog.edu>

The University of Guam
CALL FOR PAPERS: Pacific Asia Inquiry: Multidisciplinary Perspectives
in the Liberal Arts & Social Sciences, Volume 4, Fall 2013

Scholars are invited to submit papers focusing on the Pacific Asia Region.
Articles, critical essays, and case studies (both applied and theoretical)
across the liberal arts and social sciences are welcome. The research
emphasis of this occasional series accommodates in-depth studies on the
Pacific Asia Region. Contributors are invited not only to share their
innovative research, but also to challenge extant positions and
perspectives. Any theoretical or methodological approach may be employed
so long as it is documented in a readable style of writing that is
accessible to specialists and non-specialists alike. Authors may submit
their writing about problems and issues associated with any ethnic group,
national culture, historical period, genre, or media.

Submission Procedures
Include the following as three separate files: 1) a cover page which
includes author's name(s), title(s), affiliation(s), and address(es)
(including street and e-mail addresses); 2) a title page which includes
the title of the article and an abstract of the paper (the abstract should
be no more than 150 words); and 3) the main text which includes photos,
tables, figures, and references. Our blind peer-review process requires
that author's name(s) and address(es) appear only on the cover page. It is
important that no identifying information appear in the abstract or text
itself. Relevant publications, including the submitter's name(s) as an
author, may appear in the reference section as long as nothing is said to
connect the reference with the submitter's identity. Authors must follow
the conventions of the Publication Manual of the American Psychological
Association (6th ed., 2009), or the MLA Style Manual and Guide to
Scholarly Publishing (7th ed., 2009). If reviewers and the Editor accept
the manuscript, the author may then be asked to revise the manuscript into
the final up-load version for inclusion in the journal. Only minor
editorial adjustments will be made during the final production stage.
Articles are accepted for review with the understanding that they are not
being considered, in whole or in part, for publication elsewhere and have
not been previously published. Enclose a memo stating whether or not the
essay has been published previously or is being considered for publication
in another journal or medium.

The manuscripts should be prepared using MS Word software with Times New
Roman font, size 12, doubled space, 1-inch margin on all the sides, and
full justification. Indent the first word of a paragraph by 1/2 inch or 5
spaces, and number all pages consecutively, putting numbers in the lower
right-hand corner. Phrases and isolated words in languages other than
English should be italicized. Figures, tables, and photos should be
inserted into manuscript at the time of initial submittal. Figures,
tables, and photos need to be appropriately titled, sourced, and numbered
consecutively. Endnotes should be used and references should appear at the
end of the paper. Do not insert automatic formatting anywhere in the
manuscript. The entire manuscript should not exceed 10,000 words,
including tables and references. Pacific Asia Inquiry, Volume 2 & 3 may be
used as a general reference.

Note: This is a venue for scholarly essays. Fiction and poetry are not
published. The inclusion of artwork, audio, and video are encouraged, to
the degree that it is technically and ethically feasible. Topics relevant
to the journal's overall interests are included in this call.

Inquiries and Submissions must be forwarded electronically to:
PAI Editor
Pacific Asia Inquiry
pacificasiainquiry@yahoo.com

Deadline for submittal is April 15, 2013

For additional information contact Dr. Nicholas J. Goetzfridt, Editor,
ngoetzfr@gmail.com
Pacific Asia Inquiry, Volumes 1, 2 & 3 may be examined and
are available for free full text
downloads at www.uog.edu/dynamicdata/CLASSPacificAsiaInquiry.aspx\



James D. Sellmann
Dean
College of Liberal Arts
and Social Sciences
University of Guam


*************************************************************************

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: H-ASIA: Conference program online (Urban Violence in the Middle East, 13-16 February, SOAS)

Thanking you.


