Are Tibetans Indigenous? The Political Stakes and Potentiality
Schedule
Fri Nov 22 2024 at 06:00 pm to 07:30 pm
UTC-08:00Location
UBC Liu Institute for Global Issues | Vancouver, BC
About this Event
Date: November 22nd, 2024, Friday
Time: 6 - 7:30PM PST
Location: Place of Many Trees, UBC Liu Institute for Global Issues
About the event: How does settler-colonial imperialism operate in Asia, and what are the ways in which Asian Indigeneities become mobilised? To address this question, in 2017, I brought together scholars who are observing various settler-colonial and imperial dynamics and developments across Asia for a panel discussion titled ‘Asian Settler-Colonialisms and Indigeneities’ at the 116th annual American Anthropological Association conference. At that time, scholarly considerations about Asian land and resource extraction emphasised capitalism, development, and governmentality, with scant consideration of settler colonialism, even though the last remains a vital framework for understanding the structural nature of imperial projects (Wolfe 2006). Even the literature that adopted this frame drew its analysis primarily from Euro-American–centred examples, implicitly suggesting that settler colonialism is an innately Western phenomenon (Pels 1997). Yet, capitalist developments with imperial consequences continue to impact Asia at varying scales (Tsing 2005). Such contemporary developments, alongside long Asian imperial histories, including those of China, Japan, and India, complicate this assumption. This provokes questions such as: How does settler domination work when those involved in it are neither white nor from the West? How can we critically engage with this while not Orientalising this history as a cultural peculiarity or delinking it from the deep influence of Western empires?
Where is it happening?
UBC Liu Institute for Global Issues, 6476 Northwest Marine Drive, Vancouver, CanadaEvent Location & Nearby Stays:
CAD 0.00