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

Dr. phil. Diana Lange

Name
Dr. phil. Diana Lange
Status
visiting professor
Email
diana.lange (at) hu-berlin.de

Room: 502

Contact: diana.lange@hu-berlin.de

Consultation hour: personal consultation by appointment

 

 


 

Research interests

 

  • History of collections and collecting, provenience research
  • Historical Cartography, Mapping History (focus Central and East Asia)
  • History of Knowledge and Exploration, Decolonialization
  • Intercultural Exchange (within Asia and between Asia and Europe)
  • Material and Visual Culture
  • History of Transport
  • Economic Anthropology
  • Islam and Muslims in Tibet

 

Research regions

 

  • Tibet and the Himalayas (fieldwork experience since 1999)
  • India (fieldwork experience since 2014)
  • East Asia (China, Korea and Japan)


Curriculum Vitae

 

10/2022–09/2023             

Visiting professor Central Asian Studies, Institute of Asian and African Studies, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin

 

since 10/2021                   

Principal Investigator of the research project Maps as Knowledge Resources and Mapmaking as Process: The Case of the Mapping of Tibet at the Cluster of Excellence Understanding Written Artefacts at the Centre for the Studies of Manuscript Cultures, Universität Hamburg

https://www.csmc.uni-hamburg.de/written-artefacts/research-fields/field-d/rfd16.html

 

08/2018–09/2021                  

Research associate at the Museum am Rothenbaum Hamburg,

(BMBF-Project „Coloured Maps“) https://markk-hamburg.de/forschungsprojekt-kolorierte-landkarten/

 

08/2020–02/2021                  

Guest researcher at the Max-Planck-Institute for the History of Science Berlin, project Colouring Maps in East Asia

https://www.mpiwg-berlin.mpg.de/research/projects/coloring-maps-east-asia

 

09/10 2019                            

guest researcher at the Max-Planck-Institute for the History of Science Berlin, project Mapping China in the 18th Century: Hand-drawn Maps from the “Qing Atlas Tradition”

https://www.mpiwg-berlin.mpg.de/research/projects/mapping-china-18th-century-hand-drawn-maps-qing-atlas-tradition

 

since 11/2016                        

Associated researcher in the European Research Council Project TibArmy (The Tibetan Army of the Dalai Lamas, 17th-20th Century), Paris

https://tibarmy.hypotheses.org/about

 

09/2018                                 

L’ Habilitation à Diriger des Recherches (HDR) en Sciences Historique et Philologiques/ at École Pratique des Hautes Études/Paris 

Exploring Tibet in mid-19th Century: The British Library's Wise Collection

 

2016                                      

Visiting lecturer at the University of Zürich, Department of Social Anthropology and Cultural Studies

 

04/2015–09/2018                  

Research associate at the Institute of Asian and African Studies, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin

 

2013–2015                            

Gerda Henkel research fellow at the Institute for Indology and Central Asian Studies Leipzig University

 

11/2005–03/2013                  

Research associate at the Institute of Asian and African Studies, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin

 

01/2002–12/2004                  

Associated researcher in the Research Project Chinese Everyday Technologies (funded by the Volkswagen Foundation) at the Technical University Berlin

 

2003–2008                            

Ph.D. in Central Asian Studies, Humboldt Universität zu Berlin

The Reduction of the Coracles: Fishing Cultures in Southern and Central Tibet and their Economic and Socio-cultural Transformation in Modern China

Supervisors: Prof. Dr Toni Huber, Prof. Dr Mareile Flitsch,

 

1999–2000                            

Tibet University (China), Tibetan Language course

 

1996–2002                            

Leipzig University, Magister Artium in Sinology, Central Asian Studies (Tibetology) and Economics

 

1992–1996                            

Education as a banker, working in the asset consulting      department at the Deutsche Bank, Leipzig

 

Current research project

 

