Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin - Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences - Institute of Asian and African Studies

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9.02: 25th HIP Workshop, from 2pm onwards



 

 

The seminar for South Asian Studies cordially invites all interested, especially students, to participate in the 24th HIP-Workshop. The respective presentations take place independently of each other so that participants can visit them individually.

 

9th February 2018

Seminar for South Asian Studies, Room 217

Department of Asian and African Studies

Invalidenstraße 118

2-7pm

 

25th HIP Abstracts (3)

MIDA Workshop: January 30 - 31, 2015



 
Seminar für Südasien-Studien,
Institut für Asien- und Afrikawissenschaften,
Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin


Organised by:

Prof. Dr. Ravi Ahuja, Universität Göttingen, Centre for Modern Indian Studies (CeMIS)

Dr. Heike Liebau, Zentrum Moderner Orient (ZMO) Berlin

Prof. Dr. Michael Mann, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Institut für Asien- und Afrikawissenschaften (IAAW)

 

 

-> Programme and Abstracts

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

13th HIP Workshop: Dec 12, 2014

Department of South Asian Studies Institute of Asian and African Studies Invalidenstr. 118, Room 217 2:00-7:00 pm


 

 

 

 
Dec 12, 2014
Department of South Asian Studies
Institute of Asian and African Studies

Invalidenstr. 118, Room 217

2:00-7:00 pm

 

 

13th HIP Workshop

 

HIP brings together Berlin’s academic competence on South Asia

 

 

  • 2:15-3:15 pm Elijah Horn, IAAW, HU Berlin/ Universität Hildesheim:
                   Tagore and Geheeb - the Myth of a Friendship.

 

  • 3:15-4:15 pm Julten Abdelhalim, IAAW, HU Berlin:
                   An Indian Spring Versus an Arab Autumn? The Impact of Global Networks 
                   of Political Islamism between the Arab World and India.

 

  • 4:15-4:45 pm Coffee/Tea Break

 

  • 4:45-5:45 pm Tanja Herklotz, IAAW, HU Berlin:
                   Women's Rights Activism and the Supreme Court in India.

 

  • 5:45-6:45 pm Suraj Beri, JNU, Delhi / IAAW, HU Berlin:
                   Democracy and Inequality: Dynamics of Indian Elites.

 

  • 6:45 onwards Drinks and Snacks

 


Abstracts:

 

Tagore and Geheeb - the Myth of a friendship

 

Elijah Horn

IAAW, HU Berlin / Universität Hildesheim

 

In his 2011 "Eros & Herschaft", Jürgen Oelkers analyses strategies of power and (sexual) violence among representatives of German Reformpädagogik (new education), one of them being Paul Geheeb, the founder of the Odenwaldschule. From my analyses of the reception of India and its cultural tradition at the Odenwaldschule during the 1920s and 30s, I argue that Geheeb strategically used the personal contact to a number of Indians for positioning his institut on the competitive market of private schools. I will show that these strategies worked out and function until today: In the very same work, Oelkers reports on the friendship of Rabindranath Tagore and Paul Geheeb. Referring to original documents, their relationship should rather not be classified as such.

 

                                                                                                                                                                            An Indian Spring versus an Arab Autumn?

The impact of global networks of political Islamism between the Arab World and India

 

Dr. Julten Abdelhalim

 IAAW, HU Berlin    

                                                    

This presentation tackles my post-doctoral project concerning the dynamics of migration flows from Kerala to the Persian Gulf and their impact on the consolidation of revivalist Islamist politics. The intricate methods with which migration has created parallel organizations in the Gulf attracting moral and financial support of both the relatively wealthier Non Resident Indians and Egyptians is the impetus of these dynamics to be studied, in addition to the different manifestations of  the new political setups in the Arab World.

