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Center forSoutheast Asian Studies Kyoto University

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過去のセミナー案内:24年度

2013年2月

CSEAS Colloquium by Virginia Shih
  1. 日時:平成25年2月28日(木) 16:00 -
  2. 場所:京都大学稲盛財団記念館3階中会議室(332号室)
  3. スピーカー:Virginia Shih, Visiting Research Fellow, Center for Southeast Asian Studies, Kyoto Universit
  4. タイトル:Exploring Southeast Asian Studies Programs & Scholarly Treasures at Japanese Institutions: A Preliminary Fieldwork Survey
  5. アブストラクト:
  6. Southeast Asian studies has become internationalized in recent years, but Japanese scholarship on Southeast Asia has not been “widely publicized” in research, teaching, learning, and outreach in the United States as well as in other academies. My preliminary fieldwork survey is to explore the Southeast Asian studies programs and scholarly resources at various institutions that offer Southeast Asian studies programs and/or collect Southeast Asia research resources as well as the National Institutes for the Humanities for my comparative study perspective in the field. I will highlight major fieldwork site visits in Japan, booksellers and publishers in Jinbocho area in Tokyo, Southeast Asia newspaper holdings, Southeast Asia and Han Nom special collections of research interests, my general observations and the next steps of my research journey.
  7. スピーカーについて:
  8. Virginia Shih is Librarian in charge of the Southeast Asia Collections, one of the comprehensive collections in both western and Southeast Asian languages in North America at the South/Southeast Asia Library of the University of California, Berkeley. She has been active in serving CORMOSEA (Committee on Research Materials on Southeast Asia), a national committee of the Southeast Asia Council of the Association for Asian Studies and numerous library committees and task force projects locally and globally. She curated several well-received academic exhibitions at Berkeley for publicity and published articles and conference proceedings in professional journals and monographs. She serves on the Board of Directors of the Vietnamese Nom Preservation Foundation (USA).
CSEAS-ARI Joint Workshop on Reassessing Ritual in Southeast Asian Studies
  1. 日時:平成25年2月25日(月) ~ 26(火)
  2. 場所:京都大学稲盛財団記念館3階中会議室(332号室)
  3. 主催:京都大学東南アジア研究所東南アジアにおける持続型生存基盤研究/日本学術振興会アジア研究教育拠点事業「グローバル時代における文明共生:東南アジア社会発展モデルの構築」/Asia Research Institute, National University of Singapore (Religion & Globalization Research Cluster)
  4. プログラム:PDF
  5. アブストラクト:PDF
  6. 発表者のBIO-Notes:PDF
Asian CORE Workshop on Interface, Negotiation, and Interaction in Southeast Asia
  1. 日時:平成25年2月22日(金)-23日(土)
  2. 場所:京都大学稲盛財団記念館3階中会議室
  3. プログラム:PDF
  4. アブストラクト:PDF
京都大学生存基盤科学研究ユニット・東南アジア研究所 京滋FS 事業 第53 回 実践型地域研究 定例研究会
  1. 日時:平成25年2月22日(金)17:45 ~ 19:15
  2. 場所:もやいネット交流空間」守山駅前 コスモ守山5番館(守山市勝部1丁目16-27)
  3. 発表者:河原林 洋(京都大学東南アジア研究所特任研究員、保津川遊船船士)
  4. 発表タイトル:『保津川流域の人々の「水辺の記憶」』
  5. 発表内容:
  6. 私はこれまで、保津川(桂川)の元筏士などの聞き取り調査や筏体験イベント などを通じて保津川の筏流しの歴史と文化を語りつぐ試みを行なってきた。しか し、これらは河川従事者という目線の中で培われてきたものではあり、それらを 語りつぐことは、流域の人々に対し、ある種一面的な歴史や文化を押し付けてい るような感じがしていた。  川や水辺が人々とともにあった時代、そこには、多種多様な水辺の記憶があっ たのではないだろうか。私は、筏の歴史とともに、流域の人々の水辺の記憶をも 後世に伝えていかなければならないと考えて始めている。  今回、京筏組(亀岡市)や亀岡市文化資料館友の会(同市)の協力を得て、 「水辺の記憶」と名打った「座談会」やアンケート調査を行った。その座談会や アンケート調査の結果を受け、みなさんとともに「水辺の記憶」さらには「水辺 の未来」について語り合ってみたいと思う。
  7. ★以上の催し物への参加ご希望の方は,必ずご連絡ください。部屋のスペースと 懇親会の準備があります。  京都大学 東南アジア研究所 実践型地域研究推進室  担当:安藤和雄(ando@cseas.kyoto-u.ac.jp)まで。
Special Seminar Dr. CAIRNS, Malcolm Foster
  1. 日時:平成25年2月20日(水) 12:00~14:00
  2. 場所:京都大学稲盛財団記念館 東南亭(201号室)
  3. スピーカー:Dr. CAIRNS, Malcolm Foster, Visiting Research Fellow of CSEAS
  4. タイトル:How an Alder Tree Allowed the Angami Nagas to Intensify from Shifting to Permanent Cultivation: A Case Study from Khonoma Village of Nagaland, Northeast India