Divine Books
40/13.Shakti Nagar.
Delhi-110007.
India.
Ph.no..No..011 6519 6428
divinebooksindia@gmail.com
www.divinebooksindia.com
----- Original Message -----
From: "Andrew Field" <adfield@BU.EDU>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Tuesday, January 29, 2013 1:38 PM
Subject: H-ASIA: Conference program online (Urban Violence in the Middle
East, 13-16 February, SOAS)


> H-ASIA
> Jan 29 2013
>
> Conference program online (Urban Violence in the Middle East, 13-16
> February, SOAS)
> *********************************
> From: Rasmus Christian Elling <mail@rasmuselling.com>
>
> The program for the international conference 'Urban Violence in the
> Middle East: Histories of Place and Event' is now online at
> http://www.soas.ac.uk/uvme/.
>
>
>
> URBAN VIOLENCE IN THE MIDDLE EAST: HISTORIES OF PLACE AND EVENT
>
> 13-16 February 2013
>
> School of Oriental and African Studies, London
>
> http://www.soas.ac.uk/uvme/
>
>
>
> In spite of its relevance to contemporary events the history of public
> violence in Middle Eastern cities has not yet been the subject of
> systematic academic debate. Building on a workshop held at the Zentrum
> Moderner Orient Berlin in December 2011 this international conference
> explores the violent histories of some of these cities from the 18th to
> the late 20th centuries through a variety of actors, themes and
> historical processes.
>
>
>
> Covering the Middle East, North Africa and Central Asia papers feature
> crowds and elites; urban space, discipline, discourse and ritual
> performance;empire, colonialism, war and revolution. Speakers include
> established and young Middle Eastern historians, and a number of
> academics specialising in other disciplines and regions in order to
> foster comparative and interdisciplinary understandings of urban
> violence.
>
>
>
> Admission is free, however, pre-registration is required. To register
> please telephone +44 (0)20 7898 4330 or email lh2@soas.ac.uk.
>
>
>
>
>
> Best regards,
>
> Rasmus Elling
>
> Assistant Professor
>
> University of Copenhagen
>
> *************************************************************************
>
> 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: H-ASIA: CFP: Classical Poetry in the Digital Age at MLA 2014

Thanking you.


Divine Books
40/13.Shakti Nagar.
Delhi-110007.
India.
Ph.no..No..011 6519 6428
divinebooksindia@gmail.com
www.divinebooksindia.com
----- Original Message -----
From: "Andrew Field" <adfield@BU.EDU>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Tuesday, January 29, 2013 1:28 PM
Subject: H-ASIA: CFP: Classical Poetry in the Digital Age at MLA 2014


> H-ASIA
> Jan 29 2013
>
> CFP: Classical Poetry in the Digital Age at MLA 2014
> **********************************************
> From: Joseph T. Sorensen <jsorensen@ucdavis.edu>
>
> Dear Colleagues,
> The East Asia Division to 1900 of the MLA invites you to submit paper
> proposals for a session on "Classical Poetry in the Digital Age" for the
> 2014 MLA which will convene in Chicago January 9-12, 2014. We invite
> papers
> on classical East Asian poetic traditions, specifically addressing the
> issue on how the internet and other technological innovations have
> impacted
> the circulation, discussion, and composition of poetry in traditional
> poetic forms (shi, ci,tanka, haiku, etc.).
>
> Please send all queries to Paul Rouzer at prouzer@umn.edu. 250-word
> abstracts by March 10.
>
> Other MLA panels you might consider:
>
> http://www.mla.org/cfp_detail_5608 "Poetry in Digital Age"
> http://www.mla.org/cfp_detail_5482 "Influence/Confluence of Genres"
> http://www.mla.org/cfp_detail_5447 "Premodern East Asia in World
> Literature"
> http://www.mla.org/cfp_detail_5548 "Asia and the Nobel Prize in
> Literature"
> http://www.mla.org/cfp_detail_5549 "Representations of Disaster"
> http://www.mla.org/cfp_detail_5512 "Fanlation"
>
> ____________________________________
> Joseph T. Sorensen, Ph.D.
> Associate Professor of Japanese
> Department of East Asian Languages and Cultures
> 2nd Floor Sproul Hall, One Shields Avenue
> University of California, Davis 95616
> Email: jsorensen@ucdavis.edu
> Faculty Leader, Kyoto Quarter Abroad:
> http://quarterabroad.ucdavis.edu/programs
> http://www.brill.nl/optical-allusions
>
> *************************************************************************
>
> 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: H-ASIA: Question: UK Visa for dissertation research

Thanking you.


