CANCELLED: 11th Humboldt India Project (HIP) Lecture
- https://www.iaaw.hu-berlin.de/de/region/suedasien/seminar/aktuell/11th-humboldt-india-project-hip-lecture
- CANCELLED: 11th Humboldt India Project (HIP) Lecture
- 2019-03-04T15:00:00+01:00
- 2019-03-04T23:59:59+01:00
- Wann 04.03.2019 von 15:00 bis 23:59
- Wo Invalidenstraße 118, Raum 217
- iCal
Dear All,
Unfortunately, the announced 11th Humboldt India Project Lecture on 04.03.2019 (by Kamran Asdar Ali) will NOT TAKE PLACE as scheduled.
The speaker's flight was cancelled and flights from Lahore, Pakistan will only resume from the 04.03.2019.
Kindly pass the information onto anybody who was about to the attend the lecture.
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11th Humboldt India Project (HIP) Lecture
Dear Colleagues and Friends,
the Department of South Asia Studies, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin cordially invites you to the 11th Humboldt India Project Lecture:
When?
4th March 2019, 3 pm
Department of South Asia Studies
Institute of Asian and African Studies
Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin
Invalidenstr. 118, Room: 217
Institute of Asian and African Studies
Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin
Invalidenstr. 118, Room: 217
Female Friendships and Frictions: Sexual Politics in 1960s Pakistani Cinema
by Kamran Asdar Ali
by Kamran Asdar Ali
By focusing on the Pakistani film Saheli (1961) the paper seeks to open up the questions related to emotions, domestic life and sexuality in Pakistan. Indeed, by concentrating primarily on women's lives as depicted in this film (and other cultural artefacts), I do not seek to dismiss the importance of other studies, but to make an added and necessary argument. It enables me to make visible and audible those instances that may have historically enabled women (and men) in Pakistan to create emotional fields and varied forms of connections to each other. Hence the analysis makes an argument about women's representation in the popular media in Pakistan in order to create a different archive of women's cultural and sexual politics and histories. This said, I would admit that my attempt while providing insights into women's lives in Pakistani society remains partial as it suggests a reading and constructs a narrative that may be only available in small fragments. It is akin to, as the historian Joan Scott (2011) reminds us, an archaeological reconstruction of a pot from shards and pieces found in a dig.
Kamran Asdar Ali is professor of anthropology at the University of Texas, Austin. He is the author of Planning the Family in Egypt: New Bodies, New Selves (UT Press, 2002) and the co-editor of Gendering Urban Space in the Middle East, South Asia and Africa (Palgrave 2008), Comparing Cities: Middle East and South Asia (Oxford 2009) and Gender, Politics, and Performance in South Asia (Oxford 2015). He has published several articles on issues of health and gender in Egypt and on ethnicity, class politics, sexuality and popular culture in Pakistan. His more recent book is Communism in Pakistan: Politics and Class Activism 1947-1972 (I.B Tauris 2015). On Leave from UT, he is currently the Dean of the School of Humanities and Social Sciences at LUMS
We hope to see you at the event!