LA LETTRE DU CASE - 27 mai 2016
Ashley Thompson, Engendering the buddhist state : territory, sovereignty and sexual difference in the inventions of Angkor, Routledge, 2016
- Can ASEAN Cope with China? by Mark Beeson
- Understanding the Oppressed: A Study of the Ahmadiyah and Their Strategies for Overcoming Adversity in Contemporary Indonesia by Aleah Connley
- Can Social Protection Weaken Clientelism? Considering Conditional Cash Transfers as Political Reform in the Philippines by Arun Ranga Swamy
- Regional Commonalities and Regional Identities: Forging a Normative Understanding of Southeast Asian Identity by Gürol Baba
- Myanmar’s Foreign Policy under the USDP Government: Continuities and Changes by Maung Aung Myoe
Book Reviews
http://journals.sub.uni-hamburg.de/giga/jsaa/
Cette revue est en libre accès.
Sommaire
Introduction
- Introduction: Understanding Thailand’s Politics by Veerayooth Kanchoochat and Kevin Hewison
Articles
- The 2014 Thai Coup and Some Roots of Authoritarianism by Chris Baker
- Inequality, Wealth and Thailand’s Politics by Pasuk Pongpaichit
- The Resilience of Monarchised Military in Thailand by Paul Chambers and Napisa Waitoolkiat
- Thailand’s Deep State, Royal Power and the Constitutional Court (1997–2015) by Eugénie Mérieau
- Thailand’s Failed 2014 Election: The Anti-Election Movement, Violence and Democratic Breakdown by Prajak Konkirati
- Reign-seeking and the Rise of the Unelected in Thailand by Veerayooth Kanchoochat
- Rural Transformations and Democracy in Northeast Thailand by Somchai Phatharathananunth
- Redefining Democratic Discourse in Thailand’s Civil Society by Thorn Pitidol
Book Reviews
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rjoc20/46/3
Cette revue est disponible en ligne et en version papier à la BULAC et à la bibliothèque de la Maison de l’Asie.
Sommaire
Research Essays
- The Ambiguous Legacy of Ngô Đình Diệm in South Vietnam’s Second Republic (1967–1975) by Sean Fear
- Wearing Modernity : Lemur Nguyễn Cát Tường, Fashion, and the “Origins” of the Vietnamese National Costume by Martina Thucnhi Nguyen
Feature Roundtable Review
- Review: American Reckoning: The Vietnam War and Our National Identity by Christian Appy / Tuong Vu
- Review: American Reckoning: The Vietnam War and Our National Identity by Christian Appy / Andrew Wiest
- Review: American Reckoning: The Vietnam War and Our National Identity by Christian Appy / Edward Miller
Book Reviews
http://vs.ucpress.edu/content/11/1?etoc
Cette revue est disponible en ligne et en version papier à la BULAC.
Sommaire
- The divinatory role of the Qurʾan in the Malay World by Majid Daneshgar
- Fundamentalism and religious dissent: the LPPI's mission to eradicate the Ahmadiyya in Indonesia by Ahmad Najib Burhani
- The literary motif of head-taking in Old Javanese court poems (kakavin): cěṅěl and varagaṅ terms revisited by Jiří Jákl
- Three Arabic letters from North Sumatra of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries by A. C. S. Peacock
- Managing minorities in competitive authoritarian states: multiracialism and the hijab issue in Singapore by Walid Jumblatt Abdullah
- Multicultural Hang Tuah: Cybermyth and popular history making in Malaysia by Rusaslina Idrus
- Contemporary Indonesian and Malaysian interpretations of ‘no compulsion in religion’ by Natalia Laskowska
- Motinggo Busye and his popular novels : A socio-historical analysis of the middle class emotional experience of economic modernisation in new order Indonesia by Sony Karsono
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cimw20/44/129
Vous pouvez télécharger ce numéro en ce moment à l’adresse ci-dessus ou me demander de vous envoyer les PDF.
