Presentation Title

Luncheon/Presidential Address: Significance of Language and Translation in Asian Studies across Academies

Location

RCC Large Ballroom

Start Date

12-10-2013 12:30 PM

End Date

12-10-2013 2:00 PM

Abstract

The scholarship on Asia that were produced in various academies are different. Language and translation are significant factors in the relationship (transmission, mediation, appropriation, etc.) among those academies and the knowledge they produce.

Comments

Thongchai Winichakul is Professor of History at University of Wisconsin-Madison. His book, Siam Mapped (1994) was awarded the Harry J. Benda Prize from the Association for Asian Studies in 1995, and the Grand Prize from the Asian Affairs Research Council (Japan) in 2004. He was a recipient of the John Simon Guggenheim Award in 1994 and elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2003. His research interests are in cultural and intellectual history of Siam including nationalism, modern geography and cartography, and historical knowledge. He currently works on the intellectual foundation of modern Siam (1880s-1930s) and also a book on the memories of the 1976 massacre in Bangkok. He also publishes articles and books in Thai, including many political and social commentaries. He is currently the President of the Association for Asian Studies.

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Oct 12th, 12:30 PM Oct 12th, 2:00 PM

Luncheon/Presidential Address: Significance of Language and Translation in Asian Studies across Academies

RCC Large Ballroom

The scholarship on Asia that were produced in various academies are different. Language and translation are significant factors in the relationship (transmission, mediation, appropriation, etc.) among those academies and the knowledge they produce.