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

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New findings on Subhas Chandra Bose

Vortrag von Dr. Purabi Roy (Kolkata) zum Thema
  • When Oct 29, 2012 from 02:00 to 04:00
  • Where IAAW, Invalidenstraße 118, Raum 217
  • iCal

Subhas Chandra Bose – New Findings

Der Bengale S.C.Bose (1897-1945) war einer der Führer der nationalen Unabhängigkeitsbewegung Indiens. Anders als Gandhi und Nehru war er bereit, die Freiheit von britischer Kolonialherrschaft auch mit militärischen Mitteln zu erlangen. Er gründete die Indian National Army und bereiste Europa, um Unterstützung für seinen Kampf von den damaligen Mächten zu bekommen. Dabei wandte er sich sowohl an die Sowjetunion, der er ideologisch nahestand, als auch an die Achsenmächte Deutschland und Italien, da diese im 2.Weltkrieg Gegner der Briten waren. Um seinen Tod im Jahre 1945 kreisen verschiedene Legenden. Purabi Roy hat aus russischen, deutschen, britischen und indischen Archiven neues Material zu Boses Leben und Tod zusammengetragen, der bis heute in Indien als „Netaji“ verehrt wird.

 

 

Purabi Roy is a retired Professor of Jadavpur University, was

visiting Professor of Moscow State University and St. Petersburg

University, Russian Federation Born in July 1941, she did her Phd from

the Institute of Oriental Studies, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow.

 

She is a specialist of Russian Language and Politics. She participated

in various International Seminars and Conferences.Presented papers at

theInstitute of Oriental Studies, Moscow-1999, Oriental Faculty St.

Petersburg-2002, Hamburg University- 2003, Lund University-2004.

 

As a research professor of the Asiatic Society, Calcutta, she

published volumes on Russo-Indian Relations XiX cent, Indo- Russian

Relations XX cent Part I and Part II. Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose

Commemoration Vol of Scottish Church College. Her latest publication on

2011-The search For Netaji: New Findings.

 

 

Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin | Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences | Department of Asian and African Studies | Regional Departments | South Asian Studies | Events | Archives | Some reflections on early Muslim Modernism in South Asia - Guest Lecture by Prof. Dr. Irfan Habib

Some reflections on early Muslim Modernism in South Asia - Guest Lecture by Prof. Dr. Irfan Habib

Prof. Dr. Irfan Habib (New Delhi, India) is Visiting Professor at the Department of South Asia Studies, Humboldt University, Berlin in the framework of the Rotating Chair Program of the Indian Council of Cultural Relations for the period 23rd April – 31st August 2012.
  • When Jun 25, 2012 from 04:00 to 06:00
  • iCal

He has worked on diverse issues related to science, technology and colonialism in mid 19th and early 20th century India. At present he is engaged in research on issues concerning science and Islam, mainly within South Asia. His book called Jihad or Ijtihad: Religious orthodoxy and modern science in contemporary Islam is due for publication soon.

 

Hosted by the Department of South Asian Studies.

4th HIP-Workshop

You are cordially invited to participate in the 4th Humboldt India Project (HIP) Workshop which will take place on the 29th June, 2012. The workshop aims to provide a forum for exchange across institutional and disciplinary boundaries on topics related to South Asia.


4th HIP Workshop

 

The workshop aims at contributing to the goal of the Humboldt India Project of bringing together the South Asia competence of the Humboldt-Universität and its partners in Berlin. Individual projects at the doctoral and post-doctoral levels from across institutions and disciplines will be presented and discussed.

 

29 June, 2012

3-8pm

IAAW, Room 217

Invalidenstr. 118

 

Project Presentations

 

Rajeshwari Mallegowda LGF, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin: An Institutional Analysis of Vegetable Supply Chains in Emerging Megacity of Hyderabad, India

 

Lisa Sturm GESI, Universität Leipzig: New York Merchants and the Indian Ocean Trade 1790-1815

 

Stephan Beutner IAAW, Humboldt-University zu Berlin: Representations of Nature in India: Property and Progress

 

Sven Andressen, IAAW, Humboldt Universität zu Berlin: Picturizing Indian History - Indian Self-Image on Postage Stamps

 

Sabil Francis GESI, Universität Leipzig: The University as a Critical Juncture: The IITs and India’s Quest for the Ideal University

 

For further Information about HIP you can visit the homepage:

http://www.hip.hu-berlin.de/

 

If you have any questions, don’t hesitate to contact us:

sadia.bajwa@asa.hu-berlin.de

Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin | Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences | Department of Asian and African Studies | Regional Departments | South Asian Studies | Events | Archives | International Workshop: Beyond the Line - Cultural Constructions of the Sea (June 22–23, 2012)

International Workshop: Beyond the Line - Cultural Constructions of the Sea (June 22–23, 2012)

The international workshop “Beyond the Line – Cultural Constructions of the Sea” examines the relationship between land and sea. It investigates how the currently changing constellations in South-South relationships can be understood historically and culturally. If the active participation of the regions south of the Sahara since early modern times is denied, what is the situation today? And beyond that: is it justified in any way to attribute a historical insignificance to regions neighboring Africa on the Atlantic and Indian Oceans? These questions will be analyzed in the framework of a current trend in the social and cultural sciences that is called the “oceanic turn.” The symposium aims to pursue these questions and make its own contribution to them. Participants present the Atlantic and Indian Oceans as a cultural space. Individual panel discussions examine case studies of literature, migration, piracy, and trade cultures. In this way, research results on the sub-Saharan part of Africa will be investigated in their relationship to the Atlantic and Indian Oceans and new approaches will be formulated. Conceived by Michael Mann and Ineke Phaf-Rheinberger


Institute of Asian and African Studies (IAAW)
Invalidenstraße 118, Room 217
Humboldt-Universität Berlin

 

 

WORKSHOP PROGRAM

 

Friday, 22 June 2012

 

 

2 pm Keynote

The Historian and the Fish: Of Archives and Categories

Georg Berkemer, Humboldt-Universität Berlin

 

 

2.45 pm Panel 1

Translocalities

 

 

Approaching the Sea – Conceptual Gateways and Theoretical

Implications

Katrin Bromber, ZMO Berlin, and Brigitte Reinwald, Leibniz Universität Hannover

 

Intensive research about oceans especially within the past three decades has resulted in a variety of approaches that conceptualize the sea as socio-cultural areas. The emerging term liquid continent not only flagged up the idea that oceans could be studied similar to land masses, but also linked ocean studies to disciplines such as cultural geography and the sociology of space. As a consequence, oceans are increasingly thought of as social spaces of intersecting and overlaying social and cultural practices and patterns of representation with a maritime reference, as well as political and economic scenarios of regulation. Such an approach allows to understand and to describe the plurality of historical processes, which generated, reorganised and redefined oceans as social spaces. It is not based on Euclidian geometry and Newtonian conceptualization of space as homogenous receptacle or container, which is filled with objects. It rather considers space in terms of its relational configurations of permanently moving objects (humans, goods, ideas, etc.) and, thus, in terms of time, place and agency.

Using empirical examples from research projects pursued at the ZMO, Berlin and the University of Hannover, the joint presentation will address the conceptual category of the seascape – a predominantly maritime geographical, social and cultural landscape – and the methodological approach of auto-geographies as two gateways to the study of the Indian Ocean and the Atlantic. It will further ask in how far middle range concepts such as translocality are useful to make larger theoretical claims and, thus, escape the trap of becoming a catch-all phrase for any phenomenon of spatial mobility and transgression irrespective of its quality.

 

 

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4 pm Coffee/tea break

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4.30 pm Panel 2

The Ocean as a Contact Zone in Literature

 

 

African-Portuguese Encounters in The Lusiads

Bernhard Klein, University of Kent

 

This paper considers the various encounter scenes between Europeans and Africans in Luís de Camões’s 1572 maritime epic Os Lusíadas (The Lusiads). The first – and in many ways most important – of these scenes occurs in canto 5, when the Portuguese seafarers en route to India first make landfall in the southern hemisphere and meet a local honey-gatherer in St Helena Bay, described as “a strange man of black skin” (um estranho vir, de pele preta, 5.27.6). The ensuing interaction begins as a ritual of gift-giving and cultural exchange, but quickly leads to non-comprehension, failed reciprocity, and mutual hostilities. The scene has often puzzled later readers: there are no immediate lessons to be learned, there is no moral or didactic message imparted to the reader, and Camões has been criticized for including the episode in his poem on precisely these grounds. In this paper I want to argue that the episode is no irrelevant aside but a crucial first introduction to the contingencies and cultural complexities of overseas travel.

