Thursday, January 27, 2011

Fw: H-ASIA: Graduate School of Philosophy and Religion, Assumption University, Bangkok, Thailand

----- Original Message -----
From: "Monika Lehner" <monika.lehner@UNIVIE.AC.AT>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Thursday, January 27, 2011 6:57 PM
Subject: H-ASIA: Graduate School of Philosophy and Religion, Assumption
University, Bangkok, Thailand


> H-ASIA
> January 27, 2011
>
> Graduate School of Philosophy and Religion, Assumption University,
> Bangkok, Thailand
> *************************************************************************
> From: IMTIAZ AHMED YUSUF <iyusuf@au.edu>
>
> The Graduate School of Philosophy and Religion, Assumption University of
> Thailand, Bangkok
> offers:
>
> PhD and MA Programs in Philosophy
> PhD and MA Programs in Religious Studies
>
> The primary strength of the Graduate School of Philosophy and Religion is
> its diversity with its trans-cultural and multi-religious atmosphere. It
> is rooted in both, tradition and contemporary and innovative thought, by
> bridging continental and analytic approaches, Eastern and Western
> traditions, and diverse religions and faiths. The international faculty
> has ten permanent members trained in different traditions. It offers an
> extremely intensive teaching-learning environment, with a low
> professor-student ratio and convenient evening classes. The weekly
> research seminar class allows students to actively engage with peers and
> professors concerning their research projects. All classes are held on Hua
> Mak Campus, located between city center and the new international Airport.
>
> In a rapidly globalizing world which exacerbates ethnic and religious
> tensions it is important to teach students to be both, critical, creative
> and respectful of diverse older traditions. Graduate Students of
> Philosophy and Religion are prepared for systematic, independent, and
> innovative thinking, analyzing, and argument construction across
> religious, cultural and disciplinary boundaries. Therefore our students
> are very well equipped to identify, moderate and solve personal, social,
> environmental and political problems. They are in a position to consider
> unfamiliar ideas, to evaluate opposing arguments and to achieve
> cooperation and compromise in conflict situations.
>
> PhD and MA Degree holders in Philosophy and Religion are found in diverse
> professional fields such as NGO?s, teaching and research, governmental
> offices, diplomatic service, military, police, intelligence, publishing
> and media, counseling and consulting as well as in professional ethics
> advising (environmental, business etc.).
>
> For further information please visit our website:
> www.philo-religion.au.edu or contact: philo_religion@au.edu
>
> Dr. Imtiyaz Yusuf
> Philosophy and Religion
> Assumption University
> Hua Mak Campus
> Bangkok 10240
> Thailand
>
>
> *************************************************************************
> To post to H-ASIA simply send your message to:
> <H-ASIA@h-net.msu.edu>
> For holidays or short absences send post to:
> <listserv@h-net.msu.edu> with message:
> SET H-ASIA NOMAIL
> Upon return, send post with message SET H-ASIA MAIL
> H-ASIA WEB HOMEPAGE URL: http://h-net.msu.edu/~asia/

Fw: H-ASIA: REVIEW H-Net Review Publication: 'The Idea of Empire'

----- Original Message -----
From: "Frank Conlon" <conlon@U.WASHINGTON.EDU>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Friday, January 28, 2011 3:57 AM
Subject: H-ASIA: REVIEW H-Net Review Publication: 'The Idea of Empire'