Divine Books
40/13.Shakti Nagar.
Delhi-110007.
India.
Ph.no..No..011 6519 6428
divinebooksindia@gmail.com
www.divinebooksindia.com
----- Original Message -----
From: "Andrew Field" <adfield@BU.EDU>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Tuesday, January 29, 2013 1:25 PM
Subject: H-ASIA: Question: UK Visa for dissertation research


> H-ASIA
> Jan 29 2013
> Question: UK Visa for dissertation research
> ******************************************
> From: shahin kachwala <skachwal@indiana.edu>
>
> Dear All:
>
> I am an Indian national, studying in the United States and need to travel
> to UK for dissertation research. I am having trouble figuring out which
> specific UK visa I can apply for in the United States. I have been in
> touch
> with the firm that is listed on the UK Border Agency website. However, the
> information they provided is very limited.
>
> If anyone has information about the UK visa process in the US
> (particularly
> when you are on an F-1 visa), please contact me off list at
> skachwal@indiana.edu
>
> Thank you.
> Sincerely,
> Shahin Kachwala
>
> *************************************************************************
>
> 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: H-ASIA: Nehru Memorial Museum and Library Public Lecture Series 2013

Thanking you.


Divine Books
40/13.Shakti Nagar.
Delhi-110007.
India.
Ph.no..No..011 6519 6428
divinebooksindia@gmail.com
www.divinebooksindia.com
----- Original Message -----
From: "Andrew Field" <adfield@BU.EDU>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Tuesday, January 29, 2013 1:19 PM
Subject: H-ASIA: Nehru Memorial Museum and Library Public Lecture Series
2013


H-ASIA
Jan 29 2013


Nehru Memorial Museum and Library Public Lecture Series 2013
************************************************************
From: Arupjyoti Saikia <arupjyotisaikia@gmail.com>

Dear All,
Please find herewith the notice of the public lecture series of the Nehru
Memorial Museum and Library for the year 2013 which is kindly received from
the Nisar Kizhakkayil, NMML, Teen Murti House, New Delhi.

Sincerely,

Arupjyoti Saikia
IIT Guwahati

*NMML Public Lecture Series *

*'India and the Wider World'*

*2012-2013 *

*Venue: Seminar Room, First Floor, Library Building*

*Time: 3.00 pm*



*S. No*

*Day and Date*

*Speaker*

*Title*

* *

* *

1.

Monday

10 December 2012

Prof. Odd Arne Westad,

London School of Economics and Political Science,

UK.



*'Restless empire: *

*China and the world since 1750'*

* *

* *

2.

Monday

17 December 2012

Prof. Anand Yang,

University of Washington,

Seattle,

USA.



*'Chin aur Hind: *

*An Indian subaltern's travel narrative of China in 1900-1901'*

3.

Wednesday

9 January 2013

Prof. E. Sridharan,

University of Pennsylvania Institute for the Advanced Study of India,

New Delhi.

*'India in the emerging world order: *

*Rising power or constrained power?' *

* *

* *

4.

Wednesday

16 January

2013

Prof. Rudi Matthee,

University of Delaware,

USA.



(postponed till further notice)

*'The decline of Safavid Iran:*

*A comparative perspective'*

* *

5.

Thursday

17 January 2013

Prof. David Engerman,

Brandeis University,

Massachusetts,

USA and American Institute of Indian Studies,

Gurgaon.

*'Development as diplomacy:*

*Superpower competition and the Nehruvian economy'*

* *

* *

* *

* *

* *

6.

Monday

21 January

2013

Ms. Sreemati Mitter,

Doctoral Candidate,

Harvard University,

USA.



*'The case of the Frozen Bank Accounts 1948: *

*A history of money in Palestine'*

* *

* *

7.

Tuesday

29 January 2013

Prof. Partha Ghosh,

Senior Fellow, NMML.



*'Making sense of cross-border migrations in south Asia'*

8.

Wednesday

6 February 2013

Prof. Rajen Harshe,

South Asian University,

New Delhi.

* *

*'Revisiting Indo-African ties in the twenty first century'*

* *

* *

* *

9.

Wednesday

13 February 2013

Dr. Vivek Neelakantan,

University of Sydney,

Australia.



(postponed till further notice)

*'The Soekarno Era: Indonesia in the 1950s'*

10.

Thursday

14 February 2013

Prof. Varun Sahni,

Jawaharlal Nehru University,

New Delhi.

* *

*'Problematizing the BRICS: *

*Southern hemisphere Grandeza, northern hemisphere geopolitics'*

* *

11.

Wednesday

20 February 2013

Prof. Ashok Desai,

*Business World,*

New Delhi.

*'A view to the south: *

*India and the Indian Ocean'*

* *

12.

