About this Event
640 Stewart Ave, Ithaca, NY 14850, USA
As in years prior, this conference, cosponsored by the American Institute for Sri Lankan Studies, provides an opportunity for graduate students to critically engage with the particularities of Sri Lanka and its diasporas; particularities often sacrificed to make our work speak clearly to non-specialist audiences. While we acknowledge the many benefits of such generalized engagement, we also recognize a keen need to build community around a shared sense of context. If there is something unique about the field of Sri Lankan Studies, then gathering in a common space to discuss the specificities of a local context offers opportunities to consider not only how this material contributes to the academic conversations in which it tends to be subsumed, but also how conventions of rigor, generosity, and accountability might best be achieved amongst scholars most intimately familiar with the conditions of producing this material. This conference will feature papers from within Sri Lanka; papers that engage with contemporary Sri Lankan scholarship, recognizing that the study of Sri Lanka within Sri Lanka often finds nuances lost in generalized or comparative disciplines around the globe; and reflections on the ways in which our institutional locations determine our approach to the study of Sri Lanka.
CONFERENCE SCHEDULE
9:00-9:15 am Welcome
Anne Blackburn (Asian Studies, Cornell University)
9:15-10:30 am Panel 1
“These drifting Somalis”: Migration and Identity Formation in the Talaimannar-Djibouti circuit, 1919–1946
Ifadha Sifar (History, Columbia University)
Tangible and Intangible Freedom: Manumission and Emancipation in the late 18th and early 19th century Colombo
Sanayi Marcelline (History, University of Leiden)
Discussant: Durba Ghosh (History, Cornell University)
10:45 am-12:00 pm Panel 2
On Absences and Presences: A Speculative Reading of Disappearance under Liberal Modernity
Themal Ellawala ( Anthropology, University of Illinois at Chicago)
Hustling Through A Pandemic: The Implications of COVID-19 on Sex Work in Urban Sri Lanka
F. Zahrah Rizwan (Women's, Gender & Sexuality Studies, Ohio State University)
Discussant: Lucinda E. G. Ramberg (Anthropology, Cornell University)
1:30-2:00 pm Resources for Sri Lankan Studies
Daniel Bass (South Asia Program, Cornell University)
2:00-3:15 pm Panel 3
The Black Legend in/of Ceylon: Kaffrinha, Créolité, and Imperial Difference between the 19th Century and the Present
Praveen Tilakaratne (Comparative Literature, Cornell University)
What Remains? Genealogy, Language, and the Politics of Un/belonging
Deborah Philip (Anthropology, City University of New York)
Discussant: Hadia Akhtar Khan (Future of Work, Cornell University)
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