Maps as Knowledge Resources and Mapmaking as Process: The Case of the Mapping of

Tibet

Cluster of Excellence Understanding Written Artefacts at the Centre for the Studies of

Manuscript Cultures, Universität Hamburg

https://www.csmc.uni-hamburg.de/written-artefacts/research-fields/field-d/rfd16.html

 

Talks and lectures

 

Knowledge, Science and Empires: The Mapping of Tibet in Europe and Asia

Conference Mapping Asia: Cartography and the Construction of Territoriality

Forschungskolleg Transkulturelle Studien/Sammlung Perthes/Universität Erfurt, Gotha, 24.–25.11. 2022

 

Putting Tibet on the Map: A Journey Through Different Mapping Practices

CrossAsia Talks, Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin, 17.11.2022

https://blog.crossasia.org/crossasia-talks-diana-lange-17-november-2022/

 

Abstract signs on printed and manuscript maps of Tibet

Interdisciplinary panel Beyond the realm of natural language – Abstract sign systems in multigraphic written artefacts, Deutscher Orientalistentag, Berlin, 12.–17.9. 2022

 

Maps of Tibet as Knowledge Resources

  1. Seminar of the International Association for Tibetan Studies, Prag, 3.–10.7.2022

 

Making maps of Tibet: Uncovering the knowledge of their production

Virtual Lunch Talk, together with Prof. Dr. Oliver Hahn (BAM Berlin), Centre for the Studies of Manuscript Cultures, Universität Hamburg, 13.6.2022

 

Colours on East Asian Maps

International Conference for the History of Cartography, Bucharest, 4.–8.7.2022

 

Mapping (Un)Certain Knowledge. The Case of Tibet

KNIR Colloquium Mapping Uncertainty. Early Modern Global Cartography, 21st Century Discussions, Koninklijk Nederlands Instituut Rome, 11.–12.5.2022

 

Representation of Mt. Kailash on Tibetan, Chinese and European Maps

5th International Conference on the Phenomenon of the Holy Mt. Kailash, Universität Hamburg, 25.–27.2.2022

 

The Diverse Mapping of Tibetan Human Landscapes

International SEECHAC conference Kucha and Beyond: Divine and Human Landscapes from Central Asia to the Himalayas, Sächsische Akademie der Wissenschaften zu Leipzig, 2.–4.10.2021

 

Talking about Colours on Maps: ‘Colour Systems’, ‘Colour Schemes’ and ‘Colour Codes’ (ONLINE)

Workshop Maps and Colours, 5.–6.11.2020

 

Blaue Berge, grüne Flüsse: Die Repräsentation physischer Geographie auf ostasiatischen Karten

Historisches Forum Erde-Natur-Wissen, Online-Conference, 12.–13.10.2020

 

A Pictorial Encyclopaedia of the Tibetan World: Reading Illustrated Mid-19th Century Maps of Tibet

Aris Lecture, Wolfson College, University of Oxford, 5.12.2019

https://www.wolfson.ox.ac.uk/annual-aris-lectures

 

Mapping Tibet: Ein tibetischer Lama zeichnet Karten für Major Hay

Völkerkundemuseum Zürich, 5.9.2019

 

Tracking down the secrets of colours: Asian maps from the Museum am Rothenbaum in Hamburg seen with respect to colour analysis.

15th International Conference on the History of Science in East Asia, Chonbuk National University Jeonju, Korea, 19.–23.8.2019

 

Considerations about a Chinese ‘Map of the World’ at the Museum am Rothenbaum in Hamburg

International Conference for the History of Cartography, Amsterdam, 14.–19.7.2019

 

Encounters in the Western Himalayas: Visualizing Tibet in the mid-19th Century

Keynote Speech, 15. Seminar of the International Association for Tibetan Studies, Paris, 7.–13.7.2019

 

Infrastructure and Power: the tazam station system along the zhunglam

  1. Seminar of the International Association for Tibetan Studies, Paris, 7.–13.7.2019

 