                                                                                  

 

Women's Rights Activism

and the Supreme Court in India

 

Tanja Herklotz

IAAW, HU Berlin

 

This interdisciplinary PhD Project seeks to answer the question to which degree the Indian women's movement has influenced Indian Supreme Court decisions regarding the religious "personal laws." It shows that the Indian women's movement, which has long argued that the various religious customary family laws are discriminatory against women, has functioned as a "support structure" in order to push for a judicial re-interpretation of religious laws. Due to its own fragmentation and the lack of a uniform and coherent voice it has, however, not realised this aim to its full potential.

 

                                                                                                                                                                            Democracy and Inequality:

Dynamics of Indian Elites

 

Suraj Beri

JNU, New Delhi / IAAW, HU Berlin

 

Social theory has been concerned with the dynamics of social inequalities. One of the major concept-ualizations, to make sense of processes of inequalities, has been of the elite studies. Studies on elites in India have focused on certain sections of elites such as political elites, intellectual elites and also business elites. This work aims to study empirically the dynamics between these various elites in the context of small town. On the one hand, it focuses on institutional context and material characteristics i.e. organizational capacity, structural factors of family, nature of the power exercised etc., while on the other it also brings the significance of symbolic aspects of classification and their vision of social world.

 

 

12th HIP Workshop: 4th July 2014

You are cordially invited to participate in the 12th Humboldt India Project (HIP) Workshop which will take place on the 4th of July 2014, Invalidenstr. 118, Room 217, 2:00–7:00 pm.


When?  

4th July 2014
2:00-7:00 pm

 

Where?

Department of South Asia Studies
Institute of Asian and African Studies
Invalidenstr. 118, Room: 217

 

Programm

2.15–3.00 pm Keerthi K. Bandru, Division of Resource Economics, HU Berlin: Role of Citizen Environmental Complaints in Local Environmental Governance: A Case of Industrial Pollution Regulation in India
3.00–3.45 pm
Johanna Buß, Institut für Südasien-, Tibet und Buddhismuskunde, Universität Wien: Debates of Secularization in Nepali Newspapers and Blogosphere
3.45–4.15 pm Coffee/Tea Break
4.15–5.00 pm
Chen Tzoref-Ashkenazi, South Asia Institute, University of Heidelberg: German Soldiers In Colonial India: The Hanoverian Regiments in Colonial India 1782-1792
5.00–5.45 pm
Soham Das Gupta, Dept. of History, Jadavpur University, Kolkata: Shifts and Continuities in Waging War in the North West Frontier: British Engagements between 1849-1913 and the Idea of ‘New Wars’.
5.45–6.00 pm Coffee/Tea Break
6.00–6.45 pm Anwesha Sengupta, Centre for Modern Indian Studies, University of Goettingen: Breaking Up Bengal: Land, People and Things, 1947-1952.

 

Contact

If you have any questions, please email: sadia.bajwa@asa.hu-berlin.de

 

Download

Programme + Abstracts

11th HIP Workshop: 6th June 2014

You are cordially invited to participate in the 11th Humboldt India Project (HIP) Workshop which will take place on the 6th of June 2014, Invalidenstr. 118, Room 217, 2:00–7:00 pm.


When?  

6th June 2014
2:00-7:00 pm

 

Where?

Department of South Asia Studies
Institute of Asian and African Studies
Invalidenstr. 118, Room: 217

 

Programm

2.15–3.15 pm Ranjan Ghosh, Division of Resource Economics, HU Berlin: The Role of Social Information in Collective Action — A Proposal
3.15–4.15 pm Vikram Patil, Division of Resource Economics, HU Berlin: What Determines Rehabilitation Compensation Claim? An Analysis of Farmers' Decisions in India
4.15–4.45 pm Coffee/Tea Break
4.45–5.45 pm Jutta Jain-Neubauer: Curiosity and its Aesthetics: German Explorers in 19th Century India
5.45–6.45 pm Sarah Holz, BGSMCS, Freie Universität, Berlin: Pakistan, quo vadis? Visions of Islam and State in Pakistan.
6.45 pm onwards Drinks and Snacks

 

Contact

If you have any questions, please email: sadia.bajwa@asa.hu-berlin.de

 

Download

Programme + Abstracts

Talk 27th May: Dr. Chandrika Kaul

Communications, Media and the Imperial Experience: Britain and India 1850–1950


Dr. Chandrika Kaul

Department of modern History, university of St. Andrews, Scotland, UK

 

When?