> H-ASIA
> January 27, 2011
>
> Book Review (orig pub. H-Albion) by Daniel Gorman on Duncan Kelly, ed.
> Lineages of Empire: The Historical Roots of British Imperial Thought
>
> (x-post H-Review)
> ************************************************************************
> From: H-Net Staff <revhelp@mail.h-net.msu.edu>
>
> Duncan Kelly, ed. Lineages of Empire: The Historical Roots of
> British Imperial Thought. Oxford Oxford University Press, 2009. xv
> + 247 pp. $60.00 (cloth), ISBN 978-0-19-726439-3.
>
> Reviewed by Daniel Gorman (University of Waterloo)
> Published on H-Albion (January, 2011)
> Commissioned by Thomas Hajkowski
>
> The Idea of Empire
>
> Despite work by scholars such as David Armitage, Uday Singh Mehta,
> Jennifer Pitts, and Duncan Bell, to cite just four examples of a
> recent upsurge of interest in empire and political theory, we still
> have only a partial understanding of the historical discourses
> surrounding the intellectual roots of empire.[1] To be sure,
> imperial historians have devoted much ink to "discourse" as a dynamic
> feature of the history of empire.[2] Whether invoking Orientalism,
> Michel Foucault, or the Subaltern School, much of the history very
> loosely grouped under the aegis of "postcoloniality" has argued that
> the very essence of imperialism was ideational. Relationships of
> inequality and power were inscribed in the various iterations of
> imperial rule and culture created by European powers. Recovering the
> history of these relationships requires historians to be attentive to
> how ideas and language were constructed and contested. This work has
> without question widened our understanding of how and why empires
> functioned, and how they shaped the lives of those in both the
> metropole and the colonized world. Yet like the politico-economic
> imperial history which is sometimes presented as its foil, the "new
> imperial history," whether postcolonial or more empirically based
> cultural history, largely ignores the ideational beginnings and
> subsequent intellectual rationales of empire. The "idea of empire"
> is assumed from its later nature.
>
> Refuting such _ex post facto_ reasoning is one goal of intellectual
> histories of imperialism, as on display in the book under review,
> _Lineages of Empire_, edited by Duncan Kelly. The book is derived
> from a 2006 symposium on the roots of British imperial thought, and
> published as a proceeding of the British Academy. While the opening
> essay by James Tully attempts to draw some impressionistic
> contemporary conclusions from a series of historical imperial
> antecedents, the strength of the book is the reconstruction of
> aspects of historical political imperial thought rather than any
> (necessarily politicized) present salience such thought might have.
>
> Much of the historiography on the political theory of empire,
> particularly as it relates to Britain, concentrates on two subjects.
> The first, a subset of histories of the Atlantic world, is what used
> to be called "The First British Empire" which took form in the
> eighteenth century in the Americas. Understanding the relationship
> between British settlers, the Imperial Parliament, and the Crown,
> especially relating to the key question of sovereignty, is an
> important theme in this literature. A second is the dialectic of
> imperialism and Enlightenment rationalism, with a focus on the
> roughly contemporaneous developments of Britain's imperial ascendency
> in India in the latter eighteenth century and the advent of
> principles of political economy.
>
> These temporal and thematic interests are replicated in _Lineages of
> Empire_, where only the final two essays, by Douglas Lorimer and
> Jeanne Morefield, focus specifically on post-Georgian subjects.
> Following a short part 1, which includes Tully's essay and a chapter
> by Mehta on the ways by which postcolonial states have been
> constituted through a self-conscious refashioning of their imperial
> political pasts, the book's part 2 presents a series of chapters on
> "historical debates."
>
> In the only chapter in part 2 which extends its coverage beyond
> Britain, Richard Whatmore reflects on the implications for small
> states of the eighteenth-century growth of European empires, spurred
> by the national rivalries emanating from the application of
> statecraft to economic affairs. Whatmore demonstrates that such
> growth posed both an existential threat and an opportunity to
> cultivate protection and/or commercial gain. Phiroze Vasunia
> examines the various providential uses of Virgil made by British
> imperial writers in the long eighteenth century, concentrating
> especially on Edward Gibbon at the era's opening and Alfred, Lord
> Tennyson at its close. Iain Hampsher-Monk and Robert Travers are
> concerned with the relationship between empire and the development of
> political economy in the late eighteenth century. Hampsher-Monk's