Reading Maps and Drawings: An Atlas of the Himalayas by a 19th Century Tibetan Lama

Department of Ethnology and Cultural Anthropology, Copernicus University Torun, Polen, 13.5.2019

 

Mysterious Beings on a Wutaishan Map

Conference Current Himalayan Research: Gods, Ghosts, Demons and Other Beings, Będlewo/Polen, 15.–18.5.2019

 

Journey of Discovery: The “Tibet Collection” of Thomas Alexander Wise

The McManus Museum and Archives Dundee, 18.4.2019

 

The Presence of Qing Troops in Tibet as Represented in Different 19th Century Sources

Conference Military Culture in Tibet during the Ganden Phodrang Period (1642–1959): The Interaction between Tibetan and Other Asian Military Traditions, University of Oxford, Wolfson College, 18.6.2018

 

My Journey of Discovery in Tibetan Studies.

Conference Current Himalayan Research: My Himalayan Story, Będlewo/Polen, 11.–14.4.2018

 

Exploring Tibet in the mid-19th Century: The British Library’s Wise Collection

Royal Asiatic Society, London, 7.12.2017

 

Journey of Discovery. An Atlas of the Himalayas by a 19th Century Tibetan Monk.

Dipartimento di Studi Umanistici, Uniserità Ca’ Foscari Venezia, Venice, 30.10.2017

 

The Presence of Qing Officials and Garrisons in mid-19th Century Tibet from a Visual Perspective.

TibArmy Monthly Seminar, TIBARMY, EPHE, La Sorbonne, Paris, 12.10.2017

 

A Hidden Atlas of the Himalayas made by a 19th Century Tibetan Monk: The Wise Collection.

Symposium Mapping Asia: Cartographic Encounters between East and West,

Leiden University, 15.–16.09.2017

 

Hidden and Unrecognized Knowledge on Tibet: The British Library’s Wise Collection

Royal Geographical Society – IBG Annual International Conference 2017: Decolonising Geographical Knowledge: Opening Geography out to the World, London, 29.8.–1.9.2017

 

One collection, many faces: When did the Wise Collection have its “historical moment”?

Workshop Object Lessons from Tibet and the Himalayas, University of Manchester, 9.6.2017

 

Wie Tibet nach Europa kam: ein tibetischer Mönch zeichnet für Major Hay

University of Vienna, Institut für Südasien-, Tibet- und Buddhismuskunde, 20.1.2017

 

A visual history of a hidden exploration of mid-19th century Tibet

Institutskolloquium, HU Berlin, Institute of Asian and African Studies,

Co-presentation with Dr. Bi-Yu Chang (SOAS London), 12.1.2017

 

Journey of Discovery. An Atlas of the Himalayas by a 19th Century Tibetan Monk.

Rubin Museum, New York, 2.12.2016

 

An unrecognized pioneer of Tibetan Studies: the man who engaged a lama to draw and describe Tibet in the late 1850s

  1. Seminar of the International Association for Tibetan Studies, Bergen/Norwegen, 19.–25.6.2016,

 

Knowledge, Science and the Empire: The Exploration and Visualization of Tibet, c. 1857

Workshop Colonial Sciences and Indigenous Knowledge Systems in South Asia, Max Planck Institute for the History of Science, Berlin, 10.–11.6.2016

 

A “Road leading to Spiti from Demjok”: Considerations about the search for alternative routes between Tibet and Spiti in mid-19th Century

1st International Conference on Spiti: Recovering the Past & Exploring the Present,

University of Oxford, 6.–7.5.2016

 

Images as historical evidence: potentials and limits

Conference Current Himalayan Research: Challenges, Problems or Failures, Będlewo/Polen, 27.–30.4.2016

 

Mapping Tibet und Westafrika. Indigene Informanten, Kartographie und britischer

Imperialismus im 19. Jahrhundert

Institutskolloquium, HU Berlin, Institute of Asian and African Studies,

Co-presentation with Dr. Silke Strickrodt (University of Birmingham), 23.11.2015

 

