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Sustaining one another: enset, animals, and people in the southern highlands of Ethiopia

Series
Anthropology
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An Anthropology Departmental Seminar delivered by Elizabeth Ewart and Wolde Tadesse (School of Anthropology and Museum Ethnography, Oxford) on 13 October 2017

Episode Information

Series
Anthropology
People
Elizabeth Ewart
Wolde Tadesse
Keywords
anthropology
society
Africa
Ethiopia
plants
animals
Department: Institute of Social and Cultural Anthropology
Date Added: 27/03/2018
Duration: 00:53:31

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Existential mobility, migrant imaginaries and multiple selves

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Anthropology
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An Anthropology Departmental Seminar by Michael Jackson (Emeritus Professor of World Religions at Harvard Divinity School), 20 October 2017

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Series
Anthropology
People
Michael Jackson
Keywords
society
migration
anthropology
Department: Institute of Social and Cultural Anthropology
Date Added: 27/03/2018
Duration: 00:40:55

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Words and Deeds - the Astor Visiting Lecture 19 October 2017

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Anthropology
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Michael Jackson, Distinguished Visiting Professor of World Religions at Harvard Divinity School, delivered the Astor Visiting Lecture at Oxford on 19 October 2017. Introduced by Ramon Sarró (Oxford).
Abstract: 'In this talk, I share some vignettes from my recent fieldwork among African migrants living in Copenhagen, Amsterdam and London in order to reflect on the cultural and strategic reasons why migrants are often averse to speaking their minds, telling their stories, or sharing their feelings. In linking this parsimony in speech to economy in consumption, I explore not simply what words mean or are made to mean, but what words do – their social effects, their political repercussions, and their practical entailments. In this endeavor I am, to some extent, echoing Wittgenstein’s proposition that ‘one cannot guess how a word functions. One has to look at its use and learn from that,’ though I am also mindful of Malinowski’s emphasis on language as ‘a mode of action rather than as a countersign of thought.’
Words and Deeds

Episode Information

Series
Anthropology
People
Michael Jackson
Keywords
copenhagen
Africa
amsterdam
migration
speech
anthropology
society
Department: Institute of Social and Cultural Anthropology
Date Added: 27/03/2018
Duration: 00:57:25

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Ebola: A biosocial journey

Series
Anthropology
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The inaugural Geoffrey Harrison Prize Lecture delivered in Oxford on 3 November 2017 by Melissa Parker, Professor of Medical Anthropology at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine

Episode Information

Series
Anthropology
People
Melissa Parker
Keywords
society
anthropology
disease
ebola
Medicine
Department: Institute of Social and Cultural Anthropology
Date Added: 27/03/2018
Duration: 00:56:59

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India Conquered and Unconquered: The Chaos of Empire and the End of British power in India

Series
Asian Studies Centre
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Jon Wilson speaks at the South Asia Seminar on 16 May 2017
Histories of the British empire in India often present it as a stable and effective form of state power and a coherent ideology. Drawing on the argument of his recent book, India Conquered. Britain’s Raj and the Chaos of Empire, Jon Wilson argues in contrast that the British never built a stable state in India. Their power was fractious and anxious, limited in scope but prone to unreasonable violence. Focusing on the late C19th and C20th in his paper, Dr Wilson will argue that we need to see the shift from imperial power to a nation state as a far more radical break than historians currently tend to suggest.

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Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0 UK (BY-NC-SA): England & Wales; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/

Episode Information

Series
Asian Studies Centre
People
Jon Wilson
Keywords
india
British empire
military history
colonial history
Department: St Antony's College
Date Added: 27/03/2018
Duration: 00:48:38

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Jamal al-din al-Afghani and Syed Ahmad Khan: Reform, Rivalry, and Heresy in late 19th century India

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Asian Studies Centre
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Teena Purohit speaks at the South Asia Seminar on 30 May 2017
This talk examined the writings of Jamal al-din al-Afghani (1838-1897) with particular attention to his polemical piece against Syed Ahmad Khan (1817-1898), entitled “The Refutation of the Materialists” (1881). Scholars have assumed that al-Afghani was anti-imperial and wrote this diatribe because Syed Ahmad Khan was pro-British. It is the speaker’s intention to show that al-Afghani was not consistently anti-imperial, and in fact shared with Syed Ahmad Khan many similar views on the role of science, education, and progress. Teena Purohit reads “The Refutation” and ancillary treatises to show how al-Afghani invokes the idiom of heresy for his arguments about reform: on the one hand, al-Afghani mounts an accusation of heresy against Syed Ahmad Khan and his followers, and on the other hand, he deploys “heretical” concepts to rationalize and legitimize his aspiration to serve as a redemptive leader for all Muslims.

