Lettre du CASE du 19 septembre 2016

LA LETTRE DU 19 septembre 2016

Dons faits à la bibliothèque

    • Nasir Abdoul-Carime, Grégory Mikaelian, Joseph Thach (éds), Le passé des Khmers : langues, textes, rites, Peter Lang, 2016

    • Pascal Royère, Le Baphuon, de la restauration à l’histoire architecturale, EFEO, 2016, Mémoires Archéologiques n° 27

Reçus à la bibliothèque

Sojourn, vol. 31, no. 2 (juillet 2016)

Articles

  • Buddhist Holy Man Khruba Bunchum: The Shift in a Millenarian Movement at the Thailand–Myanmar Border by Amporn Jirattikorn

  • 78s and the Golden Age of Thai Song: Content and Analysis of the Thai 78 rpm Discographical Framework by James Mitchell

  • Chinese Women Ethnopreneurs in Southeast Asia: Two Case Studies by Caroline S. Hau

  • Propaganda and the Public: The Shaping of Opinion in the Southern Vietnamese Countryside during the Second Indochina War by David Hunt

  • Through Racing Goggles: Modernity, the West, Ambiguous Siamese Alterities and the Construction of Thai Nationalism by Thak Chaloemtiarana

Sojourn Symposium

  • A Life Beyond Boundaries: A Memoir. By Benedict R. O'G. Anderson. Review essays by John Sidel, Danilyn Rutherford and Michael Montesano, with an introduction from Hui Yew-Foong and Kathleen Azali, and an excerpt from Benedict Anderson's final book by Hui Yew-Foong, Kathleen Azali, James Sidel, Danilyn Rutherford, Michael J. Montesano, Benedict R. O’G. Anderson

Book Reviews

https://bookshop.iseas.edu.sg/publication/2167

Southeast Asian Studies, vol. 5, no. 1 (avril 2016) : Political Networks in Asia

Guest Editors: Onimaru Takeshi and Khoo Boo Teik

    • Introduction: A Place for Networks in Asian Politics by Khoo Boo Teik and Onimaru Takeshi

    • Very Distinguished Alumni: Thai Political Networking by Pasuk Phongpaichit, Nualnoi Treerat, and Chris Baker

    • The Rise and Fall of Virata’s Network: Technocracy and the Politics of Economic Decision Making in the Philippines by Teresa S. Encarnacion Tadem

    • Networks in Pursuit of a “Two-Coalition System” in Malaysia: Pakatan Rakyat’s Mobilization of Dissent between Reformasi and the Tsunami by Khoo Boo Teik

    • Contending Political Networks: A Study of the “Yellow Shirts” and “Red Shirts” in Thailand’s Politics by Naruemon Thabchumpon

    • Shanghai Connection: The Construction and Collapse of the Comintern Network in East and Southeast Asia by Onimaru Takeshi

    • Looking at Links and Nodes: How Jihadists in Indonesia Survived by Miichi Ken

http://englishkyoto-seas.org/

Cette revue est en ligne et en libre accès.

Vient de paraître en ligne

Bulletin of Indonesian Economic Studies, vol. 52, no. 2 (2016)

Sommaire

Survey of Recent Developments

    • Family Matters: Demographic Change and Social Spending in Indonesia by Riatu Qibthiyyah and Ariane J. Utomo

Others Articles

    • Village Governance, Community Life, and the 2014 Village Law in Indonesia by Hans Antlöv, Anna Wetterberg & Leni Dharmawan

    • Could a Resource Export Boom Reduce Workers’ Earnings? The Labour-Market Channel in Indonesia by Ian Coxhead & Rashesh Shrestha

    • Traditions, Land Rights, and Local Welfare Creation: Studies from Eastern Indonesia by Stein Kristiansen & Linda Sulistiawati

    • How Robust Is Indonesia’s Poverty Profile? Adjusting for Differences in Needs by Jan Priebe

Book Reviews

http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cbie20/current

Cette revue est disponible en format papier à la BULAC, à la bibliothèque de la FMSH et à la bibliothèque de la Fondation des Sciences Politiques.