> fine chapter examines Edmund Burke's attempts to come to terms with
> "the dynamic between the economic and moral properties of empire, and
> its prospects for survival" (p. 118) in an age when Adam Smith's
> concept of a commercial empire was eclipsing the more customary
> established practices of imperialism favored by Burke. Travers also
> writes on Smith, comparing the latter's root and branch attack on the
> East India Company's monopoly status with the Scottish political
> economist James Steuart's preference for more stringent "economies of
> control" (p. 158). Both cases, Travers argues, demonstrate the need
> to reconcile histories of imperialism and political economy, rather
> than treat them as mutually exclusive developments.
>
> Karen O'Brien also challenges conventional wisdom in her chapter on
> the role of Tory Romanticism in the Georgian discourse on
> state-assisted emigration to the colonies. While she does not
> dispute the prevailing contemporary perception of emigrants as
> "wastrels"--assisted emigration, after all, represented but a small
> percentage of total emigration flows which were dominated by penal
> convicts and "casualt[ies] of industrialisation, war and poverty" (p.
> 161)--O'Brien suggests that voluntary emigrants represented a promise
> of "social uplift" embodied in romantic ideals of "constructive
> imperialism" (p. 162). After O'Brien's chapter, the book is silent
> on mid-Victorian imperial thought. This is an odd lacuna, for
> Victorian concepts of world order were fundamental in constructing
> the ideational infrastructure upon which rested the New Imperialism
> of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.[3] Lorimer
> picks up the thread at this point, providing a fine examination of
> the language of race relations in the decades before the First World
> War. He convincingly shows the separate, though not mutually
> exclusive, historical trajectories of biological and cultural
> discourses of race, and argues that it was the latter which more
> directly influenced the imperial racial discourse of Empire's last
> decades. Morefield concludes the volume with a careful exegesis of
> the imperial connotations of the political theorist Harold Laski's
> theory of sovereignty.
>
> Despite the inevitable challenges of coverage and continuity endemic
> to an edited volume, _Lineages of Empire_ is an important
> contribution to the history of imperial political thought. It
> illustrates the connection of imperial thought with other prominent
> intellectual discourses in modern British history, including the
> merits of emigration, political economy and demography, the role of
> the state and sovereignty in British political life, the language of
> race relations, and the invocation of classical models in
> understanding Britain's empire. The essays in this book remind us
> that at every point in its history, Britons thought about the "idea
> of empire." They variously challenged, defended, or questioned the
> assumptions of what Morefield terms, in a narrower application to
> Laski that holds for all imperial thinkers, their "habits of
> imperialism" (pp. 226-235). There is still much to learn about the
> history of these practices of thinking, equally relevant for "new"
> and "old" imperial histories alike.
>
> Notes
>
> [1]. David Armitage, _The Ideological Origins of the British Empire
> _(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000); Uday Singh Mehta,
> _Liberalism and Empire_ (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1999);
> Jennifer Pitts, _A Turn to Empire_ (Princeton, NJ: Princeton
> University Press, 2005), Duncan Bell, _The Idea of Greater Britain_
> (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2007).
>
> [2]. For a useful survey of some of this material, including
> "postcoloniality," see Stephen Howe, "Empire and Ideology," in _The
> British Empire: Themes and Perspectives_,_ _ed. Sarah Stockwell
> (Oxford: Blackwell, 2008), 157-176.
>
> [3].See Duncan Bell, ed., _Victorian Visions of Global Order: Empire
> and International Relations in Nineteenth-Century Political Thought
> _(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007).
>
> Citation: Daniel Gorman. Review of Kelly, Duncan, ed., _Lineages of
> Empire: The Historical Roots of British Imperial Thought_. H-Albion,
> H-Net Reviews. January, 2011.
> URL: https://www.h-net.org/reviews/showrev.php?id=29382
>
> This work is licensed under a Creative Commons
> Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States
> License.
> ******************************************************************
> To post to H-ASIA simply send your message to:
> <H-ASIA@h-net.msu.edu>
> For holidays or short absences send post to:
> <listserv@h-net.msu.edu> with message:
> SET H-ASIA NOMAIL
> Upon return, send post with message SET H-ASIA MAIL
> H-ASIA WEB HOMEPAGE URL: http://h-net.msu.edu/~asia/
>