  5. アブストラクト:
  6. In recent years, the discourse about shifting cultivation has often turned to how it can regain its equilibrium and stop its downward spiral into degradation. This has led to an intense interest in fallow management strategies by which fallow functions may be achieved in a shorter period of time.
  7. During his fellowship at CSEAS, the author is working on a book that compiles regional experiences on the many pressures being brought to bear against shifting cultivation and farmers’ responses to them. But his seminar will focus on one particularly compelling example of indigenous fallow management that was innovated by the Angami Nagas in Nagaland, Northeast India.
  8. The research village is a powerful and historic Angami village by the name of Khonoma, in Kohima District. Even by the time of the arrival of the British in 1832, its administrators were already commenting on Khonoma’s serious shortage of agricultural land from which to feed itself. Thus, almost 200 years ago, Khonoma was already feeling the pressures to intensify land use that have now become widespread in swidden communities across the region. Hence, it is not surprising that Khonoma became the crucible in which the system of managing alder trees in their dryland fields was perfected.
  9. This promising system focussed on management of the Himalayan alder tree ? Alnus nepalensis - that is a pioneer colonizer of disturbed land ? and would have quickly colonized fallowed fields regardless of human intervention. But by learning to manage it and better harness its agronomic properties, the Angami head-hunters were able to reduce their fallow periods to as little as two years without any reduction of crop productivity and without sending the system into a downward spiral of degradation.
  10. The Himalayan alder provided an attractive combination of needed products (chiefly firewood) and ecological services (soil stabilization and N-fixation). Necessity was the mother of invention ? and their grim shortage of agricultural land forced Khonoma’s feared headhunters to experiment with how they could better exploit alder’s agronomic properties long before agricultural scientists ever gave it a thought.
  11. Although others didn’t learn to manage it in as intricate a manner as Khonoma’s Angami, the agronomic properties of A. nepalensis were widely recognized across the region and it can be found integrated into agroforestry patterns, often as a canopy species, all across the tree’s natural habitat - across Nepal, Bhutan, Northeast India, Northern Myanmar, Yunnan, and into Northern Vietnam.
  12. The fact that an indigenous group (the Ikalahan tribe of Nueva Vizcaya) in Luzon, the Philippines, have just in the last decade, begun experimenting with how to integrate the Japanese alder (Alnus japonica) into their farming systems, suggests that they are on a similar path of discovery and innovation as Khonoma’s Angami were several hundreds of years ago ? and points to the exciting potential for farmer-to-farmer transfer of indigenous technologies that could greatly shorten the process of innovation. The wheel doesn’t have to be continually reinvented.
  13. The research carefully monitored the inputs and harvested outputs from ten cultivated fields in Khonoma. These data showed that by far, the most valuable product harvested from Khonoma’s jhum fields was the alder firewood that was harvested at the time that the fallows are reopened for cultivation. This underlines our understanding that the alder trees have allowed the Angami to intensify their land use to the point that it is really not shifting cultivation any longer ? but should more accurately be regarded as permanent land use under a food crop ? firewood crop rotation.