Importantly, the scene is not one of Camões’s inventions but reported in the anonymous eyewitness account of da Gama’s voyage as the first significant encounter between the Portuguese crew and inhabitants of the southern hemisphere, and also features in two historical narratives published in the early 1550s, by João de Barros and Fernão Lopes de Castanheda, which Camões used as sources. The paper will offer a comparative reading of the various “historical and cultural constructions of the sea” implicit in these different narratives, and also compare this first encounter scene with the seven others that follow as the Portuguese fleet rounds the Cape and continues its voyage north along the east African shoreline.

 

 

Sea-Born(e) Migration and Atlantic Creole Culture

Ineke Phaf-Rheinberger, Humboldt-Universität Berlin

 

Historians use the concepts “sea-born(e) migration” and “Atlantic Creoles” when speaking about contemporary effects of the South Atlantic past. In such cases, they generally refer to processes of cultural interactions since the end of the 16th century between Africa and (Latin) America. According to their argument, Africa has to be considered as an active partner in the creation of the Atlantic Creole cultures instead of merely being considered as a passive and victimized subject.

Simultaneously, not only historians but also writers and painters produce work commemorating those cultural interactions in past and present. For this purpose they elaborate aesthetic strategies, in which the personification of the sea plays an important role. Additionally, the contemporary ecological consciousness gives this identification with the sea a special dimension. I will give some examples from Angola and Brazil framing them in a conceptual network that might also be applied to similar processes in other parts of the world.

 

 

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6 pm Coffee/tea break

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6.30 pm Panel 3

Oceanic Life and Work Regimes

 

 

Ideas on Open Water Systems and Occupation

Babacar Fall, Université Dakar

 

This will be a general and imaginative introduction to the topic of the workshop.

 

 

Life on the Water – Soldiers, Slaves, and other Subalterns of the Indian Ocean from the 18th to the 20th Century

Michael Mann, Humboldt-Universität Berlin

 

In contrast to the Atlantic Ocean, the social history of the Indian Ocean has received comparatively little attention. However, during the last three decades quite a few seminal books appeared on the market highlighting the cultural, social, economic, and political interconnectivity of the Indic. Yet, as several studies and in particular that of Marcus Rediker have dealt with the social life on board of ships in the Atlantic, there is no comprehensive account on the "Life on the Water" in the Indian Ocean. This presentation aims to give an overview of the current state of the art on that subject trying to shed some light on the social, hygienic, and nutritious conditions on board a ship with special reference to the "subalterns", i.e. soldiers, slaves, and kulis being transported on a ship or lascars as well as the crew. Little and bad or even rotten food caused severe health problems and increased death rates as did the lack of medical care. Due to the tropical climate crossing the Indic made life on board dangerous. Additionally, many of the transported "Indians" were frightened since the Brahmanic idea of the "kala pani" (Black Water) was connected with various horrible stories including the loss of "caste". Therefore to be on a ship was not something most of the "passengers" were looking forward to. 

 

 

 


 

Saturday, 23 June 2012

 

 

9.30 am Panel 4

Oceanic Turn in Literary Studies

 

 

Horrors of the Deep. Sea Fiction and Empire

Gesa Mackenthun, Universität Rostock

 

Metaphors of depth abound in sea fiction. The Bible exhorts its believers to seek commerce in the deep; Schiller’s diver doesn’t return from his dive because he has violated the divine injunction against exploring the deep; for Melville, the bottom of the ocean was at the same time the “loom” of creation and a place of invisible horror; Verne’s Captain Nemo takes possession of the deep seas in his battle against the imperial powers of the world. This paper will explore some stories and metaphors of oceanic depth and read them in conjunction with a general reformulation of deep space and deep time in the nineteenth century. Even today, the deep seas remain a zone of interdiction – a region to be explored only at the risk of many lives and ecological disaster. And the “black Mediterranean” keeps swallowing its victims as the Black Atlantic once did. The paper will steer a course through these various articulations of oceanic depth.

 

 

Seas of History, Seas of Waste

Elisabeth DeLoughrey, UCLA

 

Mary Douglas has famously argued that waste is merely matter out of place. "Dirt is the byproduct of a systemic ordering of matter in so far as ordering involves rejecting inappropriate elements." My talk is about how Caribbean artists and writers have called attention to the political and the aesthetic implications of making dirt, or waste, visible in an oceanic context. The Latin term for ocean, 'vastus,' is also the term for waste. By representing refugee bodies at sea, Caribbean writers and artists demonstrate how waste is a constitutive byproduct of modernity in which the state regulates the vastus for those bodies associated with national refuse, a practice of border-making in a fluid space.

 

 

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11 am Coffee/tea break

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

 

 

11.30 am Panel 5

Literary Constructions of the Sea

 

Africa’s Asian Options: The Indian Ocean as Literary Contact Zone, Transcultural Memory Space and Transregional Discourse of Power

Frank Schulze-Engler, Frankfurt/Main

 

The paper is based on the research agenda of a major collaborative research project on “Africa’s Asian Options” that will officially start at Goethe University in October 2012. It will present three major research areas relating to literary, cultural and academic “Indian Ocean Imaginaries” to be explored over the next four years in the field of literary, cultural and media studies and will highlight important questions we hope to address through new empirical research:

 

1. What is the historical and current role of “Indian Ocean Imaginaries” in East African, South African and South Asian literature? To what extent can concepts of the Indian Ocean Area as a transregional space be found in this literature? What are similarities and differences between East African literature in English and Swahili with regard to representations of these Indian Ocean Imaginaries?

 

2. To what extent is the Indian Ocean constituted as a transcultural memory space in current literature, film and ‘new’ media (including the internet)? How can a new understanding of cultural memory as a mobile, contested practice rather than as a ‘territorialized’ feature defining particular communities be brought to bear on the Indian Ocean as a transcultural memory space based on African-Asian interactions?

 

3. Given the fact that “Africa’s Asian options” are neither a result of older trajectories of nationalist politics nor an outcome of old-style political “South-South solidarity”, but rely to a great extent on new factors such as the emergence of a new African middle class, a (moderately) sustainable African capitalism and on new transregional interactions in an increasingly multipolar world, what exactly is the function of academic/theoretical “Indian Ocean Imaginaries”? Who produces these imaginaries for which purposes, and who stands to benefit from them? What is the role of South Africa as a newly emerging global player in this scenario, and how are Indian Ocean discourses taken up in India and other Asian countries such as China?

 

 

“Oceans of pain”: The Sea as a Contact Zone in Angolan Poetry and Rap ´Music

Anna Sobral, Universität Konstanz

 

This paper examines the way Angolan poets have resorted to images of the Atlantic Ocean as a source of national identity as well as a transnational unifier. By focusing on the history of the ocean as a means of transporting slaves from the Angolan coast to the Americas, the poets highlight the negative impact of colonialism on the national territory, presenting the international slave trade as the pivotal experience of destruction – of both identity and memory – that has had repercussions up to our days. On the other hand, the ocean is also the connecting point between African Angolans and their descendants who were spread out by the slave trade all over America and Europe. The same space that features as a source of loss is thus turned into a powerful means of transnational alliance, appealing to ethnic as well as cultural ties between Africans.

These images become especially interesting when regarded against the background of the historical and political context in which the poems were composed. Hence, this paper compares poems by famous Angolan authors of the years of struggle for independence from colonialism (the 1960s) with more contemporary texts by poets/rappers of the current young generation of Angolans. By allowing the texts to enter into a dialogue with each other, the analysis aims at highlighting the role of the Atlantic as a source of Angolan identity, which itself has undergone significant changes in the past 50 years.

 

 

Fabulating the Indian Ocean – An Emerging Network of

Imaginaries?