Wednesday

27 February

2013

Prof. Brij Tankha,

Institute of Chinese Studies, Delhi.

*'India and Japan: *

*Varieties of Asian regionalism'*

* *

13.

Tuesday

19 March 2013

Dr. Rohit Negi,

Ambedkar University,

Delhi.

* *

*'An African century? Politics, geopolitics, and development in
contemporary Africa'*

14.

Wednesday

3 April

2013

Dr. Parul Pandya Dhar,

University of Delhi,

Delhi.**

*'India and Southeast Asia: *

*The iconography of early cultural interactions'*

* *

* *

15.

Thursday

4 April

2013

Dr. Najaf Haider,

Jawaharlal Nehru University,

New Delhi.

* *

*'India and the Great Divergence'*

* *

* *

16.

Wednesday

10 April 2013

Prof. Patricia Uberoi,

Institute of Chinese Studies,

Delhi.

*'Dr. Kotnis ke amar kahani and after:*

*Images of China in Bombay cinema'*

* *

17.

Wednesday

17 April

2013

Prof. Susan Pennybacker,

University of North Carolina,

USA.





*'Fire by Night, Cloud by Day: *

*Indians, South Africans and Trinidadians remember postwar, Cold War London'
*

18.

Wednesday

8 May 2013

Sh. Chinmaya Gharekhan,

Eminent Diplomat and Former Ambassador to the UN,

New Delhi.



*'How relevant is the UN today?'*

19.

Wednesday

15 May

2013

Prof. Dev Nathan,

Institute for Human Development,

New Delhi and

Duke University,

USA.



*'India, the emerging powers and the world economy'*

* *

* *

* *

* *

20.

Thursday

12 September

2013

Mr. T.N. Ninan,

Jawaharlal Nehru Fellow,

New Delhi.

*'India in a changing Asia'*

* *

* *

* *

* *

21.

Wednesday

25 September

2013





Prof. Seema Alavi,

University of Delhi,

Delhi.

*'Muslim cosmopolitanism in the Age of Empire'*

* *

* *

22.

Thursday

10 October

2013

Mr. Nandan Nilekani,

Unique Identification Authority of India,

New Delhi.



*'India and the Third Industrial Revolution'*

* *

* *

* *

* *

23.

Thursday

17 October

2013

Dr. V. C. Bhutani,

Formerly at University of Delhi,

Delhi.

*'The making of the McMahon Line and its fate, *

*1900-47'*

* *

* *

24.

Wednesday

23 October 2013

Prof. Lakshmi Subramanian,

Centre for Studies in Social Sciences,

Kolkata.

* *

*'Greater India or the global Indian?: *

*Reflections on the Indian Ocean'*

* *

* *

25.

Thursday

21 November

2013

Prof. Radhika Singha,

Jawaharlal Nehru University,

New Delhi.

*'Indian labour and the geographies of the Great War'*

*************************************************************************

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Monday, January 28, 2013

Fw: H-ASIA: Position Translation, Univ of Hong Kong (School of Chinese), Asst prof

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> Position: Translation, Assistant Professor, School of Chinese,
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> University of Hong Kong
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Fw: H-ASIA: CFP Taiwan in Dynamic Transition, Edmondton, Univ of Alberta, May 24-26, 2013

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----- Original Message -----
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Sent: Tuesday, January 29, 2013 4:53 AM
Subject: H-ASIA: CFP Taiwan in Dynamic Transition, Edmondton, Univ of
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> H-ASIA
> January 28, 2013
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> Call for papers: Taiwan in Dynamic Transition, University of Alberta,
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> DEADLINE 20 FEBRUARY 2013
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> From: H-Net Announcements <announce@MAIL.H-NET.MSU.EDU>
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> CFP Taiwan in Dynamic Transition
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> Location: Alberta, Canada
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> Date Submitted: 2013-01-26
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>
> The Department of East Asian Studies at the University of Alberta will
> host the inaugural Alberta International Conference on Taiwan Studies
> (AICTS) in Edmonton, Alberta from May 24-26, 2013.
> The theme of this interdisciplinary conference is "Taiwan in Dynamic
> Transition." The organizers seek papers concerning the following topics:
> Constitutional reform, rule of law, and party politics; cross-strait
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> identity, and gender.
>
> Interested scholars should send a paper title and an abstract (under 400
> words) to Dr. Ashley Esarey at taiwanst@ualberta.ca by February 20, 2013.
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> The University of Alberta will cover the costs of travel, lodging, and
> meals for selected participants.
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>
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> Dr. Ashley Esarey
> East Asian Studies
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Sunday, January 27, 2013

Bhadau (Nepali calendar)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Bhadau (Nepali: भदौ) also called Bhadra (भाद्र) is the fifth month in the Bikram Samwat, the official Nepali calendar. This month coincides with August 17 to September 16 of the Western Calendar and is 31 days long.

