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  • What is Happening to Southeast Asia’s Famed Diversity & Gender Balance ?

What is Happening to Southeast Asia’s Famed Diversity & Gender Balance ?

  • Wednesday Forum News
  • 19 February 2016, 07.30
  • Oleh:
  • 2

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Abstract
Among Southeast Asia’s many distinctive features, some would say stereotypes, there are two which I have helped to build. The first is its great diversity of language, religion, mode of production and political organization, where ‘empires failed to unify’ and stateless hunter-gatherers may still be found. The second is the economic autonomy of women, who had their own secure share in production (planting, harvesting, textiles, pottery, marketing) and therefore an almost uniquely strong position in sexual politics. As an historian, I was excited to demonstrate both features in the era before modernity entranced the region around 1900. Today’s students are entitled to ask, ‘Then what happened?’ Does modernity require nationalist homogeneity and patriarchy? Or was the region seduced by a peculiar ‘Victorian’ model of colonial modernity that could never really succeed in such a context?
Speaker
Anthony Reid is a Southeast Asian historian, once again based at the Australian National University after serving as founding Director of the Center for Southeast Asian Studies at UCLA (1999-2002) and of the Asia Research Institute at NUS, Singapore (2002-7). Since 2004 he has been increasingly interested in the impact of natural disasters on Southeast Asian history.  His books include The Contest for North Sumatra: Aceh, the Netherlands and Britain, 1858-98 (1969); The Indonesian National Revolution (1974);  The Blood of the People: Revolution and the End of Traditional Rule in Northern Sumatra (1979); Southeast Asia in the Age of Commerce, c.1450-1680  (2 vols. 1988-93); An Indonesian Frontier: Acehnese and other histories of Sumatra (2004); Imperial Alchemy: Nationalism and political identity in Southeast Asia (2010); To Nation by Revolution: Indonesia in the 20th Century (2011); and A History of Southeast Asia: Critical Crossroads (2015).
 

Tags: Anthony Reid Diversity Gender modernity Religion and Gender Southeast Asia

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Comment (2)

  1. fazl habib 9 years ago

    Is it for university students?
    How to be the participant?
    Is it free?
    Thanks

    Reply
  2. Bandri 9 years ago

    Dear Fazi Habib
    We are sorry for lately respond.
    Wednesday forum is a weekly discussion run by CRCS and IRCS for public and free.
    This event is a one of our forum for this semester.
    Come and join our discussion.
    Thank You.

    Reply

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A M P A T Baru kemarin, pemerintah YTTA melakukan A M P A T
Baru kemarin, pemerintah YTTA melakukan aksi simsalabim dengan mencabut empat konsesi tambang di salah satu gugusan Red Line. Aksi "heroik" itu terlihat janggal ketika perusahaan yang paling bermasalah dalam perusakan lingkungan, bahkan yang menjadi pusat viral, justru dilindungi. Tentu bukan karena cocokologi dengan nama Raja Ampat sehingga hanya empat perusahaan yang dicabut konsesinya. Bukan cocokologi juga ketika Raja Ampat akan menjadi lokus tesis yang akan diuji esok di CRCS UGM. Berkebalikan dengan aksi badut jahat di Raja Ampat, @patricia_kabes akan bercerita bagaimana komunitas masyarakat di Aduwei mengelola laut dengan lestari melalui sasi. Berangkat dari negeri timur, peraih beasiswa LPDP ini justru menjadi yang pertama di angkatannya untuk menambahkan dua huruf pada akhir namanya.
For people who learn religious studies, it is comm For people who learn religious studies, it is common to say that "religion", as a concept and category, is Western modern invention. It is European origin, exported globally through colonialism and Christian mission. Despite its noble intention to decolonize modern social categories, it suffers from historical inaccuracy. Precolonial Islamic Malay and Javanese texts in the 16th and 17th century reflect a strong sense of reified religion, one whose meaning closely resembles the modern concept.

Come and join @wednesdayforum discussion at UGM Graduate School building, 3rd floor. We provide snacks and drinks, don't forget to bring your tumbler. This event is free and open to public.
I N S P I R A S I Secara satir, penyandang disabil I N S P I R A S I
Secara satir, penyandang disabilitas baru mendapatkan sorotan ketika dia mampu berprestasi, mampu mengatasi segala rintangan dan kekurangan. Singkat kata, penyandang disabilitas kemudian menjadi sumber inspirasi bagi nondisabilitas. Budi Irawanto menyebutnya sebagai "inspirational porn". Simak ulasan lengkapnya di situs web crcs ugm.
Human are the creature who live between the mounta Human are the creature who live between the mountain and the sea. Yet, human are not the only one who live between the mountain and the sea. Human are the one who lives by absorbing what above and beneath the mountain and the sea. Yet, human are the same creature who disrupt and destroy the mountain, the sea, and everything between. Not all human, but always human. By exploring what/who/why/and how the life between the mountain and the sea is changing, we learn to collaborate and work together, human and non-human, for future generation—no matter what you belief, your cultural background.

Come and join @wednesdayforum with Arahmaiani at UGM Graduate School building, 3rd floor. We provide snacks and drinks, don't forget to bring your tumbler. This event is free and open to public.
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