Mapping Tibet in mid-19th century: The British Library’s Wise Collection

26th International Conference on the History of Cartography, University of Antwerp, 12.–17.7.2015

 

Putting Tibet on the Map: A 19th Century Cartographic Depiction by a Local Artist

Maps and Society Lecture Series, Warburg Institute, London, 28.5.2015

 

Hidden Exploration on Tibet: The British Library’s Wise Collection

University of Oxford, Oriental Institute, 27.5.2015

 

Knowledge, Science and Empires: the Exploration and Visualization of Tibet in Europe and Asia.

Conference Current Himalayan Research: Approaches, Methodologies, Results, Będlewo/Polen, 23.–25.4.2015

 

Tashilhunpo in the Nubra Valley: A preliminary report on the visual representation of cultural interactions between Tibet and Ladakh

Workshop Tibetan Borderlands, Palacky University, Olomouc/Chech Republic, 28.2.2015

 

Die visuelle Repräsentation sino-tibetischer Beziehungen in der Wise Collection der British Library

Sinologie-Kolloquium, Ostasiatisches Institut, Universität Leipzig, 26.1.2015

 

“Spying out Tibet for the British Empire”: Die visuelle Repräsentation Tibets in der Wise Collection der British Library.

Lecture Series Kartographie zwischen Kunst und Wissenschaft, Universität Jena, 19.1.2015

 

Tibet visualisiert: Bilder als historische Quellen

Universität Zürich, Kunsthistorisches Institut, 14.11.2014

 

The visual representation of 19th century Tibet: the British Library’s Wise Collection.

1st Conference of the European Association for Asian Art and Archaeology, Olomouc, Chech Republic, 25.–27.9.2014

 

Visual Documentation of Regional Topography and Everyday Life in mid-19th Century Tibetan Cultural Areas: the British Library’s Wise Collection.

Centre for Community Knowledge, Ambedkar University Delhi, 4.8.2014

 

“Dundee and the World”: The Collection(s) of Thomas Alexander Wise (1802–1889).

Workshop (Mis-)Representing Cultures and Objects: Critical Approaches to Museological Collections, University of Stirling/UK, 16.5.2014

 

Trading routes and -activities in mid-19th century Tibet–represented in the Wise Collection.

Conference Commerce and Communities: Social status and the exchange of Goods in Tibetan Societies, Universität Bonn, 5.–6.5.2014

 

A Unique View from Within”: Mapping mid-19th Century Tibet by a Local Artist

International Conference Chinese and Asian Geographical and Cartographical Views on Central Asia and its Adjacent Regions, Universität Bonn, 10.–11.1.2014

 

Acquiring knowledge: The British Library’s Wise Collection.

  1. Seminar of the International Association for Tibetan Studies, Ulan Bator/Mongolia, 21.–27.7.2013

 

Spying out Tibet for the British Empire? Die Wise Collection der British Library.

Universität Leipzig, Institut für Indologie und Zentralasienwissenschaften, 19.6.2013

 

The significance of waterways for the pre-modern Tibetan transport system.

Workshop Waterspace, Empire and Mobility in Southeastern Asia, HU Berlin, 14.6.2013

 

“A unique view from within”: The visual representation of Tibet by a local artist in the middle of the 19th century.

Oriental Institute, University of Oxford, 17.5.2013

 

The visual representation of Ladakh and Zanskar in the British Library’s Wise Collection.

16th Conference of the International Association for Ladakh Studies,

Universität Heidelberg, 17.–20.4.2013

 

Maps and territories: Visual representation of Tibetan frontier areas along the Himalaya.

Conference The Himalayan Impasse, Universität Bonn, 28.–29.1.2013

 

The Revival of Local Handicraft as a Result of the Increasing Tourism in Central Tibet.