Being mostly based on Hindu calendar, Nepali calendar's festival dates are flexible. Important events are:

  • around August 20: Bhadau 4, Kushe Aunsi (Nepali Father's Day)
  • around August 22: Bhadau 6, Dar Khane
  • around August 23: Bhadau 7, Haritalika Teej (Public Holiday for Women)
  • around August 24: Bhadau 8, Rishi Panchami

[edit] Months in Nepali Calendar

No. Name Nepali Days
1 Baishākh बैशाख 30 / 31
2 Jeṭha जेष्ठ or जेठ 31 / 32
3 Asār आषाढ or असार 31 / 32
4 Sāun श्रावण or साउन 31 / 32
5 Bhadau भाद्र or भदौ 31 / 32
6 Asoj आश्विन or असोज 30 / 31
7 Kartik कार्तिक 29 / 30
8 Mangsir मार्ग or मंसिर 29 / 30
9 Push पौष or पुष/पूस 29 / 30
10 Magh माघ 29 / 30
11 Falgun फाल्गुन or फागुन 29 / 30
12 Chaitra चैत्र or चैत 30 / 31

[edit] References

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Asar (Nepali calendar)

Asar (Nepali calendar)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Asar (Nepali: असार) also called Aashadh(आषाढ) is the third month in the Bikram Samwat, the official Nepali calendar. This month coincides with June 15 to July 16 of the Western Calendar and is 31 or 32 long.

[edit] Months in Nepali Calendar

No. Name Nepali Days
1 Baishākh बैशाख 30 / 31
2 Jeṭha जेष्ठ or जेठ 31 / 32
3 Asār आषाढ or असार 31 / 32
4 Sāun श्रावण or साउन 31 / 32
5 Bhadau भाद्र or भदौ 31 / 32
6 Asoj आश्विन or असोज 30 / 31
7 Kartik कार्तिक 29 / 30
8 Mangsir मार्ग or मंसिर 29 / 30
9 Push पौष or पुष/पूस 29 / 30
10 Magh माघ 29 / 30
11 Falgun फाल्गुन or फागुन 29 / 30
12 Chaitra चैत्र or चैत 30 / 31

[edit] References

Saral Nepali Calendar
Official Nepali Calendar
Full Nepali Calendar with festivals
Rajan Nepali date converter
Nepali Calendar

Thanking you.
 
 
Divine Books
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www.divinebooksindia.com

Jetha (Nepali calendar)

Jetha (Nepali calendar)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Jetha (Nepali: जेठ or ज्येष्ठ jyeṣṭh) is the second month in Bikram Samwat, the official Nepali calendar. This month starts with May 15 to 14 June of the Western calendar and is 30 days long. The Bikram Sambat originated from the Vikram Samwat.

This month was initially identical to second of Indian calendar month Jyeshta or Bangali calendar month Joishtho, however due to regional pronunciation it differed later. The name is derived from the Bikram Sambat calendar

[edit] Months in Nepali Calendar

No. Name Nepali Days
1 Baishākh बैशाख 30 / 31
2 Jeṭha जेष्ठ or जेठ 31 / 32
3 Asār आषाढ or असार 31 / 32
4 Sāun श्रावण or साउन 31 / 32
5 Bhadau भाद्र or भदौ 31 / 32
6 Asoj आश्विन or असोज 30 / 31
7 Kartik कार्तिक 29 / 30
8 Mangsir मार्ग or मंसिर 29 / 30
9 Push पौष or पुष/पूस 29 / 30
10 Magh माघ 29 / 30
11 Falgun फाल्गुन or फागुन 29 / 30
12 Chaitra चैत्र or चैत 30 / 31

[edit] References

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www.divinebooksindia.com

Baishakh (Nepali calendar)

Baishakh (Nepali calendar)

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Baishakh (Nepali: बैशाख) is the first month in the Bikram Samwat, the official Nepali calendar. This month coincides with April 14 to May 14 of the Western calendar and is 31 days long.