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Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0 UK (BY-NC-SA): England & Wales; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/

Episode Information

Series
Asian Studies Centre
People
Teena Purohit
Keywords
Jamal al-din al-Afghani
Syed Ahmad Khan
islam
india
Pakistan
Department: St Antony's College
Date Added: 27/03/2018
Duration: 00:42:52

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Populism as a Global Form: A Roundtable Conversation

Series
Asian Studies Centre
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Akeel Bilgrami (Columbia), Shruti Kapila (Cambridge) and Saeed Naqvi (Foreign Correspondent and Author) speak in Oxford on 2 June 2017
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Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0 UK (BY-NC-SA): England & Wales; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/

Episode Information

Series
Asian Studies Centre
People
Akeel Bilgrami
Shruti Kapila
Saeed Naqvi
Keywords
populism
india
USA
politics
Department: St Antony's College
Date Added: 27/03/2018
Duration: 01:19:51

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Scribes, Paper and the Formation of the Colonial State in North India, 1780-1840

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Asian Studies Centre
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Hayden J. Bellenoit speaks at the South Asia Seminar on 23 May 2017
The transition to colonialism in South Asian history has been a vibrant and hotly contested part of India’s history. The role of scribes as historical actors of change in India’s history has only recently been explored. This talk will examine how the formation of early agrarian revenue settlements exacerbated late Mughal patterns in taxation, and how the colonial state was shaped by this extant paper-oriented revenue culture and its scribes. It proceeds to examine how the service and cultural histories of various Hindu scribal communities fit within broader changes in political administration, taxation and patterns of governance, arguing that British power after the late eighteenth century came as much through bureaucratic mastery, paper and taxes as it did through military force and commercial ruthlessness. In particular, this paper explores the cultural and service experiences of various Kayastha scribes and how they fit within the transitional period of the mid-late 18th century between late Mughal and early colonial rule.

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Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0 UK (BY-NC-SA): England & Wales; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/

Episode Information

Series
Asian Studies Centre
People
Hayden J. Bellenoit
Keywords
North India
British empire
history
Department: St Antony's College
Date Added: 27/03/2018
Duration: 00:47:47

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Nihilism in the 21st Century: A Conversation with Pankaj Mishra, Shruti Kapila and David Priestland

Series
Asian Studies Centre
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Pankaj Mishra, Shruti Kapila and David Priestland speak at St Antony's College on 3 May 2017
Shruti Kapila lectures at the Faculty of History and is a Fellow and Director of Studies in History at Corpus Christi College, University of Cambridge. Her publications include a co-edited special issue ‘Bhagavad Gita and Modern Thought,’ Modern Intellectual History (2010), and, as editor, An Intellectual History for India (2010).

Pankaj Mishra’s From the Ruins of Empire: The Revolt Against the West and the Remaking of Asia became the first book by a non-Western writer to win Germany’s prestigious Leipzig Book Award for European Understanding. Mishra regular contributes literary and political essays to the New York Times, the New York Review of Books, The Guardian, the New Yorker, London Review of Books and Bloomberg View.

David Priestland is Professor of Modern History at St Edmund Hall. His landmark overview of world communism, The Red Flag: Communism and the Making of the Modern World, was published in 2010. His following book, Merchant, Soldier, Sage: A New History of Power (2012), discussed the rise of market cultures in global history. He is now working on the history of market liberalism with special reference to the former communist world.
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Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0 UK (BY-NC-SA): England & Wales; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/

Episode Information

Series
Asian Studies Centre
People
Pankaj Mishra
Shruti Kapila
David Priestland
Keywords
nihilism
political philosophy
india
Department: St Antony's College
Date Added: 27/03/2018
Duration: 01:20:03

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An Eminent Victorian: Gandhi and the Crisis of Liberal Democracy in the 19th Century

Series
Asian Studies Centre
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Dilip M. Menon speaks at the South Asia Seminar on 25 April 2017
Gandhi’s lauded text Hind Swaraj is born of and located within the 19th century crisis of liberal democracy and its resolutions of an intimate animosity towards the masses. Gandhi shares considerable terrain with Indian liberals writing in the late 19th and early 20th century; the text can be seen as articulating a certain kind of conservatism that attempts to think with “recovering liberties” that Christopher Bayly charts in all its nuances of a global historicism, statistical liberalism and a benign sociology. While Gandhi draws upon this burgeoning corpus of liberal thought in India, his work is characterized by its typical impatience with ideas, and a method that combines random observation with apodictic statements. The Hind Swaraj resisted many of the impulses of Indian liberalism, even when thinking from within it, in its attempt to forge a politics of indigeneity.

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Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0 UK (BY-NC-SA): England & Wales; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/

Episode Information

Series
Asian Studies Centre
People
Dilip M. Menon
Keywords
india
gandhi
Liberal Democracy
British empire
Department: St Antony's College
Date Added: 27/03/2018
Duration: 00:40:54

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