27th May, 2014

2–4 pm

 

Where?

Institute of Asian and African Studies
Invalidenstr. 118, Room: 217

Fotoausstellung: Framing Muslims

10 Fotografen | 10 Länder | 20 Bilder


Ein Bild sagt mehr als tausend Worte, heißt es, und doch vergessen wir oft, dass wir mit Fotos nicht nur Realitäten abbilden, sondern diese auch schaffen. Im Akt des Fotografierens machen wir uns ein Bild von der Welt. In jeder Aufnahme wird auch etwas ausgeblendet.

Was als „muslimisch“ klassifiziert wird ist häufig gottesfürchtig, überwiegend männlich und uneingeschränkt traditionell. Ausnahmen bestätigen entweder die Regel oder reduzieren ihre Motive auf Formen des Protests und der Grenzüberschreitung. Das Ziel dieser ethnographischen Fotoausstellung ist es, alltägliche, banale, zum Teil unterrepräsentierte Aspekte des Lebens in islamisch geprägten Gesellschaften einzubeziehen. Die Fotografien zeigen die Komplexität alltäglicher Erfahrungen: konfliktträchtige Gebiete werden Orten gegenübergestellt, an denen das Gebet und das Bedürfnis nach Vergnügen und einfachen Freuden Hand in Hand gehen. Hinzu kommen Bilder von muslimischen Gemeinschaften im Dialog mit der nichtmuslimischen Mehrheit und von Situationen, in denen das Muslim-Sein der Dargestellten gegenüber ihrem Mensch-Sein in den Hintergrund tritt.

Das Projekt „framing muslims“ dokumentiert zugleich das breite Spektrum an regionalen und kulturellen Schwerpunkten, die die Vielfalt der Forschungsprojekte an der Berlin Graduate School Muslim Cultures and Societies ausmacht.

 

Ort

Invalidenstraße 118, 2.Etage
Seminar für Südasien-Studien

 

Zeit

30. April – 30 Juni 2014

Lecture 9th May: Prof. Amar Farooqui

The Opium Enterprise in Nineteenth Century India: Some Reflections


Prof. Dr. Amar Farooqui

Delhi University
Member of the DFG/ICHR Delegation of Indian Historians


When?
9th May, 2014
2:00-4:00 pm

Where?
Institute of Asian and African Studies
Invalidenstr. 118, Room: 410

10th HIP Workshop: 7th February 2014

You are cordially invited to participate in the 10th Humboldt India Project (HIP) Workshop which will take place on the 7th February 2014, Invalidenstr. 118, Room 217, 4:00–7:00 pm.


When?   

7th February 2014
4:00-7:00 pm 

Where?

Department of South Asia Studies
Institute of Asian and African Studies 
Invalidenstr. 118, Room: 217

Call for Presentations : "Theory matters!?"

In this workshop, we want to address the question of modernity as one of the most decisive theoretical challenges for the humanities until date. Critically discussed since decades, terminologies and contextualization remain hazy. Focusing on South Asia as a crucial point of reference for the formation of European modernity and its claims, we want to examine the impact of altering theories of modernity for the academic as well as the public/political sphere.

Format

Diverging from our usual format, this workshop will open with short introductory presentations by the two moderators, after which everyone attending is invited to prepare a 3-5 min presentation, addressing one or more of the following questions:

  • One modernity or many? How do we define and where do we locate modernity?
  • Is there a difference between the content and the form of modernity?
  • Do we (still) need one or more theories of modernity?
  • Does the theory of modernity matter for its practice?
  • Does 'the' modernity have an agency?
  • What is the relationship critique of society and the critique of modernity?
  • Does an up-to-date academic contribution require the engagement with modernity?
  • How do we deal with modernity's discontents?
  • Is 'classical' modernity theory a European / German enterprise?
  • Where is the place for a critical academic today?
  • Does / in how far does gender matter?

