Tag Archive | "Call for Submissions"

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Call for Papers: 2011 SPAS Graduate Student Conference

Posted on 02 December 2010 by Ronald Gilliam

The School of Pacific and Asian Studies at the University of Hawai’i at Manoa is seeking papers and presentations for its 2011 Graduate Student Conference. The conference will be held from April 3-5, 2011 on the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa campus in Honolulu. The theme is “Crossing Borders: Emerging Trends in Pacific and Asian Studies.”

In particular, we are looking for papers that incorporate:

  • New and emerging trends in Pacific and/or Asian Studies
  • Insights on the importance of area studies
  • Interdisciplinary approaches
  • Any other original research on the region(s)

Please submit abstracts of no more than 500 words to gradconf@hawaii.edu. Abstracts should include your name, discipline, university affiliation, and contact information.

Abstract submission deadline: January 28, 2011

Conference Dates and Location:
April 3-5, 2011
Center for Korean Studies
University of Hawai’i at Manoa
Honolulu, HI

Please note that the SPAS Graduate Student Conference is immediately following the Association for Asian Studies (AAS) Annual Conference (March 31-April 3) and precedes the Center for South Asian Studies (CSAS) Annual Spring Symposium (April 6-8).

Limited travel subsidies to the conference site may be available.

Direct any questions to gradconf@hawaii.edu. Additional information is available on our website and on Facebook! These sites will be updated as additional information becomes available.

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Space, Place and the Production of Knowledge Conference

Posted on 01 December 2010 by Ronald Gilliam

April 8th and 9th 2011.

The Space, Place and The Production of Knowledge Conference at UH-Mānoa seeks to explore the sites where place-based cultures and practices meet with scholarship. This includes an examination of how region and environment influences scholars and their methods. The conference welcomes work from a wide variety of intellectual fields including but not limited to:

Marine Biology, Astronomy, Visual Art, Political Science, American Studies, Pacific Island Studies, Hawaiian Studies, Environmental Studies, Architecture, Anthropology, Law, Botany, Marine Science, Geology, Linguistics, Film Studies, English, Education, Kinesiology, Medicine, Ethnic and Cultural Studies, Music and Performance.

In addition to traditional conference format, the organizers also encourage submissions by artists, poets, photographers, filmmakers, musicians and theatrical performers.

For more information, please visit the conference website at https://sites.google.com/site/spaceplaceandpok/home

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Explorations Call for Submissions

Posted on 09 November 2010 by Ronald Gilliam

EXPLORATIONS is edited and published by graduate students at the University of Hawai’i at Manoa with administrative support provided by the Center for Southeast Asian Studies (CSEAS). The journal provides a peer-reviewed forum for graduate scholarship on Southeast Asia. Submissions are welcomed from all disciplines, however the author must be currently enrolled in an academic program or a recent graduate (within the last year). The journal is produced through a blind review process, by volunteer editors with the guidance of a faculty advisor. EXPLORATIONS is published electronically and in hard copy, and is distributed to Southeast Asian Studies programs, centers, and university libraries both nationally and internationally. Works published in EXPLORATIONS are not necessarily representative of the views of the editors or CSEAS, and responsibility for the opinions expressed and the factual accuracy of papers lies with the individual authors.

HOW TO SUBMIT:

  • Submissions should be sent to explore@hawaii.edu.
  • Submissions should be in any of the following formats: Word (.doc), MPEG, MP3, Quicktime, or WMV.
  • Submissions should follow APA or Turabian style, and essays must include a complete bibliography.
  • Submissions should not be currently under review for another publication or previously published.

TYPES OF SUBMISSIONS CONSIDERED:

  • Original essays (up to 30 pages in length including bibliography)
  • Reviews of films, music, online resources, archives, museums, libraries (up to 3 pages in length)
  • Travelogues on airports, harbors, bus stations, train depots, river ferries, taxis (up to 3 pages in length)
  • Photo essays and “Notes from the Field”

QUESTIONS? PLEASE CONTACT US AT: explore@hawaii.edu or amedrano@hawaii.edu

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Call: Governance, Human Rights, & Development in SEA

Posted on 13 September 2010 by Ronald Gilliam

From 19-22 May 2011, Thammasat University in Bangkok is hosting an international conference on “Governance, Human Rights and Development: Challenges for Southeast Asia”

Scholars and Graduate level students are encouraged to submit their proposals to: abstracts@icird.org

Abstracts should consist of max. 500 words and include research question(s) and research method(s). Proposals will be peer-reviewed. The conference committee will send an acceptance letter with scheduling information and other instructions for submitting final abstract statements and full versions of papers.