Workshop China in Motion: Migration, Place, and Identity, Penn State University, USA, 18.–19.11.2011

 

Transformation und Anpassung einer ökonomischen Nische an eine veränderte

Infrastruktur: Fischerei in Zentraltibet im Jahr 2009.

Österreichische Akademie der Sozialwissenschaften, Vienna, 10.6.2010

 

Infrastructure Development and the Transformation of Everyday Life in Central

Tibet: The Case of the Yak Hide Boat.

  1. International Seminar for Young Tibetologists, Paris, 07.–11.9.2009

 

Tibetan Fishermen: Business in Confrontation with Religion.

1st International Seminar for Young Tibetologists, London, 9.–12.9.2007

 

Do all the Muslims of Tibet belong to the Hui? The Origin and Development of the Chinese Term Hui and the Equivalent Terms in the Tibetan Language.

Conference Islam & Tibet: Cultural Interactions, Warburg Institute, London, 16.–18.11.2006

 

The Tibetan skinboat: construction and adaptability to its functions and environment.

  1. Seminar of the International Association for Tibetan Studies, Universität Bonn,

27.8.–2.9.2006

 

Publications

 

Books

 

  1. An Atlas of the Himalayas by a 19th Century Tibetan Lama: A Journey of Discovery. Leiden: Brill.

https://brill.com/view/title/38404

 

  1. Die Verkleinerung der Yakhautboote. Fischerkulturen in Zentral- und Südtibet im sozioökonomischen Wandel des modernen China.

Wiesbaden, Harrassowitz.

 

Edited Volumes

 

Maps and Colours: A Complex Relationship.

Diana Lange and Benjamin van der Linde (Eds.) In: Brill Series Mapping the Past. Manuscript submitted.

 

  1. Colours on East Asian Maps: Their Use and Materiality in China, Japan and Korea between mid-17th and early 20th Century.

Diana Lange and Oliver Hahn. Research Perspectives in Map History Series (Leiden: Brill). In Print.

 

  1. Crossing Boundaries. Tibetan Studies Unlimited.

Diana Lange, Jarmila Ptackova, Marion Wettstein and Mareike Wulff (Eds.). Prague: Academia.

 

Podcasts and Blogs

 

CSMC Blog, Hamburg

“Sheding Lights on Maps”

https://www.csmc.uni-hamburg.de/publications/blog/2022-01-28-shedding-light-on-maps-english.html

 

Brill Humanities Matter Podcast “A Journey of Discovery. Reading a 19th Century Illustrated Map of the Himalayas”

https://blog.brill.com/humanitiesmatter/lange_-_atlas_of_the_himalayas.html

 

Historische Geographie – Aktuelle Forschung (Podcast, Universität Bamberg)

“Von kolorierten Landkarten, Entdeckungsreisen und dem Atlas of the Himalayas

https://open.spotify.com/episode/0UZ2sSY3o7bLUfZWwJVgUR

 

  1. An Atlas of the Himalayas by a 19th Century Tibetan Lama: A Journey of Discovery.

In: British Library: Asian and African Studies Blog. https://blogs.bl.uk/magnificentmaps/2020/07/an-atlas-of-the-himalayas-by-a-19th-century-tibetan-lama-a-journey-of-discovery.html

 

  1. The Wise Collection: Acquiring Knowledge on Tibet in the late 1850s.

British Library Asian and African Studies Blog.

http://blogs.bl.uk/asian-and african/2016/07/the-wise-collection-acquiring-knowledge-on-tibet-in-the-late-1850s.html. 18. Juli 2016.

 

Papers in Journals and books

 

Wise Collection (British Library).

In: Kain, Roger J.P. (ed.) Cartography in the Nineteenth Century (Vol. 5, History of Cartography Series). The University of Chicago Press. Manuscript accepted.

 

Colours and Readability in the Korean Daedongnyeojido: New Insights into a Map of Korea from the Nineteenth Century (Co-author Sang-hoon Jang)

In: Lange, Diana and Benjamin van der Linde (eds.). Maps and Colours. A Complex Relationship.