 

Speakers will have the chance to intervene with their contributions at any time in the workshop. A speakers' list will be moderated. All those interested are welcome to attend and participate in the discussion (no registration required unless you are preparing a short presentation).

 

Language

English

 

Moderators

Dr. Hanna Werner, Dr. Georg Berkemer

 

Deadline

If you wish to contribute a presentation, please send in your name and question(s) to

sadia.bajwa@asa.hu-berlin.de

by the 5th of February 2014.

 

If you wish to subscribe to or unsubscribe from the HIP mailing list, please write to the email above.

9th HIP Workshop: 6th December 2013

You are cordially invited to participate in the 9th Humboldt India Project (HIP) Workshop which will take place on the 6th December, 2013, Invalidenstr. 118, Room 217, 4:00–8:00 pm.


HIP brings together Berlin’s academic competence on South Asia.

When?

Dec 06, 2013
4:00-8:00 pm

Where?

Department of South Asian Studies
Institute of Asian and African Studies
Invalidenstr. 118, Room 217

Programme

  • 4:15-5:15 pm Seyed Sadroddin Alavipanah, Geographisches Institut, HU Berlin:
    Global Environmental Changes and the Impacts of Urbanization: An Intercontinental Framework
  • 5:15-6:15 pm Siddharth Tripathi, JNU, New Delhi/ Otto Suhr Institut, FU Berlin:
    The European Union and Norms Promotion in Security Sector Reform: A Comparative Study of Bosnia- Herzegovina and Afghanistan
  • 6:15-6:45 pm Coffee/Tea Break
  • 6:45-7:45 pm Max Kramer, BGSMCS, FU Berlin:
    Representation of Kashmiri Identities in Digital Films
  • 7:45 onwards Drinks and Snacks

 

Available downloads

Programme of 9th HIP Workshop

Abstracts of 9th HIP Workshop

 

If you have any questions, please email: sadia.bajwa@asa.hu-berlin.de

Invitation: Pakistan in its Region and Beyond

Talk by His Excellency Mr. Abdul Basit, Ambassador of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan to Germany


A talk about Pakistan’s place in the international arena and the geo-political and domestic challenges it faces as NATO prepares to withdraw from the region.

 

Who?

His Excellency Mr. Abdul Basit
Ambassador of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan to Germany
 

When?

22nd November 2013

5:00-7:00 pm

 

Where?

Department of South Asia Studies

Institute of Asian and African Studies

Invalidenstr. 118, Room: 217

 

Supported by the Embassy of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan, Berlin.

8th HIP Workshop - 28th June, 2013 - Invitation

You are cordially invited to participate in the 8th Humboldt India Project (HIP) Workshop which will take place on the 28th June, 2013, Invalidenstr. 118, Room 217, 2.00-7.00 pm.


Programme

  • 2:15-3:15 pm Simone Holzwart, Education Studies, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin: Gandhian Symbolism and its Enactment in Basic Education
  • 3:15-4:15 pm Sayantani Adhikary, JU, Kolkata/ IAAW, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin: Imprisoning Her Body: The Hindu Bhadramahila’s Experience of Physical Culture in Late Colonial Bengal
  • 4:15-4:45 pm Coffee/Tea Break
  • 4:45-5:45 pm Jens Rommel, LGF, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin: Endowment Heterogeneity and Leading by Example in the Provision of Public Goods: A framed field experiment on sanitation in Hyderabad, India
  • 5:45-6:45pm Garima Mohan, BTS, Freie Universität, Berlin: EU’s Development Aid to India: Mapping Effectiveness and Impact
  • 6:45 onwards Drinks and Snacks

 

Please find the abstracts here.

Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin | Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences | Department of Asian and African Studies | Regional Departments | South Asian Studies | Events | Archives | Waterspace, Empire and Mobility in Southeastern Asia, IAAW-Workshop-1, Friday, June 14, 2013

Waterspace, Empire and Mobility in Southeastern Asia, IAAW-Workshop-1, Friday, June 14, 2013

You are cordially invited to the Workshop 'Waterspace, Empire and Mobility in Southeastern Asia' which will take place on the 14th June, 2013, Invalidenstraße 118, Room 217, 14-20h.