Journal of Current Southeast Asian Affairs, vol. 35, no. 2 (2016) : 30 years Doi Moi

Sommaire

Research Articles

    • - Vietnam: Economic Strategy and Economic Reality by Adam Fforde

    • - Resilience of the Communist Party of Vietnam’s Authoritarian Regime since Doi Moi by Hai Hong Nguyen

    • - Vietnamese Civic Organisations: Supporters of or Obstacles to Further Democratisation? Results from an Empirical Survey by Jörg Wischermann, The Cuong Bui, Thi Viet Phuong Dang

    • - The Influence of Social Media in Vietnam’s Elite Politics by Thiem Hai Bui

Research Article

    • - Towards the ASEAN Community: Assessing the Knowledge, Attitudes, and Aspirations of Thai University Students by Pinn Siraprapasiri, Chanintira na Thalang

http://journals.sub.uni-hamburg.de/giga/jsaa/

Cette revue est en libre accès. Vous pouvez télécharger les PDF des articles à l’adresse ci-dessus.La bibliothèque est abonnée à la version papier. Vous serez avertis lorsque nous la recevrons.

South East Asia Research, vol. 24, no. 3 (septembre 2016)

Special issue : Political families in Southeast Asia / Guest editor : Jemma Purdey

Editorial

    • Political families in Southeast Asia by Jemma Purdey

Articles

    • Political dynasties in the Philippines: Persistent patterns, perennial problems by Teresa S Encarnacion Tadem and Eduardo C Tadem

  • The Lees of Singapore: A quality brand by Michael D. Barr

    • The Sukarno dynasty in Indonesia: Between institutionalisation, ideological continuity and crises of succession by Marcus Mietzner

    • Narratives to power: The case of the Djojohadikusumo family dynasty over four generations by Jemma Purdey

    • Evolving power of provincial political families in Thailand: Dynastic power, party machine and ideological politics by Prajak Kongkirati

    • Survival against the odds: The Djunaid family of Pekalongan, Central Java by Amalinda Savirani

    • Understanding family politics: Successes and failures of political dynasties in regional Indonesia by Edward Aspinall and Muhammad Uhaib As’ad

Book Reviews

http://ser.sagepub.com/content/current

La bibliothèque est abonnée à cette revue dans sa version électronique et dans sa version papier. Vous pouvez accéder à la version en ligne depuis vos postes du France.

Southeast Asian Studies, vol. 5, no. 2 (août 2016)

Sommaire

    • History Reformatted: Vietnam’s Great Famine (1944–45) in Archival Form by Ken MacLean

    • The Irony of Democratization and the Decline of Royal Hegemony in Thailand by Kasian Tejapira

  • Anut Grubyuk in the Voting Process: The Neglected Explanation of Javanese Voters (Preliminary Findings) by Wawan Sobari

    • Philanthropy and “Muslim Citizenship” in Post-Suharto Indonesia by Hilman Latief

    • Kuo Pao Kun’s Zheng He Legend and Multicultural Encounters in Singapore by Rachel Leng

    • No Room to Swing a Cat? Animal Treatment and Urban Space in Singapore by Ying-kit Chan

Book Reviews

https://englishkyoto-seas.org/2016/08/vol-5-no-2-of-southeast-asian-studies-2/

Cette revue est en ligne et en libre accès. La bibliothèque reçoit sa version papier dans le cadre d’un échange avec Archipel.

BEFEO, vol. 101, 2015

Sommaire

Articles

    • The Fragrance of the Buddha, the Scent of Monuments, and the Odor of Images in Early India by Gregory Schopen

    • Henri Hubert et l'archéologie de l'Asie du Sud-Est. Un moment de formation personnelle et d'échanges intellectuels by Christine Lorre

    • Carving at the Capital: A stone workshop at Hariharālaya, Angkor by Martin Polkinghorne, Janet G. Douglas & Federico Caro

    • Southeast Asian Images of Hell: Transmission and Adaptation by Goh Geok Yian

    • Étude du corpus des inscriptions du Campā VII. L'inscription de Jaya Parameśvaravarman à Tháp Đôi (C. 213) avec en annexe deux nouvelles inscriptions du même souverain (C. 218.2 et C. 219) by Amandine Lepoutre

    • Asbestos textiles from Batujaya (West Java, Indonesia): Further evidence for early long-distance interaction between the Roman Orient, Southern Asia and island Southeast Asia by Judith Cameron, Agustijanto Indrajaya & Pierre-Yves Manguin

    • Yang Liangyao's Mission of 785 to the Caliph of Baghdād: Evidence of an Early Sino-Arabic Power Alliance? by Angela Schottenhammer

    • Histoire d'un groupe de parenté du Fujian. Commerce au-delà des mers et mouvance by Claudine Salmon & Paola Calanca

    • Sailing from the China Coast to the Pescadores and Taiwan: A Comparative Study on the Resemblances in Chinese and Dutch Sailing Patterns by Cheng Weichung

Chronique

    • Prospection archéologique de la côte nord de Java Centre : le district de Kendal par Baskoro D. Tjahjono, Agustijanto Indrajaya & Véronique Degroot

Comptes rendus

http://www.efeo.fr/base.php?code=97

La bibliothèque reçoit cette revue dans le cadre d’un échange avec Archipel.

