rekan-rekan
terlampir pemberitahuan dan 'call for papers' dalam konferensi tentang
"power in southeast asia" di universitas cambridge tahun depan.
siapa tahu bermanfaat.
salam,
y
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'Continuity and Change: (Re)conceptualising Power in Southeast Asia'
March 26th-28th 2009
Hosted by CRASSH (Centre for Research in the Arts, Social Sciences and
Humanities),
University of Cambridge, UK
Keynote Speakers:
James Scott (Sterling Professor of Political Science and Professor of
Anthropology, Yale University)
Shelly Errington (Professor of Anthropology, UC Santa Cruz)
The study of power in contemporary Southeast Asia has never been more timely.
Over the last half-century, the region has undergone innumerable far-reaching
changes. It has witnessed the rise of
postcolonial nation-states, rapid industrialization, economic growth and
democratization but also genocide, political upheaval and widespread repression.
Power lies at the core of these important
developments, whether in the form of brute military force or as a more capillary
'disciplinary' influence on religious and political subjectivities. New
religious, economic and political movements—all
drawing deeply on local traditions while proposing new forms of personhood,
civil and political society—cut across national, cultural, ideological and
sectarian boundaries.
Yet for all that power can be detected in Southeast Asia, there seems to be
little specifically Southeast Asian about it contemporary scholarly analyses.
This is both puzzling and ironic given the central
role that earlier ethnographic studies of Southeast Asia once played in
identifying distinctively regional modalities of power, prompting us to
reconsider how 'power' could be most profitably studied in
Southeast Asian contexts.
'Continuity and Change' will be a major interdisciplinary and international
conference on Southeast Asia. Its key aim is to reopen the debate on the issue
of 'power'—both in real life and academic
scholarship—as it is manifest across the region. Conference themes and questions
will include:
• Are there, or were there ever, distinctly 'Southeast Asian' notions of
power that could still exist as alternatives—or complements—to Western folk and
political models?
• Are scholars' analytic imaginaries of power in relation to nationhood
and governance congruent with the imaginaries of Southeast Asians witnessing or
involved in such projects and processes?
• What are the shapes that power takes?
• How have recent theoretical developments within various disciplines
reshaped our understanding of the nature and location of power?
• How useful is the concept of 'Southeast Asia' as a geographical,
political and analytical entity in dealing with these issues?
We invite papers from scholars working in the arts, humanities and social
sciences whose research illuminates novel, exciting and challenging dimensions
of power in Southeast Asian contexts across
space and time.
Abstracts, 250 words in length, should be submitted to
sea.continuity.change@...
For further details, see our website:
http://www.crassh.cam.ac.uk/events/542, or email us at the address above.
Key dates:
Submission of Proposal: 1st October 2008
Announcement of accepted proposals: 1st November 2008
Circulation of Paper Abstracts and Panels: 1st March 2009
Organizing Committee:
Liana Chua
Joanna Cook
Nick Long
Lee Wilson
____________________
Dr. Yanuar Nugroho
Manchester Institute of Innovation Research (MIoIR/PREST)
MBS, The University of Manchester
Harold Hankins Building, Precinct Centre
Oxford Road, Manchester M13 9PL
Tel. +44-161-275-5904
Fax. +44-161-275-0923
URL. audentis.wordpress.com
Email. yanuar.nugroho@...