The recent spell of economic growth in India, China and countries across Southeastern Asia, have mostly impacted the Himalayan-Tibetan watershed. Thousands of large and smaller dams, completed or projected, on the Brahmaputra, Irrawaddy, Salwin, Mekong and Yangtze, among others, are set to alter the waterspace of the region in an unprecedented manner. Yet just about half of the world’s poor population depend either directly or indirectly on this watershed.
How do historians and social scientists grapple the qustion of maintaining ecological value of the waterspace amid the desire for ecnomic growth in Asia? This broader question would be discussed in this workship at the Institut für Asien- und Afrikawissenschaften at Humboldt-Universität Berlin. The IAAW seems to be a fitting place to engage this question as its different departments represent scholars of Central Asia, South Asia and Southeast Asia where this watershed touches.


In this broader context and platform, the workshop would seek to examine trans-regional forces of the watersapce. In particular, it will study the river as a force of environmental, economic and cultural integration in the territories spanning Bangladesh, India (Northeastern provinces), Myanmar, China (Yunnan) and Southeastern Tibet as well as mainland Southeast Asia.
So far policy-makers, environmentalists and civil society activists have mostly based their approach to rivers on the externalities of the impact of interventions into the river systems, leaving the question of the river as a force in itself less focused. It may be argued that the interactions and exchanges of people, commodities and ideas around the watersapce of this region have given rise to a distinctive integrative force which must be taken seriously. Through such attempt to restore the value of the river as an integrative force, this workshop will seek to recover the ‘transnational self’ of the river. In doing so, the workshop aims to highlight the aspects of ecological “commons” as inherent in these rivers against the development practices that are spatially framed within the bounded space of the postcolonial nation-state.

 

Talks:

  • Klara Feldes: The Polavaram Dam in Andhra Pradesh: a Project of “Modernity”
  • Olaf Günther: State-Community-Relationsships in the Amudarya Delta
  • Iftekhar Iqbal: Locating River at the Imperial Crossroads of India and China
  • Diana Lange: The Significance of Waterways for the pre-modern Tibetan Transport System
  • Jarmila Ptackova: Three Rivers‘ Headwaters Nature Reserve“ in Qinghai, China: Environmental Protection versus Economic and Political Interests
  • Vincent Houben: Liquid Space and Southeast Asia
  • Ashfaque Hossain: Water-space and Mobility in the Assam-Bengal Borders
  • Hanna Werner: Handling Indian Rivers between Political Concerns and Religious Sentiments

 

Please find the abstracts here.

Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin | Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences | Department of Asian and African Studies | Regional Departments | South Asian Studies | Events | Archives | Invitation 28.05.2013: Prof. Janaki Nair - "The Curious Case of the NICE road to Mysore: A New Urbanism?"

Invitation 28.05.2013: Prof. Janaki Nair - "The Curious Case of the NICE road to Mysore: A New Urbanism?"

You are cordially invited to the talk of Prof. Janaki Nair
  • When May 28, 2013 from 02:00 to 04:00
  • Where Department of South Asia Studies Institute of Asian and African Studies Invalidenstr. 118, Room: 217
  • iCal

Dear Ladies and Gentleman,

you are cordially invited to the talk of Prof. Janaki Nair.

Janaki Nair is Professor at the Centre for Historical Studies and Chairperson of the Archives on Contemporary History, School of  Social Sciences, Jawaharlal Nehru University
New Delhi.

 

Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin | Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences | Department of Asian and African Studies | Regional Departments | South Asian Studies | Events | Archives | Invitation 30.05.2013: Prof. Sanjay Srivastava - "Class/consumerism/ urban life and contemporary forms of religiosity in India."

Invitation 30.05.2013: Prof. Sanjay Srivastava - "Class/consumerism/ urban life and contemporary forms of religiosity in India."