Ute Fendler, Universität Bayreuth

 

When Stephen Muecke launches fabulation as one of the most significant aspects in Indian Ocean studies that brings about “artful politics”, he sets the focus on the “listening” and the “telling” of voices and stories that “project reality”. Starting from this interesting focus, we will analyze a couple of texts from Mozambique (E. White, U. Khosa), Madagascar (Raharimanana) and Mauritius (Torabully), to see how fabulation contributes to a network of imaginaries where the ocean is a founding part of it: its evocation ranges from being a linking bridge, via a barrier, to the source of death and life. The ocean also opens the network beyond the Indian Ocean context, linking it to the experience of the slave trade, and therefore to the Atlantic Ocean, the Sea.

Stephen Muecke: “Fabulation: Flying Carpets and Artful Politics in the Indian Ocean.” In: S. Moorthy/A. Jamal: Indian Ocean Studies. Cultural, Social, and Political Perspectives. New York/London: Routledge, 2010, 32-44.

 

 

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

1.30 pm Lunch break – plenty of restaurants and coffee houses nearby

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

 

 

3 pm Panel 6

Pirates and Politics

 

“The Imperial Pirate”: Politics and Predation in early-modern South India

Sebastian Prange, University of British Columbia

 

This paper examines the interplay of maritime predation and processes of state formation in coastal South India across the sixteenth century. Over the last decades, the study of state formation has formed a central concern in the historiography of South India for the medieval and early modern periods. However, this scholarly focus has been almost exclusively directed towards territorial states and their agrarian relations. This paper argues that another trajectory of state building can be observed on the littoral, which has been overshadowed by the growing European presence on the coast during this same period. Yet it was not only the Portuguese who competed with existing coastal powers by establishing new polities on India’s seaboard, but also Muslim groups, whose rise to preeminence is closely linked to the increasingly violent maritime milieu that developed in this region over the course of the sixteenth century. In this period, two Muslim dynasties, the Ali Rajas of Cannanore and the Kunjalis of Kottakal, established themselves as autonomous sovereignties in opposition to their Hindu lords; in both cases, this endeavor was founded in the power and profits derived from a close involvement in seaborne raiding. By comparing these two instances of state building by producers of maritime violence, it is asked whether the Portuguese brought about qualitative changes to the politics of maritime predation in maritime Asia, or if the connection between piracy and state formation must be seen against a much deeper continuity in Indian Ocean history.

 

 

The Political Legitimacy of Pirates: Coastal Diplomacy in Bombay, c. 1700-1755

Derek Elliot, University of Cambridge

 

Through the first half of the eighteenth century the Konkan littoral surrounding Bombay was a hotly contested space of sovereignty. The English East India Company, the Portuguese Estado da Índia, the Maratha-aligned Angres and the Moghul-backed Siddis all vied for political power and legitimacy. Wars frequently broke out, sometimes lasting decades, however, even in peace the powers sought to extend their assertions of sovereign power over both land and sea. The pass was the primary method of making claims over shipping and trade; the failure of a merchant to secure passes left their ship and goods open to plunder. Using East India Company records, ship’s logbooks, and prisoner’s letters, the politics of capture are laid bare and allow a reassessment of the claims of piracy made by East India Company officials against the Indian powers that most challenged their ascendancy. It will also expose how colonial era historiographical trends have persisted by failing to situate sources in their contemporary political and social contexts.

 

 

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4.30 pm Coffee/tea break

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5 pm Panel 7

Transoceanic Connections

 

The Politics of the Passport: East Africa and Beyond

Prem Poddar, ZMO Berlin

 

This paper is part of a larger work where I engage in how the laws of citizenship have mutated over time as expressed in the politics and history of the passport, and how literary and historical discourses have overlapped and intertwined with legal discourses of citizenship. I focus on moments of crisis in the colonial history of the passport and the current paper will look at two trajectories. 1. The politico-cultural relationship that uprooted Afro-Asians (part indenture, part comprador) became the subject of as their travels/journeys de-scribed a triangle between West India, East Africa and Britain. 2. The emigration pass, also called *girmitya*, which was issued to the more than one million coolies or indentured labourers, who crossed the Indian and Atlantic oceans covering the period between 1838 and 1917. The very term ‘British subject’ was “susceptible of important division and modification” and reveals what has been called the “rule of colonial difference”. The histories of colonial expansion and transfer, however, which underwrote these definitions—including the one of ‘immigrants‘— get withdrawn from the ‘national’ story. My paper delineates such re-castings.

 

 

Africa in Indian Ink: Urdu Articulations of Indian Settlement in East Africa

Nile Green, UCLA

 

As with many other areas of Indian Ocean history, the study of Indian settlement in eastern and southern Africa has suffered from a lack of primary materials in indigenous (or better, oceanic) languages. Building on recent work on Gujarati accounts of Indians in Africa, this paper brings to light the first substantial body of Urdu sources on Indian settlement in Africa. The focus is on Safarnama-e Uganda wa Mumbasa (‘Travelogue of Uganda and Mombasa’), an Urdu travel guide written in 1901 that is so far the earliest known direct account of colonial migration to Africa to have been written in Urdu and possibly in any modern Indian language. The paper analyzes the discursive frameworks by which East Africa was rendered knowable to a readership of prospective Punjabi migrant workers on the Uganda Railway, with the railway in turn providing the author of the travel guide with a geographical spine for Africa’s spatial anatomy. As a colonial Indo-African ethnography, the Safarnama thus provides our earliest direct evidence of Indian attitudes to both the peoples and landscapes of Africa. Envisioning East Africa as an at once Islamic and imperial settlement zone, the Safarnama-e Uganda wa Mumbasa documents the incorporation of not only littoral but also interior East Africa into an industrializing oceanic culture area that the railway expanded into Africa.

 

 

Transoceanic Nationalism. Connections between East Africa and India, c. 1920-1963

Margret Frenz, University of Leicester

 

This paper explores the cross-currents in the Indian Ocean that were created by several South Asian communities who lived in East Africa since the late nineteenth century. Although they had made Tanganyika, Zanzibar, Kenya and Uganda their home, links and connections to their place of origin were kept alive, particularly in the private and the political sphere. In the emerging nationalist movements in India and East Africa, and East African Indian activists traveled to India.

The paper argues that the political interaction between the two continents significantly influenced the nationalist movements in East Africa, particularly once India had achieved Independence in 1947 since it showed the realistic possibility of bringing colonial rule to an end. Transoceanic interactions between East Africa and India intensified with the establishment of scholarships for East African students in India by posting an Indian High Commissioner in Nairobi, and by politicians such as Jawaharlal Nehru advocating the need for rapid further decolonization and international solidarity between independent Asian and African countries.

 

3rd HIP-Workshop

You are cordially invited to participate in the 3rd Humboldt India Project (HIP) Workshop which will take place on the 25th May, 2012. The workshop aims to provide a forum for exchange across institutional and disciplinary boundaries on topics related to South Asia. The 4th HIP Workshop is going to take place at the 29th of June.
  • 3rd HIP-Workshop
  • 2012-05-25T15:00:00+02:00
  • 2012-05-25T19:00:00+02:00
  • You are cordially invited to participate in the 3rd Humboldt India Project (HIP) Workshop which will take place on the 25th May, 2012. The workshop aims to provide a forum for exchange across institutional and disciplinary boundaries on topics related to South Asia. The 4th HIP Workshop is going to take place at the 29th of June.
  • When May 25, 2012 from 03:00 to 07:00
  • Where Institute of Asian and African Studies of the Humboldt University
  • iCal

Following the positive response to the last workshop, we are pleased to announce the 3rd HIP workshop. You are cordially invited to participate, be it as presenters or as audience. The workshop aims at contributing to the goal of the Humboldt India Project of bringing together the South Asia competence of the Humboldt-Universität and its partner institutes in Berlin. It wishes to provide a forum for exchange across institutional and disciplinary boundaries.

Presentations:
 
Elija Horn: German-speaking Female New Educationists in India during
the 1920s and 1930s.
 
Bhuvanachithra Chidambaram: An experimental based approach towards
analyzing traffic congestion - Hyderabad, India'
 
Bettina Robotka: The MQM in Karachi and its capacity to bring change
 
Georg Berkemer: The Making of a Rajput - Upward Mobility through
Strategic Dying

 

For further Information about HIP you can visit the homepage:

http://www.hip.hu-berlin.de/

Participants are invited to present their doctoral and post-doctoral projects. The goal is to provide space for in-depth discussions. Each project presentation will be given a one hour slot (15 – 20 minutes for the presentation, the rest for the discussion). Language of presentation is English.

