Dear Colleagues,
I am writing to call your attention to a conference on maritime Asia and
will be held in Binghamton in November. We would love to have papers on the
Song and Yuan periods.
Best,
John
Call for Papers (deadline extended)
MOBILE BODIES: A Long View of the Peoples and Communities of Maritime Asia
November 10–11, 2017
An international conference held at BINGHAMTON UNIVERSITY
The first of a series of conferences on Asian Issues sponsored by the Institute
for Asia and Asian Diasporas http://www.binghamton.edu/iaad/
Recent global upheavals have turned world attention to the plight of
refugees, such as Syrians and the Rohingya of Myanmar who have chosen
dangerous sea voyages to escape conflict and persecution. These dramatic
images raise larger questions about the control over mobile bodies in the
broader context of maritime Asia, pointing to phenomena that are by no
means limited to our contemporary moment. For centuries, people have moved
in and across the maritime world that stretches from the Indian Ocean to
the western Pacific as refugees, slaves, and under other involuntary
circumstances, as well as in the pursuit of trade, war, and religion. But
this mobility has always been historically controlled, driven and regulated
by larger forces. Religion, ecology, state power, and social hierarchies
constrain and inform individual choices.
This interdisciplinary conference will feature a keynote lecture delivered
by the celebrated author AMITAV GHOSH and plenary talks by distinguished
scholars: ANGELA SCHOTTENHAMMER (University of Salzburg), "Asian-Pacific
Human Movements,” RANABIR SAMADDAR (Calcutta Research Group), "Rohingyas:
The Emergence of a Stateless Population" and ERIC TAGLIACOZZO (Cornell
University), “In Asian Waters."
Presenters are invited to explore the mobility of individuals across
maritime Asia with an interest in disaggregating different types of bodies
and different types of travel. What sorts of bodies endeavored to cross the
water between and along the coasts of Asia in the past and more recently?
What does a 20th century Somali pirate have in common with a 16th century
Javanese pilgrim heading to Mecca, or the Chinese residents of Dutch
Batavia with the Filipino domestic workers in Dubai? What is the role of
cooperation, violence and control in historical and contemporary Asian
maritime travel? How has biopolitical control over travel been effected in
the past and through modern technocratic interventions? How are the
material findings of nautical archaeology changing our understanding of the
movements of goods and people in maritime Asia? The goal of this conference
is to pair contemporary and historical experiences of travel and mobility
to understand continuities and changes experienced and brought about by
traveling bodies in and across maritime Asia.
We welcome papers that address a broad range of themes, with particular
interest in the following topics:
*Labor flows and recruitment
*Voluntary and involuntary movement, including slave and refugee communities
*Cultural meanings and representations of maritime travel and pilgrimage
*How travelers have mobilized nautical technologies and knowledge transfer
across oceans
*Uses of force across maritime Asia
*Uncertainties and vagaries of sea travel
*Shifting contours of of trade diasporas
*Identity and community formation among seafaring groups
*Geopolitics of the ocean and its frontiers
Proposals are sought from both junior and senior scholars, including
graduate students, from all fields. We will consider individual paper
proposals as well as panel proposals that
include at least three papers on a selected theme. We may be able to
provide some financial support for graduate students, as well as scholars
that are based in the region of maritime Asia.
Click HERE
https://docs.google.com/a/binghamton.edu/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSdD-ko81MfjecqvGgElqO8YK7nDD1YH2lLpmEvqIXizilZFzw/viewform
to
submit a 150-word abstract by May 15, 2017 (deadline has been extended).
Click HERE http://www.binghamton.edu/iaad/conference/conference.html for
the conference website. Questions may be sent to mobilebodies@binghamton.edu