Fw: H-ASIA: Position Islamic Art History, Hunter College, Rank Open

----- Original Message -----
From: "Frank Conlon" <conlon@U.WASHINGTON.EDU>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Friday, January 28, 2011 4:07 AM
Subject: H-ASIA: Position Islamic Art History, Hunter College, Rank Open


> H-ASIA
> January 27, 2011
>
>
> Position: Islamic Art History, rank open, Hunter College
> ************************************************************************
> From: H-Net Job Guide:
>
> JOB GUIDE NO.: https://www.h-net.org/jobs/job_display.php?id=42125
>
>
> City University of New York - Hunter College
>
> Assistant, Associate or Full Professor - Art (Islamic Art)
>
>
> Institution Type: College / University
> Location: New York, United States
> Position: Assistant Professor, Associate Professor, Full Professor
>
>
> Job Description
>
> Job Title:Assistant, Associate or Full Professor - Art (Islamic Art)
>
> Job ID:3855
>
> Location: HunterCollege
>
> Full/Part Time:Full-Time
>
> Regular/Temporary:Regular
>
>
> GENERAL DUTIES
>
> Performs teaching, research, and guidance duties in area(s) of expertise
> as noted below. Shares responsibility for committee and department
> assignments, performing administrative, supervisory, and other functions
> as may be assigned.
>
>
>
> FLSA
>
> Exempt
>
>
> CAMPUS SPECIFIC INFORMATION
>
> Hunter College of The City University of New York invites applications for
> a tenure-track faculty position beginning August 1, 2011. Hiring rank is
> open at the Assistant, Associate or Full Professor level, based upon
> qualifications. Ideal candidate will teach undergraduate and graduate
> courses in Islamic Art and will be an active scholar who already has a
> record of publications in the field. The position includes departmental
> faculty administrative duties and student advising including supervising
> masters' theses.
>
>
> MINIMUM QUALIFICATIONS
>
> Ph.D. degree in area(s) of expertise, or equivalent as noted below. Also
> required are the ability to teach successfully, interest in productive
> scholarship or creative achievement, and ability to cooperate with others
> for the good of the institution.
>
>
> OTHER QUALIFICATIONS
>
> Ph.D from an accredited university and teaching experience; publications.
>
> COMPENSATION
>
> Commensurate with rank, qualification and experience.
>
>
> HOW TO APPLY
>
> Send resume, selected offprints, and 3 supporting letters to:
>
> Art Historian Search Committee-Islamic Art
> Department of Art
> HunterCollege
> 695 Park Avenue
> New York, NY 10065
>
> No on-line applications will be accepted.
>
> CLOSING DATE
>
> The committee will begin reviewing applications on February 8, 2011. The
> search will remain open until the position is filled.
>
> EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY
>
> The City University of New York is an Equal Opportunity Employer which
> complies with all applicable laws and regulations, and encourages
> inclusive excellence in its employment practices.
>
>
> Contact: Art Historian Search Committee-Islamic Art
>
> Department of Art
> HunterCollege
> 695 Park Avenue
> New York, NY 10065
>
> No on-line applications will be accepted.
>
> Website: None
> Primary Category: Art and Art History
>
> Secondary Categories: Islamic History / Studies
>
> Posting Date: 01/27/2011
> Closing Date 04/26/2011
>
>
>
> The H-Net Job Guide is a service to the profession provided by H-Net. The
> information provided for individual listings is the responsibility of the
> organization posting the position. If you are interested in a particular
> position, please contact the organization directly. Send comments and
> questions about this service to H-Net Job Guide.
>
> Humanities & Social Sciences Online Copyright 1995-2011
> ******************************************************************
> To post to H-ASIA simply send your message to:
> <H-ASIA@h-net.msu.edu>
> For holidays or short absences send post to:
> <listserv@h-net.msu.edu> with message:
> SET H-ASIA NOMAIL
> Upon return, send post with message SET H-ASIA MAIL
> H-ASIA WEB HOMEPAGE URL: http://h-net.msu.edu/~asia/

Fw: H-ASIA: Position Japanese Studies, Univ of Hong Kong, Asst prof

----- Original Message -----
From: "Frank Conlon" <conlon@U.WASHINGTON.EDU>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Friday, January 28, 2011 3:59 AM
Subject: H-ASIA: Position Japanese Studies, Univ of Hong Kong, Asst prof