http://www.uhpress.hawaii.edu/p-9568-9780824855727.aspx
http://press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/chicago/S/bo22440915.html
http://www.hurstpublishers.com/book/the-rohingyas/
http://www.brill.com/products/book/ghost-movies-southeast-asia-and-beyond
http://www.brill.com/products/book/religion-place-and-modernity
A workshop sponsored and organized by the Japan Institute and the College of Asia and the Pacific, the Australian National University
“Specifically, the workshop will examine the effects of inter-Asian connections in the realm of the intimate. It will highlight how the intimate lives of those moving within Asia — for marriage, work, care, development, activism, education and so on— are shaped by and in turn influence these broader changes. We thus invite scholars interested in asking how people’s intimate lives are transformed in the context of economic and political shifts throughout Asia. How do economies of desire travel from one nation to another? How are people’s relationships with others created and transformed in such journeys? And what do people’s affective attachments, in turn, reveal about emergent transformations underway within the Asian region?”
“We invite applications from researchers interested in intimate connections relating the following themes:
Media Flows/ Popular Culture
Love, Gender and Sexuality
Economics, Development, Activism
Kinship, Relatedness, Care”
Date limite d’envoi des abstracts : 10 juin 2016
Thèmes des interventions :
Challenges of the archive
Teleology fractured and abondoned
Architecture and violence
Types, minor types and non-types
Date limite pour l’envoi des abstracts : 05 juillet 2016
http://blog.nus.edu.sg/seaarc/symposium-2017-3/
“This conference is intended to be a scholarly “update” on the contemporary history and ethnography of Chinese Indonesians. It is also intended to be a forum where both established and emerging scholars can introduce new directions and trends in Chinese Indonesian studies, particularly those with a transnational approach.”
Date limite d’envoi des abstracts : 27 mai 2016
Première partie d’un colloque en deux parties intitulé : “In Comparison: Korea and Vietnam in History”. La deuxième partie se tiendra l’année prochaine en Corée.
The conference is conceived as an exploratory exercise to identify points of connections in which scholars of Vietnam and Korea could confront their work and engage their paradigms. “As an ongoing project historically grounded with contemporary perspective situated within the larger Asia-global spectrum as well as for practical sake, the first part of the conference entitled Vietnam and Korea as Longue Durée Subjects: Negotiating Tributary and Colonial Positions will focus on two conventionally agreed historiographies of the countries’: their ‘pre-modern’ and ‘colonial’ periods. An underlying question this conference aims to address will be: How the Korean and Vietnamese states and their civil societies, concepts that shaped during the tributary system, became formulated during the modernization period?”
Programme complet.
http://www.seameo-spafa.org/conference2016/panels.html
“The Doctoral Program in Buddhist Studies at Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität Münchenis pleased to announce a call for papers for the interdisciplinary workshop “Evolvingthrough Context: The Transformation of Buddhism(s) and their Legitimation(s)”, tobe held on March 24-25, 2017 in Munich, Germany with keynote addresses by Prof.Peter Schwieger (Bonn) and Prof. Stefano Zacchetti (Oxford).”
Date limite d’envoi des abstracts : 04 février 2017
http://www.en.buddhismus-studien.uni-muenchen.de/currentissues/cfp_2017/cfp_workshop_2017.pdf
Francis R. Bradley, Chiara Formichi, Joshua Gedacht, David Kloos, Amrita Malhi
“Covering areas such as Aceh and Java (Netherlands Indies/Indonesia), Mindanao (The Philippines), Patani (Siam/Thailand) and the Thai-Malay(si)an border, contributions to this workshop will pay particular attention to peripheral zones, not fully-incorporated by the state-making projects of expansionary centres. In these areas, state-making took the form of the violent territorial and political enclosure of Muslim peoples. Often, these peoples’ religious ideas and practices had not yet been subjected to the regulatory projects involved in incorporation into territorial state structures, although they embodied diverse connections with broader, not-yet-severed, modes of circulation across a “Muslim” global geography.”
http://www.kitlv.nl/event/workshop-violence-displacement-muslim-movements-southeast-asia/
“The Editorial Board of Indonesia and the Malay World (IMW) is pleased to announce a biennial competition for original articles produced by young scholars following the journal’s first such competition in 2014. ‘Young scholar’ is defined by IMW as either someone in the process of completing his or her Ph.D. or someone who has been awarded a doctorate within the last five years. The competition entrant should be working on the languages, literatures, art, archaeology, history, religion, anthropology, performing arts, cinema and tourism of the region covered by the journal (Indonesia, Malaysia, Brunei, Singapore, southern Thailand and southern Philippines). Award-winning submissions will be published in the journal.”