 

HIV/Aids in Indien

  • When Apr 25, 2012 from 06:30 to 08:00
  • Where Seminar für Südasien-Studien, Raum 217
  • iCal

Indien nimmt im weltweiten Ranking die dritte Position der Länder mit HIV-infizierten Menschen ein. Die Probleme dieser ca. 2,4 Millionen Menschen in Indien liegen nicht nur in der medizinischen Versorgung, sondern auch in der offenen Diskriminierung, oftmals regelrechter Verachtung, der Gesellschaft. Das Ziel des Rehabilitation Centers des CRTDP in Nagpur ist es, den Betroffenen Hilfestellung zu leisten und Lösungsansätze für ein selbstbestimmtes Leben zu bieten. Die Entwicklung des Projekts sowie erste Erfolge und neue Herausforderungen seit Oktober 2011 wird Iqbal David schildern. Im Anschluss folgt eine Diskussion mit den Zuschauern. 

 

Anmeldung erbeten bis 23. April unter lessing@diz-ev.de

 

 

Second HIP-Workshop on 27th of January 2012

Workshop for doctoral candidates from the Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin working on South Asia.
  • When Jan 27, 2012 from 04:00 to 07:00
  • Where Institute of Asian and African Studies (IAAW), Invalidenstrasse 118/entry via Schlegelstrasse 26
  • iCal

The workshop aims at contributing to the goal of the Humboldt India Project of bringing together the South Asia competence of the Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin and providing a forum for exchange across institutional and disciplinary boundaries within the university.
For further Information about HIP you can visit the homepage:

http://www.hip.hu-berlin.de/

Participants are invited to present their doctoral projects. Each project presentation will be given a 15 minute slot (10 for the presentation, 5 for the discussion). Language of presentation is English.
Please confirm your participation at:
sadia.bajwa@asa.hu-berlin.de

If you have any questions, don’t hesitate to contact us.

Plakat 01/2012

International Hindi Day - VISHWA HINDI DIVAS

  • When Jan 10, 2012 from 06:00 to 08:30
  • Where Embassy of India, Tiergartenstr. 17, 10785 Berlin
  • iCal

Die indische Botschaft Berlin und das Südasien-Seminar der Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin laden zur gemeinsamen Veranstaltung anlässlich des Welt-Hinditages ein. <br><br>Moderiert wird die Veranstaltung von Dr. Hannelore Lötzke, Südasien-Seminar, HU Berlin. Lesung von Guntram Wischnewski und Studierenden des Südasien-Seminars.<br><br>Sprachen: Hindi / Englisch / Deutsch<br><br>Es wird darum gebeten, am Eingang der Botschaft die Personalausweise vorzuweisen und keine Getränke/kein Essen mitzubringen.<br><br><br>

Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin | Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences | Department of Asian and African Studies | Regional Departments | South Asian Studies | Events | Archives | Bildung und Ernährung - Wie der indische Staat versucht, Millionen von Schülerinnen und Schülern zu ernähren

Bildung und Ernährung - Wie der indische Staat versucht, Millionen von Schülerinnen und Schülern zu ernähren

Bildung und Ernährung - Wie der indische Staat versucht, Millionen von Schülerinnen und Schülern zu ernähren Vortrag und Diskussion mit Dr. Jona Aravind Dohrmann Eine Veranstaltung der Deutsch-Indischen Zusammenarbeit Berlin e.V. und des Seminars für Südasien-Studien
  • Bildung und Ernährung - Wie der indische Staat versucht, Millionen von Schülerinnen und Schülern zu ernähren
  • 2011-11-09T18:30:00+01:00
  • 2011-11-09T20:00:00+01:00
  • Bildung und Ernährung - Wie der indische Staat versucht, Millionen von Schülerinnen und Schülern zu ernähren Vortrag und Diskussion mit Dr. Jona Aravind Dohrmann Eine Veranstaltung der Deutsch-Indischen Zusammenarbeit Berlin e.V. und des Seminars für Südasien-Studien
  • What Südasien
  • When Nov 09, 2011 from 06:30 to 08:00
  • Where IAAW, Invalidenstraße 118, 2. OG, Raum 217
  • iCal

 

Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin | Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences | Department of Asian and African Studies | Regional Departments | South Asian Studies | Events | Archives | International Conference Shantiniketan Hellerau - Universalist Education in the Pedagogic Province

International Conference Shantiniketan Hellerau - Universalist Education in the Pedagogic Province

In the 19th century, urbanization and industrialization changed the globe dramatically and were feared by many. The universalist education movement arose as a countercultural reaction to these developments. Idealists strove to create a new world and educate the “new man.” Shantiniketan and Hellerau paradigmatically represent the urge to counteract the drastic changes the world underwent back then. Initiated by the Deutsch-Indische Gesellschaft e.V. and the Department for South Asia Studies of the Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin. Kindly supported by: Institut für Asien und Afrikawissenschaften (IAAW), Indien-Stiftung e.V., Dr. Heinz-Horst Deichmann, Helmut Nanz


When

Oct. 7th 2011, 11 am until 
Oct. 9th 2011, 1 pm
 

Where

Department for South Asia Studies, IAAW, Room 217

 

Programme

 
Opening
Friday, Oct. 7
11 am-12.30 pm
 
President of the Humboldt-Universität
Prof. Dr. Jan-Hendrik Olbertz
 
Representatives of the Embassies of India and Bangladesh 
His Excellency the Ambassador of India to Germany Mr. Sudhir Vyas
His Excellency the Ambassador of Bangladesh to Germany Mr. Mosud Mannan
 
Introduction
Prof. Dr. Michael Mann, Humboldt-Universität Berlin "Lebensreform" and Education Reform at the Turn of the 19th Century
 
Reception
2 pm-6.30 pm
Panel I: Universalistic and Holistic Education at Shantiniketan
 
Udaya Narayana Singh (Santiniketan, India)
Liberty, Freedom and Responsibility.The Ultimate Objectives of Tagore’s Experiments with Education
 
Arabella Unger (Universität Tübingen, Germany)
Education for a Complete Life
 
Tea/Coffee break
 
Christine Kupfer (Universität Heidelberg, Germany)
Unworldly or All-Worldly? Tagore’s Educational Philosophy at Shantiniketan
 
Ursula Bickelmann-Aldinger (Heidelberg) East and West: Rabīndranāth Tagore‘s Utopia of a Holistic Education Towards a Universal View of the World versus a Creative Approach
 
Aishika Chakraborty (Brahmananda Keshab Chandra College, Kolkata) Towards a Future of Performance: Tagore and his New Dance
 

 

Saturday, Oct. 8

9 am-1 pm

Panel II: New Education and the Rurality of the Place

 
Deepak Kumar (Jawaharlal Nehru University, Delhi, India)
Tagore’s Pedagogy and Rural Reconstruction
 
Fakrul Alam (Dhaka University, Bangladesh) Tagore, Thoreau and Life-Centered Educationist amidst Nature
 
Tea/Coffee Break
 
Uma Das Gupta (Kolkata, India) Nature, Education, Culture: The Santiniketan School Experiment
 
Asit Datta (Leibnitz Universität Hannover, Germany)
Tagore, the New Educationalist
 
 
14.30-19.30 Uhr  2.30-7.30 pm
Panel III: Educational and Pedagogic Reform at Hellerau
 
Michael Mann (Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin):
"Lebensreform" at Hellerau
 
Thomas Nitschke (Leipzig):
Die Gartenstadt Hellerau als pädagogische Provinz
 
Tea/Coffee Break
 
Christine Straumer (Musikhochschule Dresden)
Hellerau und Emile Jaques-Dalcroze – Von der pädagogischen Idee zum Gesamtkunstwerk
 
Boris Friedewald (Berlin) Das Bauhaus, Hellerau und Santiniketan
 
8.00 pm
Dinner
 

 

Sunday, Oct. 9
9.00 am-1.00 pm
Panel IV: Beyond Hellerau and Shantiniketan
 
Joachim Oesterheld Tagore, Geheeb and Others. Indo-German Encounters in New Education during the First Half of the Twentieth Century
 
Maria Moritz (Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Germany)
A "Universal Brotherhood of Humanity" Through Education?
Rudolf Steiner’s Reform Pedagogy and the Global Theosophical Milieu
 
Tea/Coffee Break 
 
Simone Holtzwart (Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Germany) Gandhi’s Vision of „Rural National Education through Village Handicrafts“: The Basic Education Movement and the Experiments in Sevagram/Wardha 1938-1955
 