> H-ASIA
> January 27, 2011
>
>
> Position: Japanese Studies, Assistant Professor, School of Modern
> Languages and Cultures, University of Hong Kong
> ************************************************************************
> From: H-Net Job Guide:
>
> JOB GUIDE NO.: https://www.h-net.org/jobs/job_display.php?id=42130
>
>
> University of Hong Kong
>
> Assistant Professor in the School of Modern Languages and Cultures
> (Japanese Studies)
>
>
> Institution Type: College / University
> Location: Hong Kong
> Position: Assistant Professor
>
>
> Founded in 1911, The University of Hong Kong is committed to the highest
> international standards of excellence in teaching and research, and has
> been at the international forefront of academic scholarship for many
> years. Ranked 21st among the top 200 universities in the world by the
> UK's Times Higher Education, the University has a comprehensive range of
> study programmes and research disciplines spread across 10 faculties and
> about 100 sub-divisions of studies and learning. There are over 23,400
> undergraduate and postgraduate students coming from 50 countries, and more
> than 1,200 members of academic and academic-related staff, many of whom
> are internationally renowned.
>
> Assistant Professor in the School of Modern Languages and Cultures
> (Japanese Studies)
> (Ref.: 20100866)
>
> Applications are invited for appointment as Assistant Professor in the
> School of Modern Languages and Cultures (Japanese Studies), from September
> 1, 2011 or as soon as possible thereafter, on a three-year fixed-term
> basis, with the possibility of renewal. Appointees with demonstrated
> performance will be considered for tenure towards the end of the second
> three-year contract.
>
> The School of Modern Languages and Cultures is part of the Faculty of Arts
> and offers area studies programmes in American Studies, European Studies,
> Japanese Studies and Modern China Studies, as well as language
> majors/minors, undergraduate and certificate courses in Arabic, French,
> German, Greek, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Portuguese, Spanish, Swedish and
> Thai. Information about the School can be obtained at
> http://www.hku.hk/smlc/.
>
> Applicants should have a Ph.D. degree and a high international standing in
> Sino-Japanese relations, with a good record of high-quality research and
> scholarly publications. The appointee should be able to demonstrate
> strong academic, teaching and administrative ability, and an ability to
> promote a collaborative research culture. He/She will also be expected to
> teach and supervise students at both undergraduate and postgraduate
> levels.
>
> Annual salary will be in the range of HK$484,980 - 749,520 (approximately
> US$1 = HK$ 7.8) (subject to review from time to time at the entire
> discretion of the University), with starting salary depending on
> qualifications and experience. At current rates, salaries tax does not
> exceed 15% of gross income. The appointment carries leave and
> medical/dental benefits. The appointment will attract a contract-end
> gratuity and University contribution to a retirement benefits scheme,
> totalling up to 15% of basic salary. Housing benefits will be provided as
> applicable.
>
>
> Contact: Further particulars and application forms (152/708) can be
> obtained at https://www.hku.hk/apptunit/; or from the Appointments Unit
> (Senior), Human Resource Section, Registry, The University of Hong Kong,
> Hong Kong (fax: (852) 2540 6735 or 2559 2058; e-mail: senrappt@hku.hk).
> Closes February 28, 2011. Candidates who are not contacted within 3
> months of the closing date may consider their applications unsuccessful.
>
> The University is an equal opportunity employer and is committed to a
> No-Smoking Policy
>
> Website: http://www.hku.hk
> Primary Category: Japanese History / Studies
>
> Secondary Categories: Area Studies
> Asian History / Studies
> Diplomacy and International Relations
>
> Posting Date: 01/27/2011
> Closing Date 02/28/2011
>
>
>
> The H-Net Job Guide is a service to the profession provided by H-Net. The
> information provided for individual listings is the responsibility of the
> organization posting the position. If you are interested in a particular
> position, please contact the organization directly. Send comments and
> questions about this service to H-Net Job Guide.
>
> Humanities & Social Sciences Online Copyright 1995-2011
> ******************************************************************
> To post to H-ASIA simply send your message to:
> <H-ASIA@h-net.msu.edu>
> For holidays or short absences send post to:
> <listserv@h-net.msu.edu> with message:
> SET H-ASIA NOMAIL
> Upon return, send post with message SET H-ASIA MAIL
> H-ASIA WEB HOMEPAGE URL: http://h-net.msu.edu/~asia/