Vient de paraître :

Appels à contributions

“Resilient Cities for Human Flourishing: Governing the Asia-Pacific Urban Transition in the Anthropocene”, Asia Research Institute, NUS, Singapore

“The purpose of this multidisciplinary workshop is to explore innovations in governance aimed at building urban resilience to various forms of environmental harm while protecting human flourishing through the creation of civic cultures centered on more sustainable forms of resource consumption.”

Date limite d’envoi des abstracts : 30 septembre 2016

https://ari.nus.edu.sg/Event/Detail/8b2450f9-ade1-49d9-8c5a-59cf779a7e31

“Trans-Asia as method: Exploring new potentials of "trans-Asian" approaches”, Monash University, Prato Centre, Italy

Organized by Monash Asia Institute, Monash University

“The conference aims to discuss the potential of trans-Asian perspectives and approaches for the investigation of human mobilities, media culture flows and people's cross-border connection across Asia. The conference will explore four patterns of trans-Asian approaches: Cross-border flows and connections; Inter-Asian comparison and referencing; Transnational & de-nationalized approaches; Cross-border collaboration.”

Selected papers will be published as an edited volume as part of the book series, Asian Cultural Studies: Transnational and Dialogic Approaches (Rowman & Littlefield International).

Date limite d’envoi des abstracts : 30 septembre 2016

http://artsonline.monash.edu.au/mai/trans-asia-as-method-exploring-new-potentials-of-trans-asian-approaches/

Hmong Studies Consortium : Transnational Hmong Conference, “Memories, Networks and Identities of Transnational Hmong”, 4-5 January 2017, Chiang Mai University, Chiang Mai, Thailand

Organized by the Center for Ethnic Studies and Development (CESD), Chiang Mai University, Chiang Mai, Thailand.

http://hmongstudies.wisc.edu/Conferences/january2017hmongconinfo.htm

Appel à panels et tables rondes

2017 AAS-in-Asia Conference, “Asia in motion : beyond borders and boundaries”, 24-27 juin 2016, Korea University, Seoul

“The Program Committee for the AAS-in-ASIA conference seeks proposals dealing with all regions of Asia on subjects covering a wide range of scholarly disciplines and professional fields under the theme: "Asia in Motion: Beyond Borders and Boundaries." Modern borders are often allowed to define and divide nations, cultures, and traditions. However, both present-day experience and historical records reveal that people and goods have always moved across boundaries. Ideas and material goods, rather than being the exclusive monopoly of one region or nation, have generally been the objects of exchange, competition, and rivalry. Our proposed theme questions the fixed political boundaries of nations and states, and encourages scholars to reconsider borders as in progress and Asia as in motion. By thinking beyond borders and boundaries we enhance our understanding of how the concept of “Asia” was shaped in the past and how it is now reshaping the world.”

Date limite d’envoi des propositions : 31 octobre 2016

http://www.asian-studies.org/Conferences/AAS-in-ASIA-Conferences/Seoul-2017-Home-Page/Call-for-Proposals

Colloques

The 7th Asian Translation Traditions Conference : Shifting Powers: The Ethics of Translation in a Transforming Asia, 26-29 septembre 2016, Monash University Malaysia, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

Keynote speakers : Li Wei, Vicente L. Rafael, Ronit Ricci

“This conference seeks to interrogate the role of translators in, and of, Asia as participants in, and commentators on, a changing world. Translators minimise or break down barriers between the ‘I’, ‘you’, ‘we’ and ‘Other’, and in doing so, create inclusive local, regional and global experiences and life trajectories for consumers of linguistic and cultural artefacts. Yet, translation can also be an exclusive process: decisions about what is translated, how and for whom, have far-reaching implications for the inclusion and exclusion of certain communities and/or stakeholders, simultaneously empowering some and disempowering others.”

http://future.arts.monash.edu/asiantranslation7/

Interdisciplinary Symposium : Buddhist Literacy in Early Modern Northern Vietnam, 23-24 septembre 2016, Department of Asian Languages and Culture, Rutgers School of Arts and Sciences

Presented by Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey & The Vietnamese Nôm Preservation Foundation

“Catalyzed by the recent digitization of two textual collections held at the Thắng Nghiêm and Phổ Nhân Buddhist Temples in northern Vietnam, we propose to investigate the interaction of textual practices, publishing, and the transmission of literacy in interaction with Buddhism and the Buddhist institution. The texts in these collections are written in both Literary Chinese and vernacular Vietnamese, and include both classical sutras with cosmopolitan distribution, as well as region-specific texts, produced and circulated on a local level.