In: Mapping the Past Series (Leiden: Brill). Manuscript submitted.

 

Mapping Qing Empire in Eighteenth Century: Hand-drawn Maps from the ‘Qing Atlas Tradition’ at the Museum am Rothenbaum in Hamburg.

In manuscript cultures. Manuscript accepted.

 

  1. Colour on Maps: Systems, Schemes, Codes.

In Imago Mundi 74 (1), 117–124.

 

  1. “My Karma Selected me to Become a Ferryman”: The Role of Waterways and Water Crafts in the Corvée Tax System in the pre-1959 Tibet.

In: Charles Ramble, Peter Schwieger and Alice Travers (eds.) Taxation in Tibetan Societies: Rules, Practices and Discourses. Leiden: Brill, 182–191. In Print.

 

  1. A mid-19th Century Ethnographic Atlas of the Tibetan World: The British Library’s Wise Collection.

In: Anna Boroffka and Margit Kern. Early Modern “Cultural Encyclopaedias”: Defining a Genre and its Agency from a Transcultural Perspective. De Gruyter Oldenbourg. In Print.

 

  1. Landkarte Tianxia Yutu „Abbild des ganzen Territoriums unter dem Himmel“ / Map Tianxia Yutu „Depiction of the Entire Territory under the Heaven“. In: Maria-Katharina Lang and Rahel Wille (eds.) Exhibition booklet Steppen & Seidenstraßen/ Steppe & Silk Road. MARKK Hamburg, 15–17.

 

  1. Ostasiatische Karten/East Asian Maps.

In: Kathrin Enzel, Oliver Hahn, Susanne Knödel and Jochen Schlüter (eds.) Exhibition catalogue Farbe trifft Landkarte/Colour meets map. Manuscript cultures No. 16, 289–368.

 

  1. Einführung – Farbe trifft Landkarte/Introduction: Colour meets map. (Co-author Benjamin van der Linde) In: Kathrin Enzel, Oliver Hahn, Susanne Knödel and Jochen Schlüter (Eds.) Exhibition catalogue Farbe trifft Landkarte/Colour meets map. Manuscript cultures No. 16, Hamburg, 23–48.

 

  1. A Visual History of a Hidden Exploration of mid-19th Century Tibet: the British Library’s Wise Collection.

In: Annamaria Motrescu-Mayes (ed.). De-Illustrating the History of the British Empire. Preliminary Perspectives. New York: Routledge Studies in Cultural History book series, 43–60.

 

  1. William Edmund Hay: The Pioneer of Tibetan Studies Who Sold his Fame.

In: Jeannine Bischoff, Petra Maurer and Charles Ramble (eds.) On a Day of a Month of the Fire Bird Year. Festschrift for Peter Schwieger on the Occasion of his 65th Birthday. Liri: Lumbini, 523–536.

 

  1. A Visual Representation of the Qing Political and Military Presence in Mid-19th Tibet.

In: Revue d’Études Tibétaines, March 2020, 241–276.

 

  1. Thoughts on a Hand-painted Pictorial Map of Wutaishan at the Museum am Rothenbaum in Hamburg.

In: Orientations, Vol. 51(1), 68–79.

 

  1. Visual Culture of Exploration: the Acquisition of Knowledge related to Trade in Tibet in the mid-19th Century.

In: Jeannine Bischoff and Alice Travers (Eds.) Commerce and Communities: Social Status and the Exchange of Goods in Tibetan Societies. Berlin: EB Verlag, 91–126.

 

  1. Reflections on Material and Visual Culture on a Trading Junction: the Minister’s Palace of Hunder. (Co-author Gerald Kozicz)

In: Orientations, Vol. 49(3), 52–60.

 

  1. Decoding mid-19th Century Maps of the Border Area between Western Tibet,

Ladakh and Spiti.