You are cordially invited to the talk of Prof. Sanjay Srivastava.
  • When May 30, 2013 from 10:00 to 12:00
  • Where Place: Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Seminargebäude am Hegelplatz, Dorotheenstr. 24, Room 1.504
  • iCal

This talk will explore the changing meaning of politics through exploring relationships between class, consumerism, urban life and ideas of the 'global' city, legality and illegality, and new ideals of family life, leisure and work. Through exploring such contexts, the course will also investigate changes in the relationship between the state and different class fractions.

Sanjay Srivastava is Professor of Sociology at the Institute of Economic Growth, Delhi University. His publications include Constructing Postcolonial India. National Character and the Doon School(1998), Asia. Cultural Politics in the Global Age (2001, co-author), Sexual Sites, Seminal Attitudes. Sexualities, Masculinities and Culture in South Asia (2004, contributing editor),Passionate Modernity. Sexuality, Class and Consumption in India (2007), Sexuality Studies(2013, contributing editor), and, Entangled Spaces. Slum, Gated Community and Shopping Mall in Delhi and Gurgaon (forthcoming 2013). He is co-editor of the journal Contributions to Indian Sociology.

Please register for the session with Anandita Bajpai (Seminar für Südasien-Studien, IAAW, Humboldt Universität zu Berlin) at AnanditaBajpai@gmail.com.

Invitation 30.05.2013: Prof. Sanjay Srivastava - "Postcolonial Modernities in India"

You are cordially invited to the talk of Prof. Sanjay Srivastava.
  • When May 30, 2013 from 04:00 to 06:00
  • Where Department of South Asia Studies Institute of Asian and African Studies Invalidenstr. 118, Room: 217
  • iCal

Dear Ladies and Gentleman,

you are cordially invited to the talk of Prof. Sanjay Srivastava.

Sanjay Srivastava is Professor of Sociology at the Institute of Economic Growth, Delhi University. His publications include Constructing Postcolonial India. National Character and the Doon School(1998), Asia. Cultural Politics in the Global Age (2001, co-author), Sexual Sites, Seminal Attitudes. Sexualities, Masculinities and Culture in South Asia (2004, contributing editor),Passionate Modernity. Sexuality, Class and Consumption in India (2007), Sexuality Studies(2013, contributing editor), and, Entangled Spaces. Slum, Gated Community and Shopping Mall in Delhi and Gurgaon (forthcoming 2013). He is co-editor of the journal Contributions to Indian Sociology.

Invitation: Situating Bangladesh, Workshop, 17th-19th May 2013

You are cordially invited to participate in the Situating Bangladesh in in South Asian Studies Workshop which will take place from 17th May to 19th May, 2013. A workshop conceived by Iftekhar Iqbal and Michael Mann.


Situating Bangladesh in South Asian Studies 17.05-19.05.2013

 

Programme

 

  • Friday, 17 May 2013

4.00-5.00 pm Opening Remarks

His Excellency the Ambassador of Bangladesh, Mosud Mannan (tbc)

Prof. Dr. Michael Mann, Director, Institut für Asien- und Afrikawissenschaften

Prof. Dr. Iftekhar Iqbal, Georg Forster Fellow, Humboldt Stiftung, Dhaka University

5.00-5:30 pm Coffee Break & Snacks

5.30-7.00 pm

Cláudio Costa Pinheiro

Mulaqat: Colonial Studies, Folk Art and Audio-Visual Making in India

(Documentary, Brazil 2010)

8.00 pm

Workshop Dinner at Restaurant “Honigmond”

 

  • Saturday, 18 May 2013

10.00-11.00 am

Willem van Schendel (University of Amsterdam)

Biases and Blind Spots in Bangladesh Studies

11.00 am-12.00 pm

Neilesh Bose (University of North Texas, USA)

Periodization and the Twentieth Century: Grappling with the Pre-Histories of Bangladesh
12.00-1.00 pm

Eva Gerharz (Ruhr-University Bochum)

“We invite them and they come” –Transborder Exchange and Indigenous Activism in Bangladesh