Fw: H-ASIA: IL/IN dissertation workshop: Chinese Law, Conflict, & Society, July 20-21

----- Original Message -----
From: "Andrew Field" <shanghaidrew@GMAIL.COM>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Friday, January 28, 2011 7:00 AM
Subject: H-ASIA: IL/IN dissertation workshop: Chinese Law, Conflict, &
Society, July 20-21


H-ASIA
Jan 28 2011

IL/IN dissertation workshop: Chinese Law, Conflict, & Society, July
20-21
*************************************
From: "Key, Margaret S" <mskey@indiana.edu>

Illinois/Indiana National Dissertation Workshop: "Chinese Law,
Conflict, and Society"
Indiana University Bloomington, July 20-21, 2011

The Illinois/Indiana East Asia National Resource Center
Consortium<http://www.iu.edu/~easc/about/consortium.shtml
> (IL/IN East Asia NRC) is pleased to announce its fifth annual IL/IN
National Dissertation Workshop in the field of Chinese law, conflict,
and society. The workshop will be held July 20-21, 2011 on the campus
of Indiana University Bloomington. Doctoral students in the
humanities, social sciences, and law whose dissertation projects
concern Chinese law and social, political, or cultural conflicts in
modern and contemporary China are invited to apply. Areas of interest
include anthropology, history, legal studies, political science, and
sociology, among others. The workshop is designed to enable students
just beginning work on their dissertations, as well as those farther
along, to engage in intensive discussions of their own and each
other's projects. Possibilities for continuing networks among
interested students and faculty will also be explored. The workshop
will be limited to eight participants, and the cost of the workshop,
some meals, and two nights' lodging will be covered by the IL/IN East
Asia NRC.

Faculty leaders: The workshop will be led by Ho-fung
Hung<http://www.indiana.edu/~soc/zbio_Hung.html
>, Assistant Professor in the Department of Sociology at Indiana
University Bloomington; Klaus
Mühlhahn<http://www.indiana.edu/~histweb/faculty/Display.php?Faculty_ID=25
>, Professor in the Departments of History and of East Asian
Languages and Cultures at Indiana University Bloomington; and SHAO
Dan<http://www.ealc.uiuc.edu/ealc/people/faculty/shao.htm
>, Assistant Professor in the Departments of East Asian Languages and
Cultures and of Gender and Women's Studies at the University of
Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

Eligibility and application: Applicants must be enrolled full-time in
a doctoral program and must have drafted a dissertation research
proposal, although they need not have advanced to candidacy. Those in
the early phases of writing are also encouraged to apply. In order to
prepare the ground for a productive exchange, participants must come
to the workshop having read and prepared comments on the other
participants' writing samples.

The application deadline is March 14, 2011. Application materials
consist of two items: (1) a current CV and (2) a 4-6-page double-
spaced dissertation proposal (including a description of the specific
issues being addressed, the intellectual approach, and the materials
being studied). Applications should be submitted by e-mail attachment
to easc@indiana.edu<mailto:easc@indiana.edu>. Applicants will be
informed whether or not they have been selected for the workshop by
late April.

East Asian Studies Center
Indiana University
Memorial Hall West 207
1021 East Third Street
Bloomington, IN 47405
Phone: (812) 855-3765
Fax: (812) 855-7762
E-mail: easc@indiana.edu<mailto:easc@indiana.edu>
URL: http://www.iu.edu/~easc

Find
EASC<http://www.facebook.com/pages/National-Consortium-for-Teaching-about-Asia/170694596300502#%21/easciu
> and
NCTA<http://www.facebook.com/pages/National-Consortium-for-Teaching-about-Asia/170694596300502
> on Facebook!