Date limite de soumission des articles : 31 août 2016
http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/13639811.2015.1076958
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=475-cqbaYFc&index=1&list=PL1z_PGhPjwcpF1Bjah2zW5UsmL71PhKP6
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=34VEL9KzcLA
Photo essay: “For Rohingya refugees in Aceh, a new home far from home” by Carlos Sardiña Galache, 11/05/2016, Democratic Voice of Burma
http://www.dvb.no/news/photo-essay-rohingya-aceh/65530
Lire l’article du South China Morning Post : “Ex-domestic helper Xyza Bacani on her Hong Kong photo show about human trafficking” par Enid Tsui, 18/05/2016.
“Photographer Xyza Bacani’s new Hong Kong exhibition is on the theme of human trafficking. Unlike the images used to illustrate news stories, such as the Syrians risking their lives to escape to Europe, or the mass graves of trafficking victims discovered near the Thai-Malaysian border last year, the photos Bacani, a Filipino former domestic helper in Hong Kong, has shot avoid direct depictions of the horror and despair of an evil trade. Instead, they focus on the strength and tenacity of those who have survived.”
“The Virtual Museum is an online database of Balinese paintings which documents public and private collections held in different parts of the world. The project began as a collaboration between researchers at the University of Sydney and the Australian Museum, together with input from the holder of a private collection of artworks painted in the village of Batuan in central Bali… It was led by Adrian Vickers and Peter Worsley.”
On peut interroger la base de données par artiste, par collection ou par récit (Adiparwa, Aji Darma …).
http://sydney.edu.au/heurist/balipaintings/index.html
“The Royal Commonwealth Society Library has just created an electronic catalogue for one of its largest and most significant manuscript collections: the papers of the diplomat, colonial administrator and orientalist Henry Burney (1792-1845)…
The collection preserves important records of Burney’s diplomatic missions: his instructions, travel, correspondence, journals and reports, which include rare insight into the Siamese and Burmese Courts. It also contains examples of traditional texts, such as Siamese kradat phlao and Burmese black parabaiks and palm leaf manuscripts. Burney shared the family’s intellectual curiosity and literary flair, and was fascinated by Siamese and Burmese culture. He researched the two countries’ climate, geography, languages, history, philosophy, religion, astronomy, mathematics and astrology, and collected important translations from original sources. Burney presented papers to learned bodies such as the Royal Asiatic Society and published in the ‘Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal’, the ‘Asiatic Journal’ and the ‘Journal of the Statistical Society’…
The RCS is also fortunate to possess a number of early photograph collections relating to Burma dating from the 1870s (RCS Y3029A-F), which complement the Burney archive.
The Janus catalogue of the Henry Burney Collection, RCMS 65, is now available online via the Janus homepage, a project that provides access to more than 1800 catalogues of archives held throughout Cambridge.”
https://southeastasianlibrarygroup.wordpress.com/tag/special-collections/
“The National Bureau of Asian Research and Sasakawa USA have partnered on an innovative platform for analyses and data on maritime security called the Maritime Awareness Project (MAP). The MAP portal combines interactive mapping technology with rigorous analyses from the world’s leading maritime experts to serve as the authoritative resource on maritime issues.”
http://maritimeawarenessproject.org/
Ce journal de propagande publié à Ipoh sous l’occupation japonaise de 1942 à fin 1943 vient de faire l’objet d’un don à la British Library qui possède désormais une collection qui s’étend sur 4 mois, d’avril à juillet 1943. Ces numéros vont être numérisés cette année à cause de la mauvaise qualité du papier sur lequel ils sont imprimés.
Date limite de dépôt des candidatures : 30 septembre 2016
https://www.h-net.org/jobs/job_display.php?id=52921
Date limite de dépôt des candicatures : 2 juin 2016