In: David Pritzker and Yannick Laurent (eds.) Proceedings of the First International Conference on Spiti: Recovering the Past & Exploring the Present, Revue d’Études Tibétaines, No. 41, September 2017.

 

  1. “A Unique View from within”: The Representation of Tibetan Architecture in the British Library’s Wise Collection.

In: Orientations, Vol. 47(7), 18–25.

 

  1. Visual Representation of Ladakh and Zanskar in the British Library’s Wise Collection.

In: Robert Linrothe and Heinrich Poell (eds.) Visible Heritage: Essays on the Art and Architecture of Greater Ladakh. New Delhi: Studio Orientala, 131–168.

 

  1. “The Boatman is more Beautiful than a God”. Poetising and Singing on the Rivers in Central and Southern Tibet.

In: Guntram Hazod and Olaf Czaja (eds.) The Illuminating Mirror. Tibetan Studies in Honour of Per K. Soerensen on the Occasion of his 65th Birthday. Ludwig Reichert Verlag, 269–282.

 

  1. A Dundee’s Doctor’s Collection(s) on Tibet: Thomas Alexander Wise (1802–1889).

In: Charles Ramble and Ulrike Rösler (eds.) Tibetan and Himalayan Healing. An Anthology for Anthony Aris. Kathmandu: Vajra Publications, 433–452.

 

  1. The government forced us to send the boat in the middle of the night”: Water

Transport in Pre-1959 Tibet.

In: John Bray, Alex McKay and Emilia Sulek (eds.) Trade, Travel and the Tibetan Border Worlds. Essays in honour of Wim van Spengen (1949–2013). Tibet Journal Special Issue, Vol. XXXIX, No. 1, 73–91.

 

  1. Travel Destination: Tibet. Modernizing the Present and Concreting over the Past.

In: Sonderheft ASIEN, 100–114.

 

  1. “Local handicraft made by Tibetan village artisans”: Globale Einflüsse und ihre

Folgen für das lokale Handwerk in Zentraltibet.

In: Zentralasiatische Studien (ZAS), 41, Bonn, 89–106.

 

  1. Do all the Muslims of Tibet belong to the Hui?

In: Anna Akasoy, Charles Burnett, and Ronit Yoeli-Tlalim (eds.) Islam and TibetInteractions along the Musk Routes. Farnham: Ashgate, 339–352.

 

  1. A Short History of Muslims and Islam in Central Tibet.

In: Orient IV. German Journal for Politics, Economics and Culture in the Middle East. Berlin, 65–73.

 

  1. From Water Radish to Fish Restaurant: Recent Developments of Fisheries in Central Tibet.

In: AAS Working Papers in Social Anthropology, Vol. 18, 1–13.

 

  1. Fishery in Southern and Central Tibet: An Economic Niche is Going to Disappear.

In: Brandon Dotson, Kalsang Norbu Gurung, Georgios Halkias and Tim Myatt (eds.). Contemporary Visions in Tibetan Studies. Proceedings of the International Seminar of Young Tibetologists, 2007. Chicago: Serindia Publications, 45–67.

 

  1. Das Ende der Yakhautboote? Überlegungen zum technischen Wandel bei den

Fischern in Zentraltibet.

In: Technikgeschichte (Themenheft Technik im chinesischen Alltag), Vol. 75 (2). Berlin: Edition Sigma, 183–197.

 

  1. Geschichte, Funktion und Konstruktion der Yakhaut-Boote in Zentral- und Südtibet.

In: Deimel, Claus (ed.). Jahrbuch der Staatlichen Ethnographischen Sammlungen Sachsen, Vol. XLIV. Berlin: VWB, 53–75.

 

  1. Die Hui und der Einfluß des Islam in Tibet.

In: Deimel, Claus (ed.). Jahrbuch der Staatlichen Ethnographischen Sammlungen Sachsen, Vol. XLIII. Berlin: LIT, 181–210.