Harald Fischer-Tiné (Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule  Zürich, Schweiz) Creating „Giants in Body and Mind“: Physical and Intellectual Education in the Gurukul Kangri (1902-1947)
 
Gallery
Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin | Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences | Department of Asian and African Studies | Regional Departments | South Asian Studies | Events | Archives | Public Waste and Private Health - Informelles Recycling von Elektronikschrott in Indien

Public Waste and Private Health - Informelles Recycling von Elektronikschrott in Indien

Wir initiieren das neue Format der Berliner Südasiengespräche. 2011 fragen wir nach den Gesundheitsgefahren durch informelles Recycling.
  • What Symposium
  • When Sep 14, 2011 from 10:00 to 03:30
  • Where Berliner Rathaus, Ferdinand-Friedensburg-Saal
  • Attendees Dr. Dieter Mutz/ASEM, Delhi, Knut Sander/Ökopol, Henning Schreiber/Autor und Advisor Waste-Management, Sven Schiltz/Ragpickers-Blogger. Moderation: Priya Esselborn (Deutsche Welle)
  • iCal

Jedes Jahr entstehen 20-30 Millionen Tonnen gesundheits- und umweltgefährdenden E-Schrotts weltweit. Indien erzeugt jährlich ca. 400.000 Tonnen toxischen Sondermülls allein aus PCs, Handys und alten Fernsehern. "Entsorgt" wird der Müll in Hinterhöfen oder Slums und oftmals von Kindern. Dabei gelangen Gifte in den Nahrungskreislauf und in das Grundwasser. Doch nicht nur der indische E-Schrott ist ein Problem. Auf illegalen Wegen gelangt der Müll aus Europa, aus Australien und den USA in das indische informelle Recycling. In der Panelveranstaltung debattieren Vertreter aus Wissenschaft, NGOs und Industrie. Wie sieht die Lage aus? Wie kommt E-Schrott aus Deutschland nach Indien? Welche Wege aus dem Dilemma gibt es?

Mit einer Ausstellung des Habitat Forum Berlin.



Eine Veranstaltung im Rahmen der Asien-Pazifik-Wochen Berlin. Die Asien-Pazifik-Wochen werden unterstützt durch die Stiftung Deutsche Klassenlotterie Berlin.

HIP Workshop

Workshop of the Humboldt India Project (HIP) www.hip.hu-berlin.de
  • What Workshop
  • When Jul 08, 2011 from 03:15 to 07:00
  • Where Institute of Asian and African Studies (IAAW), Invalidenstraße 118 (Zugang über Schlegelstraße 26), Raum 217
  • iCal

Workshop schedule

3:15-4:00 Introduction HIP by Prof. Dr. Michael Mann HIP and Humboldt Graduate School by Prof. Dr. Konrad Hagedorn

4:00-4:15 Break

4:15-5:00 First Round of Project Presentation

5:00-5:15 Break

5:15-6:00 Second Round of Project Presentation

6:00-7:00 General Exchange among Participants

Post-9/11: War on Terror and the Talibanization of Pakistan

Vorträge & Diskussion mit Prof. Dr. Mumtaz Ahmad - Präsident der International Islamic University, Islamabad und Ashraf Jehangir Qazi - UN-Botschafter a.D., Direktor des Institute of Strategic Studies, Islamabad
  • Post-9/11: War on Terror and the Talibanization of Pakistan
  • 2011-07-07T12:00:00+02:00
  • 2011-07-07T14:00:00+02:00
  • Vorträge & Diskussion mit Prof. Dr. Mumtaz Ahmad - Präsident der International Islamic University, Islamabad und Ashraf Jehangir Qazi - UN-Botschafter a.D., Direktor des Institute of Strategic Studies, Islamabad
  • What Gastvortrag
  • When Jul 07, 2011 from 12:00 to 02:00
  • Where IAAW, Seminar für Südasien-Studien, Invalidenstraße 118 (über Schlegelstraße 26), Raum 217
  • iCal

Studierende und Interessierte sind herzlich eingeladen. <br>

"Refugees and the Politics of Nation-Building in India, 1947-71"

Ein Vortrag des Max Weber Fellows Uditi Sen (European University Institute)
  • What Gastvortrag
  • When May 25, 2011 from 02:00 to 04:00
  • Where Südasien-Seminar, Invalidenstrasse 118, R. 117
  • iCal

Hier Text einfügen!!!

"Engendering and Degendering South Asian Studies"

Das Südasien-Seminar veranstaltet vom 19.-21. Mai den Workshop Young South Asian Scholars Meet zum Thema "Engendering and Degendering South Asian Studies". In Zusammenarbeit mit re:work und dem Zentrum Moderner Orient.
  • What Workshop Südasien Mediality and Intermediality in Asian and African Societies
  • When May 19, 2011 09:00 to May 21, 2011 04:00
  • Where Südasien-Seminar, Invalidenstrasse 118, R. 317
  • iCal

((HIer formatierten Text einfügen!!!)



(aus Flyer...)
Thursday, 19.05.2011
SOUTH ASIA ENGENDERING SCHOLARS AND DEGENDERING
MEET SOUTH ASIAN STUDIES
21. MAY Venue: Festsaal, Luisenstrasse 56
Welcome Note by Michael Mann / Professor for Culture and History of South Asia at the Institute for Asian and African Studies, Humboldt University
Keynote “Rethinking a dubious category: Representational activism and new mobilities among ‘Muslim women’ in India” Nadja-Christina Schneider / Junior Professor for Mediality and Intermediality in Asian and African Societies at the Institute for Asian and African Studies, Humboldt University
RReception Introduction by Jana Tschurenev (ETH, Zürich): “Intersectionality: Gender and sexuality,
empire and nation in modern South Asian History” Panel “Gender and Development in South Asia” Chair: Manuela Ciotti, IGK
Ingvild Jacobsen (Norwegian University of Life Science, Aas): “Women’s security in a post-conflict context (Pakistan: Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Afghanistan)”
Evgeny Kochkin (Higher School of Economics, St. Petersburg): “Gender bias in educational expectations of children from Indian rural areas”
Farhat Naz (University of Bonn): “Caste system making women visible and invisible in community based water management: a case study of rural northern Gujarat, India”
Coffee/Tea Break Panel “Gender and Politics” Chair: Nitin Sinha (ZMO)
Patrick Hesse (Humboldt Univeristy): “Liberating Women, defending Tradition: Communist perspectives on gender emancipation in the mid-20th century”
Mirella Lingorska (University of Tübingen): “Female ascetics in the Hindutva” Shahnaz Khalil Khan (Humboldt University): “What accounts for the absence of a concerted
Muslim women’s movement in J&K?” Lunch Break
Panel “Gender and Work - I” Chair: Prabhu Mohapatra, IGK Srimayee Dam (University of Calcutta): “Gender dimensions on ‘role-changing’:
An integrative approach” Julia Grünenfelder (University of Zurich): “The discursive constitution
of the ‘Pakistani Working Woman’” Devika Sethi (JNU/Göttingen): “‘Girl Clerks’, ‘Lady Officers’
and ‘Officers’ Wives’: Women’s Employment in the Indian State” Coffee/Tea Break
VVenue: Institute for Asian and African Studies (HU) Invalidenstrasse 118, R. 317
Friday, 20.05.2011 Continued from previous page
04:00-05:00 PM
PPanel “Gender and Work - II: Capitalizing Bodies, Capitalizing Work” Chair: Anne Griffiths, IGK
Lisa Caviglia (University of Heidelberg): “A feminist geography of sex work in Nepal: Bridging spaces, transnational movement and the body as capital and investment”
Sneha Banerjea (Jawaharlal Nehru University, Delhi): “Wombs to-let: Subversive ‘work’ or exploitation under capitalist patriarchy?”
005:00-05:15 PM Coffee/Tea Break 05:15-06:30 PM Film and Discussion: “The Women’s Centre” (2006)
A short documentary by Jesper Nordahl about a Sri Lankan women self-help centre. Saturday, 21.05.2011 Venue: Institute for Asian and African Studies (HU) Invalidenstrasse 118, R. 317
09:00-10:30 AM
10:30-10:45 AM 10:45-12:45 PM
12:45-1:45 PM 01:45-03:15 PM
03:15-03:30 PM 03:30-04:30 PM
04:30-04:45 PM 04:45-05:45 PM
PPanel “Sexual Identities” Chair: Michael Mann, Humboldt University Manju Ludwig (University of Heidelberg): “The inconsistencies of discourse:The colonial
archive on sexuality, sodomy and ‘unnatural’ behavior in 19th century North India.” CoraGäbel(UniversityofTübingen):“Homosexuals,prostitutesortransgender?TheHijrasin
South Asia” Kathryn Lum (European University Institute, Florence): “Equal before God, yet invisible among
the Sangat:The discourse on sexuality in Sikhism” Coffee/Tea Break
Panel “Producing Norms of Conjugality” Chair: Heike Liebau, ZMO
Prabhat Kumar (University of Heidelberg): “Household events’ in the late 19th century Bihar”
Razak Khan (Free University, Berlin): “Purdah politics: Narratives of princely zenana women”
Anja Wagner (University of Heidelberg): “Women, men, couples: Towards a unified ethnography of gender”
Fritzi Titzmann (Humboldt University, Berlin): “Gender and mobility: A case study on Gujarati matrimonial media”
Lunch Break Panel “Gender: Representation and Performance - I”
Chair: Heiko Frese, University of Heidelberg Maritta Schleyer (MPI, Berlin): “Sufi heroines: Gendered emotional styles and female agency
in Khwaja Hasan Nizami’s writing” Sukla Chatterjee (University of Heidelberg): “Playing on the body: White woman’s gaze and
the nautch girls” Aishika Chakraborty (Brahmananda Keshab Chandra College, Calcutta): “Gendering
performance: The contemporary intervention in Indian dance” Coffee/Tea Break
Panel “Gender: Representation and Performance - II” Chair: Heiko Frese, University of Heidelberg
Deimantas Valanciunas (Vilnius University): “The mythologized femininity: Gendered identity and representation of a woman in Indian goddess films”
Hana Waisserová (Masaryk University, Brno): “South Asian Transnational Womanhood by Lahiri: Re-writing South Asian gender roles?
Coffee/Tea Break Round Table with Michael Mann (Humboldt University) / Melitta Waligora (Humboldt University)
HHeiko Frese (University of Heidelberg) / Heike Liebau (Zentrum Moderner Orient)