Important events during this month include:

  • April 14: Baishakh 1, New Year (public holiday)

[edit] References

[edit] External links

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Vikram Samvat

Vikram Samvat

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Vikram Samvat (Vikram Samwat, Vikram Sambat, Bikram Samvat, Bikram Samwat, Bikram Sambat or Vikram's Era) (Devanagari:विक्रम सम्वत्) (abbreviated as V.S. or B.S.) is the calendar established by Indian emperor Vikramaditya. The Vikram calendar was commonly used in North India, and is still used. It uses lunar months and solar sidereal year. It the official calendar of Nepal is also termed Bikram Sambat, but is is computed using the tropical year.

The Vikrama Samvat is said to have been founded by the emperor Vikramaditya of Ujjain[1] following his victory over the Sakas in 56 BCE, although it is popularly (and incorrectly) associated with the subsequent king Chandragupta Vikramaditya. It is a lunar calendar based on ancient Hindu tradition (see Hindu calendar and Vedic time keeping). The Vikram Samvat calendar is 56.7 years ahead (in count) of the solar Gregorian calendar. For example, the year 2056 BS began in CE 1999 and ended in CE 2000. The new year begins with the first day after the new moon, in the month of Chaitra, Chaitra Shuddha 1 or Chaitra Shukla Paksha Prathama; which usually falls in March-April in the Gregorian calendar. The nine-day Navaratri festival season begins on this day, culminating on Ram Navami day. In Nepal, it begins in mid-April and marks the start of the solar new year.

In India, the reformulated Saka Calendar is officially used, although in the Hindi version of Preamble of The Constitution of India, the date of adoption of constitution 26 Nov 1949 is presented in Vikram Samvat (Margsheersh Shukla Saptami Samvat 2006 ). There have been calls for Vikram Samvat to replace Saka as India's official calendar.[2]

Contents

 [hide

[edit] Months

[edit] Indian Hindu & Nepali

No. Name Nepali Days
1 Baishakh बैशाख 30 / 31
2 Jetha जेठ or ज्येष्ठ 31 / 32
3 Asar असार or आशाढ 31 / 32
4 Saaun साउन or श्रावण 31 / 32
5 Bhadau भदौ or भाद्र 31 / 32
6 Asoj असोज or आश्विन 30 / 31
7 Kartik कात्तिक or कार्तिक 29 / 30
8 Mangsir मंसिर or मार्ग 29 / 30
9 Poush पुष or पौष 29 / 30
10 Magh माघ 29 / 30
11 Falgun फागुन or फाल्गुण 29 / 30
12 Chaitra चैत or चैत्र 30 / 31

[edit] North Indian

No. Name North Indian languages Days
1 Chaitra ��त�र or ��त or ��त 30 / 31
2 Vaisakha व�शाख or ब�साख or ब�साख 30 / 31
3 Jyeshtha ��य�ष�ठ or ��ठ 31 / 32
4 Aashaadha �षाढ़ 31 / 32
5 Shraawan श�रावण or सावन 31 / 32
6 Bhadrapad भाद�रपद or भाद� 31 / 32
7 Ashvin �श�विन or �सिन 30 / 31
8 Kartik कार�तिक or कातिक 29 / 30
9 Aghrahaayan अग�रहायण or मार�गशीर�ष or अगहन 29 / 30
10 Paush प�ष or प�ष/प�स 29 / 30
11 Magh मा� 29 / 30
12 Phalgun फाल�ग�न or फाग�न 29 / 30

[edit] History

This calendar derives its name from the original king Vikramaditya of Ujjain. After the rise of the Rana oligarchs in Nepal, Vikram Sambat came into unofficial use along with the official Shaka Sambat for quite some time. They discontinued Shaka Sambat in its 1823rd year, and replaced it with Vikram Samwat for official use since then to date. Vikram Sambat came into official use in its 1958th year. The calendar is widely in use in western India, where it is known as the Vikram Samvat.