1.00-3.00 pm Lunch Break

(at one’s own expense, small restaurants in 5 minutes walking distance)

3.00-4.00 pm

Iftekhar Iqbal (Dhaka University, Bangladesh/Humboldt University, Berlin)

The Bengal Muslim: Locating Identity through Mobility and Language

4.00-4.30 pm Coffee Break

4.30-5.30 pm

Hans Harder (South Asia Institute, Heidelberg University)

Between the Chairs: Some Problems of Textual Studies on Bangla/Bangladesh

5.30-6.30 pm

Sonia Nishat Amin (Dhaka University, Bangladesh)
Nawab Faizunnessa Chaudhurani and her Elusive Legacy
 

  • Sunday, 19 May 2013

10.00-11.00 am

Annu Jalais (National University Singapore)

Tazia Trajectories in Bangladesh: Mapping Moharram’s North Indian Past

11-11.30 Coffee Break

11.30 am-12.30 pm

Elora Shehabuddin (Rice University, Houston/Texas, USA)

Purdah, Piety, and Progress:
Competing Notions of the Modern Woman in Late 20th Century East Bengal

12.30-1.00 pm

Concluding Debate and General Remarks

6th HIP Workshop - Programme

HIP brings together Berlin’s academic competence on South Asia
  • When Jan 11, 2013 from 02:00 to 06:00
  • Where Department of South Asian Studies Institute of Asian and African Studies Invalidenstr. 118, Room 217 2-8 pm
  • iCal

 

2:15-3:15 pm

Jamila Adeli, IAAW, Humboldt Universität zu Berlin:

Media and Markets in a Globalizing World: Mapping the Contemporary Art World in India.

 

3:15-4:15 pm

Sabil Francis, GESI, Universität Leipzig:

Knowledge for Growth Changing Patterns of Migration and Urbanisation in an Emerging Indian Small Town. A Case Study of Kochi, India.

 

4:15-4:45 pm Drinks and Snacks

 

4:45-5:45 pm

Supriya Routh, Faculty of Law, Humboldt Universität zu Berlin;

Rita Orschiedt, IAAW, Humboldt Universität zu Berlin:

Active Agents of Change: Informal Workers Trade Unionism in Kolkata, India.

 

5:45-7:15pm

Claudio C. Pinheiro, LAI, Freie Universität, Berlin:

Mulaqat: Colonial Studies, Folk Art and Audio-Visual Making in India. (Documentary, Brazil 2010)

 

7:15 onwards Drinks and Snacks

 

5th HIP Workshop - Programme

5th HIP Workshop 30th November 2012, 2:00-7:00 pm
  • When Nov 30, 2012 from 02:00 to 08:00
  • Where Department of South Asia Studies Institute of Asian and African Studies Invalidenstr. 118, Room: 217
  • iCal

5th HIP Workshop

Programme 5th HIP Workshop (PDF)
 

When?

30th Nov. 2012

2:00-8:00 pm

 

Where?

Department of South Asia Studies

Institute of Asian and African Studies

Invalidenstr. 118, Room: 217

 

Programme



2:00-3:00 pm Janine Wilhelm, IAAW, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin:
Early Debates and Conflicts around the Pollution of the Ganges, c. 1860-1930.

3:00-4:00 pm Hanna Werner, IAAW, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin:
Large Dams, Development and the Question of Modernity in India.

4:00-4:30 pm Drinks and Snacks

4:30-5:30 pm Sabil Francis, GESI, Universität Leipzig:
German-Knowledge for Growth Changing Patterns of Migration and Urbanisation in an Emerging Indian Small Town. A Case Study of Kochi, India.

5:30-6:30 pm Atoho Jakhalu, LGF, Humboldt Universität zu Berlin:
Governance of Inter-Sectoral Water Re-allocation within the context of Urbanisation in Hyderabad.

6:30-6:45 pm Drinks and Snacks

6:45-7:45 pm Mysore G. Chandrakanth, LGF, Humboldt Universität zu Berlin: Prospects for Academic and Research Collaboration in Social Sciences with India.