Antrittsvorlesung von Prof. Dr. Michael Mann

Indien 1989 oder die Überwindung des post-kolonialen Staates
  • When Jun 01, 2011 from 02:00 to 04:00
  • Where Senatssaal der Humboldt-Universität
  • iCal

 

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

Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin | Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences | Department of Asian and African Studies | Regional Departments | South Asian Studies | Events | Archives | International Workshop: Beyond the Line - Cultural Constructions of the Sea (June 22–23, 2012)

International Workshop: Beyond the Line - Cultural Constructions of the Sea (June 22–23, 2012)

The international workshop “Beyond the Line – Cultural Constructions of the Sea” examines the relationship between land and sea. It investigates how the currently changing constellations in South-South relationships can be understood historically and culturally. If the active participation of the regions south of the Sahara since early modern times is denied, what is the situation today? And beyond that: is it justified in any way to attribute a historical insignificance to regions neighboring Africa on the Atlantic and Indian Oceans?


These questions will be analyzed in the framework of a current trend in the social and cultural sciences that is called the “oceanic turn.” The symposium aims to pursue these questions and make its own contribution to them. Participants present the Atlantic and Indian Oceans as a cultural space. Individual panel discussions examine case studies of literature, migration, piracy, and trade cultures. In this way, research results on the sub-Saharan part of Africa will be investigated in their relationship to the Atlantic and Indian Oceans and new approaches will be formulated.

Conceived by Michael Mann and Ineke Phaf-Rheinberger
 

 

Institute of Asian and African Studies (IAAW)
Invalidenstraße 118, Room 217
Humboldt-Universität Berlin

 

 

WORKSHOP PROGRAM

 

Friday, 22 June 2012

 

 

2 pm Keynote

The Historian and the Fish: Of Archives and Categories

Georg Berkemer, Humboldt-Universität Berlin

 

 

2.45 pm Panel 1

Translocalities

 

 

Approaching the Sea – Conceptual Gateways and Theoretical

Implications

Katrin Bromber, ZMO Berlin, and Brigitte Reinwald, Leibniz Universität Hannover

 

Intensive research about oceans especially within the past three decades has resulted in a variety of approaches that conceptualize the sea as socio-cultural areas. The emerging term liquid continent not only flagged up the idea that oceans could be studied similar to land masses, but also linked ocean studies to disciplines such as cultural geography and the sociology of space. As a consequence, oceans are increasingly thought of as social spaces of intersecting and overlaying social and cultural practices and patterns of representation with a maritime reference, as well as political and economic scenarios of regulation. Such an approach allows to understand and to describe the plurality of historical processes, which generated, reorganised and redefined oceans as social spaces. It is not based on Euclidian geometry and Newtonian conceptualization of space as homogenous receptacle or container, which is filled with objects. It rather considers space in terms of its relational configurations of permanently moving objects (humans, goods, ideas, etc.) and, thus, in terms of time, place and agency.

Using empirical examples from research projects pursued at the ZMO, Berlin and the University of Hannover, the joint presentation will address the conceptual category of the seascape – a predominantly maritime geographical, social and cultural landscape – and the methodological approach of auto-geographies as two gateways to the study of the Indian Ocean and the Atlantic. It will further ask in how far middle range concepts such as translocality are useful to make larger theoretical claims and, thus, escape the trap of becoming a catch-all phrase for any phenomenon of spatial mobility and transgression irrespective of its quality.

 

 

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

4 pm Coffee/tea break

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

 

 

4.30 pm Panel 2

The Ocean as a Contact Zone in Literature

 

 

African-Portuguese Encounters in The Lusiads

Bernhard Klein, University of Kent

 

This paper considers the various encounter scenes between Europeans and Africans in Luís de Camões’s 1572 maritime epic Os Lusíadas (The Lusiads). The first – and in many ways most important – of these scenes occurs in canto 5, when the Portuguese seafarers en route to India first make landfall in the southern hemisphere and meet a local honey-gatherer in St Helena Bay, described as “a strange man of black skin” (um estranho vir, de pele preta, 5.27.6). The ensuing interaction begins as a ritual of gift-giving and cultural exchange, but quickly leads to non-comprehension, failed reciprocity, and mutual hostilities. The scene has often puzzled later readers: there are no immediate lessons to be learned, there is no moral or didactic message imparted to the reader, and Camões has been criticized for including the episode in his poem on precisely these grounds. In this paper I want to argue that the episode is no irrelevant aside but a crucial first introduction to the contingencies and cultural complexities of overseas travel.

Importantly, the scene is not one of Camões’s inventions but reported in the anonymous eyewitness account of da Gama’s voyage as the first significant encounter between the Portuguese crew and inhabitants of the southern hemisphere, and also features in two historical narratives published in the early 1550s, by João de Barros and Fernão Lopes de Castanheda, which Camões used as sources. The paper will offer a comparative reading of the various “historical and cultural constructions of the sea” implicit in these different narratives, and also compare this first encounter scene with the seven others that follow as the Portuguese fleet rounds the Cape and continues its voyage north along the east African shoreline.

 

 

Sea-Born(e) Migration and Atlantic Creole Culture

Ineke Phaf-Rheinberger, Humboldt-Universität Berlin

 

Historians use the concepts “sea-born(e) migration” and “Atlantic Creoles” when speaking about contemporary effects of the South Atlantic past. In such cases, they generally refer to processes of cultural interactions since the end of the 16th century between Africa and (Latin) America. According to their argument, Africa has to be considered as an active partner in the creation of the Atlantic Creole cultures instead of merely being considered as a passive and victimized subject.

Simultaneously, not only historians but also writers and painters produce work commemorating those cultural interactions in past and present. For this purpose they elaborate aesthetic strategies, in which the personification of the sea plays an important role. Additionally, the contemporary ecological consciousness gives this identification with the sea a special dimension. I will give some examples from Angola and Brazil framing them in a conceptual network that might also be applied to similar processes in other parts of the world.

 

 

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

6 pm Coffee/tea break

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

 

 

6.30 pm Panel 3

Oceanic Life and Work Regimes

 

 

Ideas on Open Water Systems and Occupation

Babacar Fall, Université Dakar

 

This will be a general and imaginative introduction to the topic of the workshop.