It has long been recognized that Buddhism played a varying but consistently vital role in the transmission of literate knowledge throughout East and Southeast Asia. By examining these collections of diverse but otherwise mundane textual artifacts, we seek to understand the kinds of literacy that prevailed in these types of religious and non-courtly settings, as well as to investigate how networks of publishing, text-production, and the bartering of knowledge were constructed and maintained across Buddhist monastic communities. Although our focus is on the Vietnamese context, our investigation is conducted in explicit comparison with analogous contexts in China, Korea, and Japan; and we invite scholars and students of all fields and areas of study interested in issues of Buddhism and Literacy, the transmission of literate knowledge, and the interaction of cosmopolitan and vernacular forms of textual culture, to attend our symposium.”

Voir les résumés : https://www.sas.rutgers.edu/cms/asian/images/eventlist/events/EventDocs/BuddhistLit_Symp_SCHEDULE_ABSTRACTS_0916.pdf

Séminaire

“Why (social) anthropology needs (historical) linguistics: the cross-sibling substitution drifts in Austronesian languages” by Robert Blust, 15/09/2016, University of Hawaii at Manoa

“If we accept that cultures have histories then we must ask if there is a way to access those histories without documentation. Since languages have histories, and historical linguists have

studied them successfully for the past 200 years, it makes sense when possible to apply the Comparative Method of linguistics to the study of culture history. This case study argues that the history of sibling terms in Austronesian languages strongly supports 1) a Proto-Malayo-Polynesian (PMP = Proto-Extra-Formosan) society with lineal descent, and more particularly 2) an ongoing process in which the cross-sibling terms were replaced over time in many languages independently by terms that originally meant 'wife-giving group' or 'wife-

taking group', supporting an inference of PMP asymmetric alliance.”

http://www.anthropology.hawaii.edu/news-events/colloquium/archive/f16/2016_Blust.pdf

Nalanda-Sriwijaya centre lecture series : “New Data on Early Settlement Processes and State Formation in Highland Sumatra, Indonesia” by Mai Lin Tjoa-Bonatz, 08/09/2016, ISEAS, Yusof Ishak Institute

“Dr Tjoa-Bonatz presented her findings about a highland kingdom founded by Indonesia’s last Hindu-Buddhist king, Ādityavarman (r. ca. 1343–75). Using both material culture and stone inscriptions as evidence, the research shows the vitality of a highland centre of power at a site known today as Bukit Gombak, in the Minangkabau region of West Sumatra. This site showed a settlement from the 14th to the 17th century. Dr Tjoa-Bonatz argued that this was the site of the original political and socio-economic centre of the Minangkabau region before it shifted to Pagaruyng and probably the royal centre of king Ādityavarman…”

Lire la suite sur : https://www.iseas.edu.sg/medias/event-highlights/item/3963-seminar-on-new-data-on-early-settlement-processes-and-state-formation-in-highland-sumatra-indonesia

Ces recherches du Dr Tjoa-Bonatz feront l’objet d’une monographie.

A lire

Gerard Sasges, “Absent maps, marine science, and the reimagination of the South China Sea, 1922-1939” in Journal of Asian Studies, vol. 75, no. 1 (fév. 2016)

https://www.cambridge.org/core/services/aop-cambridge-core/content/view/042A230F7E483D6AEECA0DF13F1641B0/S0021911815001564a.pdf/absent-maps-marine-science-and-the-reimagination-of-the-south-china-sea-1922-1939.pdf

Blog KITLV : Books written for everyone (and protected by a few) by Tom Hoogervorst, 11 août 2016

“Indonesia’s Chinese authored literature reached its peak of popularity in the 1930s. Access to these unique sources is slowly improving. Tom Hoogervorst escaped Jakarta’s archives for a rendezvous with two passionate guardians of the ‘Sino-Malay’ literary heritage : Myra Sidharta and Azmi Abubakar, head of Indonesia’s very first Peranakan Chinese Book Museum (Museum Pustaka Peranakan Tionghoa).”

http://www.kitlv.nl/blog-books-written-everyone-protected/

Rengat, 1949 (Part 1) by Anne-Lot Hoek, 12/09/2016, Inside Indonesia

“Dutch paratroopers massacred hundreds, perhaps thousands, in a Sumatran town during the Indonesian Revolution, yet nobody outside Rengat seems to know.”Cf. “The peristiwa of Rengat, Sumatra”, 12/02/206 : http://www.kitlv.nl/blog-the-peristiwa-of-rengat/

http://www.insideindonesia.org/rengat-1949-part-1

Rengat, 1949 (Part 2) by Anne-Lot Hoek, 12/09/2016, Inside Indonesia

“The people of Rengat, the Dutch archives and Dutch authorities have always known about the massacre of January 1949. Why then is the Dutch public not aware?”