 

Organization of academic events and exhibitions

 

Mapping Holy Sites: A Global Perspective (16./17.6.2023)

Workshop, Centre for the Study of Manuscript Cultures (CSMC), Universität Hamburg

in cooperation with Prof. Dr. Hanna Wimmer (Universität Hamburg)

 

The International Society for the History of the Map Symposium and Workshop (10.–14.07.2023)

Max-Planck-Institute for the History of Science, Berlin, in cooperation with Prof. Dr. Jordana Dym (Skidmore College, USA) and Dr. Vera Dorofeeva-Lichtmann (CNRS Paris)

https://ishmap.wordpress.com/ishmap-2023-berlin-symposium-and-workshop/

 

Typologies of East Asian Maps in a Global Perspective (2./3.12.2022)

Online-Workshop, Centre for the Study of Manuscript Cultures (CSMC), Universität Hamburg

in cooperation with Dr. Vera Dorofeeva-Lichtmann (CNRS Paris)

 

What is Materiality in Tibetan Studies? (07/2022)

Panel, 16. Seminar of the International Association for Tibetan Studies, Prag

in cooperation with Dr. Emma Martin (University of Manchester) and Prof. Dr. Trine Brox (University of Copenhagen)

https://centerforcontemporarybuddhiststudies.wordpress.com/2021/07/16/cfp-what-is-materiality-in-tibetan-studies/

 

Farbe trifft Landkarte/ Colour meets Map (08/2021–06/2022)

Exhibition in the Museum am Rothenbaum Hamburg, in cooperation with Dr. Benjamin van der Linde (Hanseatisches Wirtschaftsarchiv) and Dr. Peter Zietlow (Universität Hamburg)

https://markk-hamburg.de/ausstellungen/farbe-trifft-landkarte/

 

Maps and Colours (5./6.11.2020)

International Workshop, MARKK and Universität Hamburg

in cooperation with Dr. Benjamin van der Linde (Hanseatisches Wirtschaftsarchiv)

 

A History of Transport in Tibet (07/2019)

Panel, 15. Seminar of the International Association for Tibetan Studies, Paris, in cooperation with Prof. Dr. Patrick Booz (Columbia University New York)

 

Tibet-Kolloquium (2005–2018)

Institute of Asian and African Studies, HU Berlin

 

“Wise Ways: Travels of a Dundee Doctor“ (2019)

Exhibition, The McManus Museum and Archives Dundee

 

Object Lessons from Tibet & the Himalayas (06/2017)

Workshop, University of Manchester, in cooperation with Dr. Emma Martin (University of Manchester), Prof. Dr. Trine Brox and Dr. Miriam Koktvedgaard Zeitzen (University of Copenhagen)

 

  1. Conference of the International Association for Ladakh Studies (05/2017)

Będlewo/Poland, in cooperation with Dr. Rafal Beszterda (Torun University)

 

The Representation of Knowledge about Tibet and the Himalayas in Material and Visual Culture (06/2016)

Panel, 14. Seminar of the International Association for Tibetan Studies, Bergen/ Norway, in cooperation with Dr. Bríd Arthur (Ohio State University)

 

The Representation of Tibet and the Himalayas in Material and Visual Culture (09/2014)

Panel, 1st Conference of the European Association for Asian Art and Archaeology, Palacky University, Olomouc/Czech Republic, in cooperation with Dr. Bríd Arthur (Ohio State University)

 

Visual Documentation of Regional Topography and Everyday Life in mid-19th Century Tibetan Cultural Areas: the British Library’s Wise Collection (08/2014)

Exhibition and Workshop, LAMO (Ladakhi Art and Media Organization), Leh/Ladakh/India

 

Ethnography and Cartography as Modes of Representation of Tibet (07/2013)

Panel, 13. Seminar of the International Association for Tibetan Studies, Ulan Bator/ Mongolia

 

Material Culture, Fieldwork and Ethnographic Collections Reconsidered (08/2006)

Panel, 11. Seminar of the International Association for Tibetan Studies, Universität Bonn