 

 

Life on the Water – Soldiers, Slaves, and other Subalterns of the Indian Ocean from the 18th to the 20th Century

Michael Mann, Humboldt-Universität Berlin

 

In contrast to the Atlantic Ocean, the social history of the Indian Ocean has received comparatively little attention. However, during the last three decades quite a few seminal books appeared on the market highlighting the cultural, social, economic, and political interconnectivity of the Indic. Yet, as several studies and in particular that of Marcus Rediker have dealt with the social life on board of ships in the Atlantic, there is no comprehensive account on the "Life on the Water" in the Indian Ocean. This presentation aims to give an overview of the current state of the art on that subject trying to shed some light on the social, hygienic, and nutritious conditions on board a ship with special reference to the "subalterns", i.e. soldiers, slaves, and kulis being transported on a ship or lascars as well as the crew. Little and bad or even rotten food caused severe health problems and increased death rates as did the lack of medical care. Due to the tropical climate crossing the Indic made life on board dangerous. Additionally, many of the transported "Indians" were frightened since the Brahmanic idea of the "kala pani" (Black Water) was connected with various horrible stories including the loss of "caste". Therefore to be on a ship was not something most of the "passengers" were looking forward to. 

 

 

 


 

Saturday, 23 June 2012

 

 

9.30 am Panel 4

Oceanic Turn in Literary Studies

 

 

Horrors of the Deep. Sea Fiction and Empire

Gesa Mackenthun, Universität Rostock

 

Metaphors of depth abound in sea fiction. The Bible exhorts its believers to seek commerce in the deep; Schiller’s diver doesn’t return from his dive because he has violated the divine injunction against exploring the deep; for Melville, the bottom of the ocean was at the same time the “loom” of creation and a place of invisible horror; Verne’s Captain Nemo takes possession of the deep seas in his battle against the imperial powers of the world. This paper will explore some stories and metaphors of oceanic depth and read them in conjunction with a general reformulation of deep space and deep time in the nineteenth century. Even today, the deep seas remain a zone of interdiction – a region to be explored only at the risk of many lives and ecological disaster. And the “black Mediterranean” keeps swallowing its victims as the Black Atlantic once did. The paper will steer a course through these various articulations of oceanic depth.

 

 

Seas of History, Seas of Waste

Elisabeth DeLoughrey, UCLA

 

Mary Douglas has famously argued that waste is merely matter out of place. "Dirt is the byproduct of a systemic ordering of matter in so far as ordering involves rejecting inappropriate elements." My talk is about how Caribbean artists and writers have called attention to the political and the aesthetic implications of making dirt, or waste, visible in an oceanic context. The Latin term for ocean, 'vastus,' is also the term for waste. By representing refugee bodies at sea, Caribbean writers and artists demonstrate how waste is a constitutive byproduct of modernity in which the state regulates the vastus for those bodies associated with national refuse, a practice of border-making in a fluid space.

 

 

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

11 am Coffee/tea break

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

 

 

11.30 am Panel 5

Literary Constructions of the Sea

 

Africa’s Asian Options: The Indian Ocean as Literary Contact Zone, Transcultural Memory Space and Transregional Discourse of Power

Frank Schulze-Engler, Frankfurt/Main

 

The paper is based on the research agenda of a major collaborative research project on “Africa’s Asian Options” that will officially start at Goethe University in October 2012. It will present three major research areas relating to literary, cultural and academic “Indian Ocean Imaginaries” to be explored over the next four years in the field of literary, cultural and media studies and will highlight important questions we hope to address through new empirical research:

 

1. What is the historical and current role of “Indian Ocean Imaginaries” in East African, South African and South Asian literature? To what extent can concepts of the Indian Ocean Area as a transregional space be found in this literature? What are similarities and differences between East African literature in English and Swahili with regard to representations of these Indian Ocean Imaginaries?

 

2. To what extent is the Indian Ocean constituted as a transcultural memory space in current literature, film and ‘new’ media (including the internet)? How can a new understanding of cultural memory as a mobile, contested practice rather than as a ‘territorialized’ feature defining particular communities be brought to bear on the Indian Ocean as a transcultural memory space based on African-Asian interactions?

 

3. Given the fact that “Africa’s Asian options” are neither a result of older trajectories of nationalist politics nor an outcome of old-style political “South-South solidarity”, but rely to a great extent on new factors such as the emergence of a new African middle class, a (moderately) sustainable African capitalism and on new transregional interactions in an increasingly multipolar world, what exactly is the function of academic/theoretical “Indian Ocean Imaginaries”? Who produces these imaginaries for which purposes, and who stands to benefit from them? What is the role of South Africa as a newly emerging global player in this scenario, and how are Indian Ocean discourses taken up in India and other Asian countries such as China?

 

 

“Oceans of pain”: The Sea as a Contact Zone in Angolan Poetry and Rap ´Music

Anna Sobral, Universität Konstanz

 

This paper examines the way Angolan poets have resorted to images of the Atlantic Ocean as a source of national identity as well as a transnational unifier. By focusing on the history of the ocean as a means of transporting slaves from the Angolan coast to the Americas, the poets highlight the negative impact of colonialism on the national territory, presenting the international slave trade as the pivotal experience of destruction – of both identity and memory – that has had repercussions up to our days. On the other hand, the ocean is also the connecting point between African Angolans and their descendants who were spread out by the slave trade all over America and Europe. The same space that features as a source of loss is thus turned into a powerful means of transnational alliance, appealing to ethnic as well as cultural ties between Africans.

These images become especially interesting when regarded against the background of the historical and political context in which the poems were composed. Hence, this paper compares poems by famous Angolan authors of the years of struggle for independence from colonialism (the 1960s) with more contemporary texts by poets/rappers of the current young generation of Angolans. By allowing the texts to enter into a dialogue with each other, the analysis aims at highlighting the role of the Atlantic as a source of Angolan identity, which itself has undergone significant changes in the past 50 years.

 

 

Fabulating the Indian Ocean – An Emerging Network of

Imaginaries?

Ute Fendler, Universität Bayreuth

 

When Stephen Muecke launches fabulation as one of the most significant aspects in Indian Ocean studies that brings about “artful politics”, he sets the focus on the “listening” and the “telling” of voices and stories that “project reality”. Starting from this interesting focus, we will analyze a couple of texts from Mozambique (E. White, U. Khosa), Madagascar (Raharimanana) and Mauritius (Torabully), to see how fabulation contributes to a network of imaginaries where the ocean is a founding part of it: its evocation ranges from being a linking bridge, via a barrier, to the source of death and life. The ocean also opens the network beyond the Indian Ocean context, linking it to the experience of the slave trade, and therefore to the Atlantic Ocean, the Sea.

Stephen Muecke: “Fabulation: Flying Carpets and Artful Politics in the Indian Ocean.” In: S. Moorthy/A. Jamal: Indian Ocean Studies. Cultural, Social, and Political Perspectives. New York/London: Routledge, 2010, 32-44.

 

 

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1.30 pm Lunch break – plenty of restaurants and coffee houses nearby

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3 pm Panel 6

Pirates and Politics

 

“The Imperial Pirate”: Politics and Predation in early-modern South India

Sebastian Prange, University of British Columbia

 

This paper examines the interplay of maritime predation and processes of state formation in coastal South India across the sixteenth century. Over the last decades, the study of state formation has formed a central concern in the historiography of South India for the medieval and early modern periods. However, this scholarly focus has been almost exclusively directed towards territorial states and their agrarian relations. This paper argues that another trajectory of state building can be observed on the littoral, which has been overshadowed by the growing European presence on the coast during this same period. Yet it was not only the Portuguese who competed with existing coastal powers by establishing new polities on India’s seaboard, but also Muslim groups, whose rise to preeminence is closely linked to the increasingly violent maritime milieu that developed in this region over the course of the sixteenth century. In this period, two Muslim dynasties, the Ali Rajas of Cannanore and the Kunjalis of Kottakal, established themselves as autonomous sovereignties in opposition to their Hindu lords; in both cases, this endeavor was founded in the power and profits derived from a close involvement in seaborne raiding. By comparing these two instances of state building by producers of maritime violence, it is asked whether the Portuguese brought about qualitative changes to the politics of maritime predation in maritime Asia, or if the connection between piracy and state formation must be seen against a much deeper continuity in Indian Ocean history.