http://www.insideindonesia.org/rengat-1949-part-2

Exposition ASE

Shadow Puppet Theatre from Indonesia, Malaysia and Thailand, 8 September 2016 - 29 January 2017, British Museum

“The exhibition draws on the British Museum’s unique Southeast Asian shadow puppet collection. further demonstrates that shadow puppet theatre is a living art form that still has relevance in contemporary times. Aspects of 20th century life, such as flare trousers, plastic, electricity, and sound amplification, play a part in shadow theatre, indicating its ability to adapt to social change.”

http://www.britishmuseum.org/whats_on/exhibitions/shadow_puppet_theatre.aspx

Cinéma ASE

“Venice film festival: Philippines revenge drama wins top prize”, 11/09/2016, BBC News

“Philippines film The Woman Who Left, a black and white drama by director Lav Diaz, has won the Golden Lion for best film at the Venice Film Festival.It tells the story of a schoolteacher's thirst for revenge and her feelings of forgiveness after 30 years in jail for a crime she did not commit.Diaz said the film was a testimony to the struggles of the Philippines after centuries of colonial rule.”

http://www.bbc.com/news/entertainment-arts-37330945

Eric Khoo, Hôtel Singapura, 90mn, 2015 (Singapour) en ce moment sur les écrans

Synopsis :

« Dans les années 1940, dans la chambre 27 de l'hôtel Singapura, deux hommes - un Anglais et un Singapourien - se font de poignants adieux au moment de l'invasion japonaise. Plus tard, un homme élit domicile dans cette même chambre avant de subir l'intervention qui fera de lui une femme. Un Singapourien célibataire et une Japonaise mariée y vivent un rendez-vous passionné : l'homme veut croire au futur de leur couple tandis que la femme sait que leur histoire se limite aux murs de cette chambre. Toutes ces histoires sont observées par le fantôme d'un musicien. Il hante ces lieux depuis qu'il y a trouvé la mort, par overdose d'héroïne... »

http://www.telerama.fr/cinema/films/hotel-singapura,509308.php

A lire : un entretien de Samuel Douhaire avec Eric Khoo : “Dans ‘Hôtel Singapura’, je voulais évoquer l'histoire du pays”, 23/08/2016.

http://www.telerama.fr/cinema/eric-khoo-dans-hotel-singapura-je-voulais-evoquer-l-histoire-du-pays,146391.php

Postes

Assistant Professor, Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies,Yale University

The Yale University Program in Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies intends to hire a tenure-track assistant professor in the field of gender and sexuality in the global South. We are interested in transnational research in such fields as critical development studies, environment and social justice, migration, indigeneity, human rights, science and technology studies, visual cultures, and performance studies.

Date limite de candidature : 30 septembre 2016

https://apply.interfolio.com/36196

Assistant Professor, Islam and Gender, Stanford University

“The successful candidate will be based in a social sciences department and will be expected to contribute to the Abbasi Program in Islamic Studies' curricular and outreach efforts. A focus on the Middle East and/or Southeast Asia is preferred. The appointment can be in one of the following departments in the School of Humanities and Sciences: Anthropology, Communication, Political Science, or Sociology.”

Date limite de candidature : 03 octobre 2016

https://academicjobsonline.org/ajo/jobs/7445

Position, Department of Asian Language and Culture, University of Wisconsin, Madison

“The newly formed Department of Asian Languages and Cultures at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, as part of its initiative to re-envision the study of the languages, cultures, and societies of Asia, is seeking to hire a scholar of the humanities or qualitative social sciences with expertise in at least one Southeast Asian language. Appointment begins August, 2017. Ph.D. required prior to start of appointment. Rank and area of specialization are open.”

Date limite de candidature : 24 octobre 2016

http://alc.wisc.edu/about/position-opening

Position, Comparative politics, Open Rank, Keough School of Global Affairs, University of Notre Dame

“The University of Notre Dame’s Keough School of Global Affairs invites applications for a tenure track/tenured faculty position in Comparative Politics with a preference for scholars whose work focuses on South Asia or Southeast Asia. The position will begin July 1, 2017; Ph.D. or equivalent degree required at the time of hire.”

Les candidatures seront examinées à partir du 15 octobre 2016 jusqu’à ce que le poste soit pourvu.

http://keough.nd.edu/comparative-politics-faculty-position-open-rank/