  14. Many observers, particularly anthropologists and NGOs, often protest that shifting cultivators can not be separated from their traditional means of cultivation ? since it is so central to their customs and very identity as a people. Yet, what is most significant about this case study is that wise management of alder has acted as a bridge in allowing this group of shifting cultivators to move effortlessly from shifting cultivation to permanent cultivation with neither cultural disruption nor any attendant environmental degradation.
  15. Contact:Yasuyuki Kono (CSEAS) (CSEAS, Kyoto University)
The 7th Southeast Asian Studies for Sustainable Humanosphere Research Seminar
  1. 日時:平成25年2月19日(火)12:00-14:00
  2. 場所:京都大学稲盛財団記念館東南亭(201号室)
  3. タイトル:A Sustainable Humanosphere Approach to Southeast Asian Studies
  4. 発表者:河野泰之(東南アジア研究所 教授)
  5. 要旨:
  6. This talk introduces the research framework developed by the Global COE program “In Search of Sustainable Humanosphere in Asia and Africa” and discusses how can we apply it to and elaborate it through Southeast Asian studies.
API セミナー
  1. 日時:平成25年2月15日(金) 17:30~
  2. 場所:京都大学稲盛財団記念館 小会議室Ⅱ(331号室)
  3. スピーカー:Wara Urwasi, Architect and Researcher from Bali, Indonesia
  4. タイトル:Cultural Landscape Urban Design: Preserving Local Identity in the Global Environment -- Case Studies of Japanese Cities
  5. アブストラクト:
  6. The interdependency of nature and people is the foundation for production of indigenous knowledge that creates the system of cultural landscapes, which are rich reservoirs of practices on sustainable development. Furthermore, international recognition confirms the importance of expanding cultural landscape concept to a broader application in the contemporary urban setting. Cities in Asia have the potential to be role models of development with their traditional wisdom, histories and way of life manifested in city physicality. However, the rapid development of Asian cities in chasing of ‘modernity’ often resulted in the alienation of new urban landscape and degenerated sense of place.
  7. Urban design, as the art of place-making for people, offers mechanism for engagement of community towards its environment. By exploring the practices in Japanese cities of Kyoto, Osaka and Nara through related regulation and advisory tools, community collaboration and interpretation of urban experiences, the project aims to construct urban design principles with cultural landscape orientation. This presentation will provide preliminary findings of identified urban factors, which have to be fulfilled in order to maintain the continuity of historical interactions between human and nature, together with the challenges and opportunities which shield Japanese urban landscape.
  8. Brief introduction of Wara Urwasi:
  9. Wara Urwasi gained her Master of Architecture in Urban Design from School of Planning and Architecture, New Delhi in 2011. She is currently establishing her own architectural and urban research studio (A.U.R.A) in Bali, Indonesia. She has involved in social activities including Asian Project Management Leaders for Climate Change in British Council Organization, Bali Creative Community, and also a member of Indonesian Institute of Architects. Her research interests include landscape urbanism, ritual in the city, along with architectural and urban history particularly in Asia and Middle East cities.
  10. Moderator:Yoko Hayami (CSEAS, Kyoto University)
Historiography and Nation since Pasyon and Revolution--Conference in honor of Prof. Reynaldo C. Ileto
  1. 日時:平成25年2月8日(金)~9日(土)
  2. 場所:Ateneo de Manila University, Quezon City, Philippines
  3. 共催:Philippine Studies: Historical and Ethnographic Viewpoints, Department of History Ateneo de Manila University/ Southeast Asian Studies "Toward Sustainable Humanosphere in Southeast Asia" Research Program, Center for Southeast Asian Studies Kyoto University
  4. プログラム:PDF
  5. アブストラクト:PDF
  6. ポスター:PDF
『講座 生存基盤論』第2回講評会
  1. 日時:平成25年2月2日(土)13:30-
  2. 場所:京都大学稲盛財団記念館3階大会議室
  3. プログラム:PDF