*************************************************************************
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<H-ASIA@h-net.msu.edu>
For holidays or short absences send post to:
<listserv@h-net.msu.edu> with message:
SET H-ASIA NOMAIL
Upon return, send post with message SET H-ASIA MAIL
H-ASIA WEB HOMEPAGE URL: http://h-net.msu.edu/~asia/

Fw: H-ASIA: Korean Family in Comparative Perspective (KFCP) Postdoctoral Fellowship announcement

----- Original Message -----
From: "Andrew Field" <shanghaidrew@GMAIL.COM>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Friday, January 28, 2011 7:06 AM
Subject: H-ASIA: Korean Family in Comparative Perspective (KFCP)
Postdoctoral Fellowship announcement


H-ASIA
Jan 28 2011

Korean Family in Comparative Perspective (KFCP) Postdoctoral
Fellowship announcement
***********************************
From: Yoonjeong Shim <yshim@illinois.edu>
…………………………………………………………..
Korean Family in Comparative Perspective (KFCP) Postdoctoral
Fellowship announcement
…………………………………………………………..
The 5-year Korean Family in Comparative Perspective (KFCP) Laboratory
for the Globalization of Korean Studies at the University of Illinois,
funded by the Academy of Korean Studies, and housed in the Department
of East Asian Languages and Cultures, is pleased to announce a KFCP
Postdoctoral Fellowship starting August 16, 2011. This one-year
position, with the possibility of a one-year extension, is open to:
(1) recent PhD recipients (within the last 3 years) and (2) those who
will deposit their dissertation by August 15, 2011.

The KFCP Laboratory aims to bring the Korean family to the center of
comparative East Asian and general family studies, highlighting Korea
as a productive comparative case of interest to non-Koreanists across
a range of disciplines and scholarly locations. KFCP Fellows must be
scholars interested in comparative work on the Korean family. Scholars
with primary expertise in the family of other East Asian countries
(e.g., China, Hong Kong, Japan, Taiwan) are particularly welcomed to
apply. Scholars with primary research emphasis on the Koreas must have
a concrete plan to conduct comparative research (i.e., with another
country/region). The postdoctoral fellowship is open to scholars in
any humanities or social science discipline.

The KFCP Laboratory is directed by anthropologist Nancy Abelmann and
includes 3 KFCP Laboratory Fellows: Jungwon Kim (EALC and History,
University of Illinois), Seung-Kyung Kim (Women's Studies, University
of Maryland), and Hyunjoon Park (Sociology, University of Pennsylvania).

The Postdoctoral Fellow will be welcomed to an active Koreanist
community at the University of Illinois that includes a biweekly Korea
Workshop (that will actively engage the themes of the Laboratory). The
KFCP Fellow will be provided the opportunity to participate in
organizing a Korean Family Colloquium Series which graduate students
will be able to attend for partial credit. The KFCP Laboratory will be
guided by a National Advisory Board (See list below). KFCP Laboratory
Director, Fellows, and National Board Members will take an active role
in nurturing the comparative scholarship of the Postdoctoral Fellow.
The Postdoctoral fellow will also have the opportunity to "workshop"
his or her manuscript/s with experts from both on and off campus.

The KFCP Fellow will be paid $40,000 including benefits, if benefit
eligible, and some funds for domestic research-related travel.

Application deadline: February 25, 2011

Please submit electronically http://go.illinois.edu/KFCP_Application

Applications must include:

1. A cover letter reviewing your research history, including your
dissertation and other publications.

2. A statement of interest in the Korean family in comparative
perspective, including a publication plan that includes the submission
of one article for each postdoctoral year (OR a single- or co-authored
book manuscript) (this can be integrated into the cover letter).

3. A statement of commitment to active participation in KFCP
Laboratory events, including the Korean Family Colloquium Series (this
can be a simple statement in the cover letter).

4. One writing sample, 25-40 pages.

5. Contact information for three referees who can speak to your
scholarly work and abilities and to the feasibility of your research
and publications plans for comparative work on the Korean family.
Referees will be contacted electronically and asked to submit their
letters.