 

 

The Political Legitimacy of Pirates: Coastal Diplomacy in Bombay, c. 1700-1755

Derek Elliot, University of Cambridge

 

Through the first half of the eighteenth century the Konkan littoral surrounding Bombay was a hotly contested space of sovereignty. The English East India Company, the Portuguese Estado da Índia, the Maratha-aligned Angres and the Moghul-backed Siddis all vied for political power and legitimacy. Wars frequently broke out, sometimes lasting decades, however, even in peace the powers sought to extend their assertions of sovereign power over both land and sea. The pass was the primary method of making claims over shipping and trade; the failure of a merchant to secure passes left their ship and goods open to plunder. Using East India Company records, ship’s logbooks, and prisoner’s letters, the politics of capture are laid bare and allow a reassessment of the claims of piracy made by East India Company officials against the Indian powers that most challenged their ascendancy. It will also expose how colonial era historiographical trends have persisted by failing to situate sources in their contemporary political and social contexts.

 

 

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4.30 pm Coffee/tea break

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5 pm Panel 7

Transoceanic Connections

 

The Politics of the Passport: East Africa and Beyond

Prem Poddar, ZMO Berlin

 

This paper is part of a larger work where I engage in how the laws of citizenship have mutated over time as expressed in the politics and history of the passport, and how literary and historical discourses have overlapped and intertwined with legal discourses of citizenship. I focus on moments of crisis in the colonial history of the passport and the current paper will look at two trajectories. 1. The politico-cultural relationship that uprooted Afro-Asians (part indenture, part comprador) became the subject of as their travels/journeys de-scribed a triangle between West India, East Africa and Britain. 2. The emigration pass, also called *girmitya*, which was issued to the more than one million coolies or indentured labourers, who crossed the Indian and Atlantic oceans covering the period between 1838 and 1917. The very term ‘British subject’ was “susceptible of important division and modification” and reveals what has been called the “rule of colonial difference”. The histories of colonial expansion and transfer, however, which underwrote these definitions—including the one of ‘immigrants‘— get withdrawn from the ‘national’ story. My paper delineates such re-castings.

 

 

Africa in Indian Ink: Urdu Articulations of Indian Settlement in East Africa

Nile Green, UCLA

 

As with many other areas of Indian Ocean history, the study of Indian settlement in eastern and southern Africa has suffered from a lack of primary materials in indigenous (or better, oceanic) languages. Building on recent work on Gujarati accounts of Indians in Africa, this paper brings to light the first substantial body of Urdu sources on Indian settlement in Africa. The focus is on Safarnama-e Uganda wa Mumbasa (‘Travelogue of Uganda and Mombasa’), an Urdu travel guide written in 1901 that is so far the earliest known direct account of colonial migration to Africa to have been written in Urdu and possibly in any modern Indian language. The paper analyzes the discursive frameworks by which East Africa was rendered knowable to a readership of prospective Punjabi migrant workers on the Uganda Railway, with the railway in turn providing the author of the travel guide with a geographical spine for Africa’s spatial anatomy. As a colonial Indo-African ethnography, the Safarnama thus provides our earliest direct evidence of Indian attitudes to both the peoples and landscapes of Africa. Envisioning East Africa as an at once Islamic and imperial settlement zone, the Safarnama-e Uganda wa Mumbasa documents the incorporation of not only littoral but also interior East Africa into an industrializing oceanic culture area that the railway expanded into Africa.

 

 

Transoceanic Nationalism. Connections between East Africa and India, c. 1920-1963

Margret Frenz, University of Leicester

 

This paper explores the cross-currents in the Indian Ocean that were created by several South Asian communities who lived in East Africa since the late nineteenth century. Although they had made Tanganyika, Zanzibar, Kenya and Uganda their home, links and connections to their place of origin were kept alive, particularly in the private and the political sphere. In the emerging nationalist movements in India and East Africa, and East African Indian activists traveled to India.

The paper argues that the political interaction between the two continents significantly influenced the nationalist movements in East Africa, particularly once India had achieved Independence in 1947 since it showed the realistic possibility of bringing colonial rule to an end. Transoceanic interactions between East Africa and India intensified with the establishment of scholarships for East African students in India by posting an Indian High Commissioner in Nairobi, and by politicians such as Jawaharlal Nehru advocating the need for rapid further decolonization and international solidarity between independent Asian and African countries.

 

Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin | Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences | Department of Asian and African Studies | Regional Departments | South Asian Studies | Events | Archives | International Conference: Kochi 1514 -- Cross-Cultural Networks between Central Europe, South Asia and Beyond in the Early Modern Period

International Conference: Kochi 1514 -- Cross-Cultural Networks between Central Europe, South Asia and Beyond in the Early Modern Period

November, 14-16, 2014 International Conference at the Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin at the Institut für Asien- und Afrikawissenschaften, Seminar für Südasienstudien/Department for South Asia Studies, Raum/Room 217


The Kochi 1514 International Conference brings together scholars of social, anthropological, historical, and linguistic disciplines. Having distinguished themselves for introducing new ideas and revised methods into the scientific discourse of the history of globalisation, they are working additionally on the subject of cross-cultural relations between Europe and Asia. By doing so, and with the intend to respond critically to habituated narratives, the twelve conference participants shall present the state of the art on the material, cultural, intellectual, and scientific transfer and exchange between Central Europe, South Asia, and beyond in the early modern period (c. 1450–1800). As a result, they shall debate, relate, and project further fields of research in three coherent panels.

 

 

PROGRAMME

 

Friday, Nov 14
 
3.00 pm
Opening Remarks
Prof. Dr. Michael Mann
 
 
PANEL A.
 
3.30-4.30 pm
Kochi 1514 as a Beginning?
The Central Europeans and the
S. Bartholomew Chapel.
Gregor M. Metzig.
 
 
4.30-5.30 pm
Mission beyond Mission:
Cross-Cultural Networks in
Eighteenth-Century South
India.
Keyvan Djahangiri.
 
5.30-6.00 pm Coffee Break
 
6.00-7.00 pm
Keynote Lecture: Trading
Goods from Southern Germany
to India 1533.
Dr. Dr. Wolfgang Knabe
 
8.00 pm Dinner
Restaurant Neumond
 
 
 
Saturday, Nov 15
 
9.00-10.00 am
The Lure of India. Was there
an Exchange of Visual Arts
between Europe and India?
Sune Erik Schlitte
 
10.00-11.00 am
Balthazar Springer and the
King of Cochin: Early Modern
Encounters between India and
Europe.
Sebastian R. Prange.
 
11.00-11.30 am Coffee Break
 
 
PANEL B.
 
11.30-12.30 pm
Jeremias van Vliet in Siam. The
Cultural Transgressions of a
Dutch Merchant Scholar.
Sven Trakulhun.
 
12.30-1.30 pm
Bilateral or Global? ‘Indiennes’
in Eighteenth-Century France.
Felicia Gottmann
 
1.30-3.00 pm Lunch Break
 
3.00-4.00 pm
The Columbian Exchange from
the West to the East and the
Dutch Trading Companies
Acting in Early Globalization.
Tim Wätzold.
 
4.00-5.00 pm
A Spidery Web: Global Textile
Connections of Eighteenth-
Century Danish Trade between
India, Guinea and Europe.
Vibe Maria Martens.
 
5.00-5.30 pm Coffee Break
 
 
PANEL C.
 
5.30-6.30 pm
Eighteenth-Century European
Polymaths interested in
Asian Languages: Tracing the
Influence of Leibniz‘ Linguistic
Research Program.
Toon van Hal.
 
 
Sunday, Nov 16
 
9.00-10.00 am
Zainudheen Maqdoom and
Malabar‘s Global Connections
in the Sixteenth Century.
Nuaiman Keeprath Andru.
 
10.00-11.00 am
Diamonds. Transcultural
Values and Cross-Cultural
Trade between India and
Central Europe.
Kim Siebenhüner.
 
11.00-12.00 pm
‘All to use’. Circulation and
Presence of Indian Goods in
Central European Art,
Science, and Culture.
Marília dos Santos Lopes.
 
12.00-12.30 pm Coffee Break
 
12.30-13.30 pm
Concluding Remarks.