Tracing Conscience in Time of War: Archiving a History of Dissent in Sri Lanka 1960s to 2000s
Jonathan Spencer is Regius Professor of South Asian Language, Culture and Society at the University of Edinburgh. He has carried out research in Sri Lanka since the early 1980s. His most recent book, Checkpoint, Temple, Church and Mosque (2014) concerns the role of religious organizations in the Sri Lankan civil war, and was co-authored with a team of Sri Lankan and European researchers.
This talk is a progress report from the midpoint in a 5-year comparative project on the Anthropology of Conscience, Ethics and Human Rights. For the Sri Lanka case study in this project the researchers have been interviewing dissenters, Sinhala and Tamil survivors of the 30-year civil war who took a stand against the violent claims of rival ethnonationalisms. The talk will combine some reflections on the translatability of the idea of “conscience” with preliminary analysis of the dissenters’ accounts of their lives and motivations.
The South Asia Seminar is co-funded by the Ashmolean Museum, the Asian Studies Centre of St Antony’s College, the Contemporary South Asian Studies Programme at the School of Interdisciplinary Area Studies, the Department for International Development and Faculty of History and the Faculty of Oriental Studies.
Date:
14 November 2017, 14:00
Venue:
Ashmolean Museum, Beaumont Street OX1 2PH
Venue Details:
Headley Lecture Theatre
Speaker:
Johnathan Spencer (Edinburgh)
Organising department:
St Antony's College
Organisers:
Mallica Kumbera Landrus (Ashmolean),
Rosalind O'Hanlon (Oriental Institute, Oxford),
Matthew McCartney
Organiser contact email address:
asian@sant.ox.ac.uk
Part of:
Modern South Asia Seminar
Booking required?:
Not required
Cost:
None
Audience:
Public
Editors:
Maxime Dargaud-Fons,
Laura Spence