Please address inquires to slcl-hr@illinois.edu

The University of Illinois is an Affirmative Action / Equal
Opportunity Employer and welcomes individuals with diverse
backgrounds, experiences, and ideas who embrace and value diversity
and inclusivity(www.inclusiveillinois.illinois.edu).

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Fw: H-ASIA: Terror and Media Special issue JSAPC - correction of email address

----- Original Message -----
From: "Andrew Field" <shanghaidrew@GMAIL.COM>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Friday, January 28, 2011 7:09 AM
Subject: H-ASIA: Terror and Media Special issue JSAPC - correction of email
address


H-ASIA
Jan 28 2011

Terror and Media Special issue JSAPC - correction of email address
*************************************************
From: parciack@post.tau.ac.il

Prof. Ritu Khanduri and I are co-editing a special issue of Journal of
South Asian Popular Culture and posted a CFP via H-Asia less than a
week ago. We realized there was an error in the email. Please consider
reposting the corrected CFP appended below. [done --AF]

Apologies for the inconvenience.

Thank you.

Ronie Parciack
Dept. of East-Asian Studies
Tel Aviv University

-----

Special Issue – Call for Papers

A Special Issue of South Asian Popular Culture will be published in
July 2013 on:

Terror and Media

Guest Editors: Ritu G. Khanduri and Ronie Parciack

The spectacular 26/11/2008 attacks on Mumbai brought South Asia to the
forefront of (western) discourse on terrorism. International and
internal media coverage consociated the Mumbai calamity with the
spectacular 9/11 attacks by terming the Mumbai tragedy "India's 9/11."
Several assessments denied The South-Asian context and subordinated it
to Western history and conceptualizations. Public resentment of such
analysis was articulated by Amitav Ghosh and Arundhati Roy among
others, who called for decolonizing the media coverage, in other words
to contextualizing the issue of terrorism within specific South Asian
frameworks.
This special issue aims at exploring pivotal theoretical and socio-
political concepts related to representations of terror in
contemporary South Asian visual cultures. Our aim is to lay the
groundwork for a critical reexamination of terror and media in the
South Asian context, and contribute to three interconnected areas of
analytical import: 1. the theoretical debate on terrorism within South
Asian conceptualizations and contexts; 2. a reconsideration of
identity formations, cultural constructs and nationalism; and 3. the
mass mediation of terror.
South Asian Popular Culture invites paper proposals critically
converging around terror and media across South Asia. Though not
limited to these questions, we anticipate paper proposals to address:
• What is Terror in the South-Asian context? Does the South Asian
media provide a background for alternative definitions - or
theorization - of terror?
• How does the South Asian context challenge or negotiate the dominant
readings of terror offered by Western theorists such as Slavoj Žižek,
Alain Badiou and Jean Baudrillard? Can the South-Asian context provide
us with a different orientation than the dominant psychoanalytical
prism of Western cultural studies?
• How is terror represented in South Asian contexts, and how do South
Asian societies visually redefine themselves in the era of terror?
• How does the era of terror challenge or recontextualize identity
formations across South Asia?
• How does the era of terror recontextualize concepts such as
nationalism, sovereignty, nonviolence, youth, gender, body, order/
disorder, the dynamics of East/West, local/global and notions of
exchange?
• Historically, does the South Asian mass media provide a framework
for conceptualizing the sensations and spectacles associated with
terror?


We are looking for critical essays, which should be 5,000-6,000 words,
and pieces for the "Working Notes," which could be interviews with
artists, reviews of works and photo essays, ranging from 1,000 - 3,000
words each.

Please email a 300 word proposal and a 150 word bio in a MS word
attachment to journalsapc@gmail.com by 30 April, 2011.

Initial review decision will be notified by 15 August, 2011.

Selected proposals should be submitted as complete Manuscripts no
later than 15 January, 2012.

All manuscripts will undergo peer review, based on initial editor
screening.

Manuscripts should not be under consideration by another publication
at the time of submission.

For additional information about South Asian Popular Culture, please
visit: http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/journal.asp?issn=1474-6689&linktype=1

____________________

Ronie Parciack, Ph.D.
Dept. of East-Asian Studies
Tel Aviv University

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