The date is supposed to mark the victory of king Vikramaditya over the Sakas, who had invaded Ujjain. Alternatively, it has been thought by some scholars to correspond to the Azes era, of the Indo-Scythian king Azes I, but this seems to be now thoroughly discredited by Falk and Bennett who place the inception of the Azes era in 47/6 BC.[3]

Kalakacharya and the Saka King (Kalakacharya Katha-Manuscript,Prince of Wales Museum, Mumbai

The story is described in "Kalakacharya Kathanaka", a much later work by a Jain sage called Mahesara Suri (probably circa 12th century CE). The Kathanaka (meaning, "an account") tells the story of a famed Jain monk Kalakacharya. It mentions that Gardabhilla, the then-powerful king of Ujjain, abducted a nun called Sarasvati who was the sister of the monk. The enraged monk sought the help of the Saka ruler, a Sahi, in Sakasthana. Despite heavy odds (but aided by miracles) the Saka king defeated Gardabhilla and made him a captive. Sarasvati was repatriated, although Gardabhilla himself was forgiven. The defeated king retired to the forest, where he was killed by a tiger. His son, Vikramaditya, being brought up in the forest, had to rule from Pratishthana (in modern Maharashtra). Later on, Vikramaditya invaded Ujjain and drove away the Sakas. To commemorate this event, he started a new era called the Vikrama era. This story seems to be somewhat jumbled, as the original Vikramaditya began his rule from Ujjain, and not from Pratishthana. The Ujjain calendar started around 56 BCE to 58 BCE, and the subsequent Shalivahan Saka calendar was started in 78 AD at Pratishthan.

[edit] Culture

The traditional New Year of Bikram Samwat is one of the many festivals of Nepal, marked by parties, family gatherings, the exchange of good wishes, and participation in rituals to ensure good fortune in the coming year. It occurs in mid-April each year, and coincides with the traditional new year in Assam, Bengal, Maharashtra,Burma, Cambodia, Kerala, Manipur, Orissa, Punjab, Sri Lanka, Tamil Nadu and Thailand.

In addition to Nepal, the Bikram Sambat calendar is also recognized in northern India, eastern India, and in Gujarat among Hindus. In Buddhist communities, the month of Baishakh is associated with Vesak, known as Visakah Puja or Buddha Purnima in Nepal, India and Bangladesh, Visakha Bucha in Thailand, Waisak in Indonesia and Wesak in Sri Lanka and Malaysia. It commemorates the birth, Enlightenment and passing of Gautama Buddha on the first full moon day in May, except in a leap year when the festival is held in June. Although this festival is not held on the same day as Pahela Baishakh, the holidays typically fall in the same month (Baishakh) of the Bengali, Hindu, and Theravada Buddhist calendars, and are related historically through the spread of Hinduism and Buddhism in South Asia.

In Gujarat, the fourth day of Diwali is celebrated as the first day of the Vikram Samvat calendar.[citation needed]

[edit] Conversion

The traditional Vikram Samvat and traditional Saka Samvat use lunar months and thus need to add adhika months or delete kshaya months. The Kyoto University Panchanga Converter Program provides this conversion capability.

The basic rule of thumb for conversion (this formula does not give the precise date, but is useful for obtaining a rough estimate)

Nepali Date to English Date: Subtract - 56 Years - 8 Months - 16 Days

English Date to Nepali Date: Add - 56 Years - 8 Months - 16 Days

There are also few online websites that are helpful in converting between these dates exactly and correctly. Some of them are:

  1. 100 Years of Vikram Samvat Nepali Calendar
  2. Nepali Calendar Date Converter
  3. Rajan Nepal's Date Converter
  4. Vikram Sambat Nepali Calendar
  5. Nepal Law Commission
  6. Date Converter
  7. Vikram Samvat Date Converter
  8. General Post Office
  9. Entertainment Nepal
  10. Kishore Thapa
  11. Nepali Calendar
  12. Himali Sherpa

[edit] See also

[edit] Footnotes

  1. ^ The cyclopædia of India and of Eastern and Southern Asia by Edward Balfour, B. Quaritch 1885, p502
  2. ^ "Vikram Samvat should be declared national calendar". The Free Press Journal. 15 February 2012. http://www.freepressjournal.in/news/48011-Vikram-Samvat-should-be--declared-national-calendar.html. Retrieved 28 March 2012.
  3. ^ Falk and Bennett (2009), pp. 197-215.

[edit] References

Thanking you.
 
 
Divine Books
40/13.Shakti Nagar.
Delhi-110007.
India.
Ph.no..No..011 6519 6428
divinebooksindia@gmail.com
www.divinebooksindia.com