BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
PRODID:iCalendar-Ruby
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Workshops
DESCRIPTION:"Undisciplining Asia" Workshop: Scope and Themes\n\nHow did kno
 wledge traditions and modalities from Inner\, South\, and East Asia shape a
 n emergent and imperializing "science of the orient" in the north Atlantic 
 during the 18-19th century? How might we write "anti-field history" that in
 cludes these contiguous but usually erased disciplinary traditions? What ar
 e the implications for critical methodologies which aim to delink from orie
 ntalist and colonial reproduction? This interdisciplinary workshop brings t
 ogether scholars working at the porous frontiers of primary and secondary s
 ources made in and from colonial South Asia and the Qing Empire. Our aim is
  to diversify our sense of the disciplinary past in order to inspire a more
  radical methodological imagination in the Asian humanities today that migh
 t delink from the persistent moral expectations and epistemic blindnesses o
 f the West/Nonwest binary.\n\n \n\nContact Matthew King (mking@ucr.edu) for
  questions or more information.\n\n \n\nPresenters\n\n-Xiaoming Hou (UC Ber
 keley): early medieval Chinese Buddhism and cross-cultural transmission and
  translation of Buddhist texts in France\n\n-Stephan Licha (University of C
 hicago): 19th century British Sanskrit philology and its reception in Japan
 \n\n-Alice Crowther (EPHE): intellectual and administrative histories of th
 e Qing imperium and the Manchu translation of French anatomical knowledge\n
 \n-Uli Harlass (Universitāt Bremen): Theosophical and Orientalist mediation
 s of South Asian religious and intellectual traditions.\n\n-Yang Lei (INALC
 O): material and sensory dimensions of religious culture during the Ming an
 d Qing periods\, epistemic transformation in the formative period of French
  Sinology.\n\n-Matthew King (UC Riverside): Exchanges between Tibetan and M
 ongolian Buddhist scholasticism and the milieu of Jean-Pierre Abel-Rémusat 
 during the professionalization of Buddhist Studies in Europe.
DTSTAMP:20260313T045031Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20240518
LOCATION:
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:"Undisciplining Asia" Workshop: Scope and Themes
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_45862067549905
URL:https://events.ucr.edu/event/UndiscipliningAsia
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Workshops
DESCRIPTION:"Undisciplining Asia" Workshop: Scope and Themes\n\nHow did kno
 wledge traditions and modalities from Inner\, South\, and East Asia shape a
 n emergent and imperializing "science of the orient" in the north Atlantic 
 during the 18-19th century? How might we write "anti-field history" that in
 cludes these contiguous but usually erased disciplinary traditions? What ar
 e the implications for critical methodologies which aim to delink from orie
 ntalist and colonial reproduction? This interdisciplinary workshop brings t
 ogether scholars working at the porous frontiers of primary and secondary s
 ources made in and from colonial South Asia and the Qing Empire. Our aim is
  to diversify our sense of the disciplinary past in order to inspire a more
  radical methodological imagination in the Asian humanities today that migh
 t delink from the persistent moral expectations and epistemic blindnesses o
 f the West/Nonwest binary.\n\n \n\nContact Matthew King (mking@ucr.edu) for
  questions or more information.\n\n \n\nPresenters\n\n-Xiaoming Hou (UC Ber
 keley): early medieval Chinese Buddhism and cross-cultural transmission and
  translation of Buddhist texts in France\n\n-Stephan Licha (University of C
 hicago): 19th century British Sanskrit philology and its reception in Japan
 \n\n-Alice Crowther (EPHE): intellectual and administrative histories of th
 e Qing imperium and the Manchu translation of French anatomical knowledge\n
 \n-Uli Harlass (Universitāt Bremen): Theosophical and Orientalist mediation
 s of South Asian religious and intellectual traditions.\n\n-Yang Lei (INALC
 O): material and sensory dimensions of religious culture during the Ming an
 d Qing periods\, epistemic transformation in the formative period of French
  Sinology.\n\n-Matthew King (UC Riverside): Exchanges between Tibetan and M
 ongolian Buddhist scholasticism and the milieu of Jean-Pierre Abel-Rémusat 
 during the professionalization of Buddhist Studies in Europe.
DTSTAMP:20260313T045031Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20240519
LOCATION:
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:"Undisciplining Asia" Workshop: Scope and Themes
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_45862067550930
URL:https://events.ucr.edu/event/UndiscipliningAsia
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