Deadline for abstract submission: 30 October 2010

Full papers are requested by 1 March 2011
Full details at http://www.icird.org/index.html

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Criticine.com: Call for Contributions on Archiving in SEA

Posted on 02 September 2010 by Ronald Gilliam

From Criticine News (31 August 2010)

In Alexis’s last blog entry on August 29 2009 he wrote:

DEAR FILM DEVELOPMENT COUNCIL OF THE PHILIPPINES

You have the mandate to start the National Film Archive. I have heard that your first priority project in relation to archiving is the digitization of some 70 works into high quality digital copies. While this may be useful, perhaps inquiring into the state of and assisting the various archives in the country (UP Film Center, Mowelfund et al) whose current holdings (which include rare prints if not master negatives of some titles, let alone the entire history of alternative/experimental cinema in the country) are being stored in deplorable conditions, may be even more important. Have you thought about this? Saving the master negatives or prints and storing and caring for them properly will ensure their survival far longer than digital copies (of which we are still uncertain), and in their original state too. Steps need to be made NOW to ensure that we don’t lose more of these films.

I know you would like high quality digital copies of films to be available for public screenings, and its embarrassing when you’re asked for titles, even recent ones, and don’t know where to get them, but to push for this at the expense of the archiving itself, when the situation is clearly a SOS one for many films/archives is a serious mismanagement of priorities.

I saw this poster recently in the National Film Archive of Thailand, an institution that has done so much with so little and continues to do more (I believe you can learn much from them), and thought it would be useful to share it with you:

Alexis wrote this a few weeks after he Nika, and Lav Diaz visited the Thai Film Archive. They had come to Bangkok that precious week last year for an event Lav would later describe as a “very prole” restrospective of his films. It would never have happened without the kindness of the three good souls from Manila who had taken the time to come – to come to talk and listen, each so acute in words and yet were better listeners still. Out of gratitude for their sincere approach to our homestyle event, we wanted to show them an indie spirit shrine.

So one night we took Alexis, Nika and Lav hurtling along the city’s never-ending elevated highway to a province bordering Bangkok. Out there among the abandoned fields and half-finished condos nestle a cluster of modest buildings in which the Thai Film Archive lives. There is a small restoration and storage bungalow, a cramped library inside an adapted storage carriage, and a museum. Dome Sukwong, the founder of an archive now in its 26th year and which for the most part has been living off a pitiful annual budget, showed them around. Inside the museum, Dome got Alexis to crank an old camera. A flickering image of a miniature figure appeared on the wall – a king takes a step in 1897. “Faster!” the guardian of the spirit shrine whispered to Alexis. It was a wondrous minute, like watching magic passing hands from the bearded visionary to the fresh-faced one with an infectious laugh.

After Alexis and Nika flew back to Manila, Lav mentioned that the humble scale of the archive, its quiet persistence, had resonated strongly with Alexis. The night before the visit, the question of how films die in Southeast Asia had already found its way to us. We had met up with the archivist Brigitte Paulowitz, who has a special interest in film archiving in the region and has helped to train people for the Thai archive. The conversation quickly turned to a topic that was bothering both Alexis and Lav, and which he subsequently wrote up on this blog: the push for digitisation of old films in countries such as the Philippines where much still remains to be done in terms of storing prints in acceptable condition. It was a rich, long night around a bar table on the pavement, a crash course in archiving dilemmas, with Brigitte setting us right on a few myths. In terms of storage, it’s not necessarily cheaper to transfer film prints to digital, and in terms of longevity there is no comparison between the two. With intelligent use of vernacular architectural knowledge it’s possible to construct storage buildings in Southeast Asia that won’t cost the earth to run. Look to archives in the region for examples of what’s being done successfully. For thinking on storage, look to Laos rather than take as the starting point the fanciful notion of the handsomely resourced archives of the West.

A sense of possibilities against impossible odds. I guess Alexis might have been struck by this. Or at least it would have been characteristic of him to draw from our nocturnal encounters this kind of inspiration, and then to take it upon himself to speak out about the hard things and the possibilities already around.

The next issue of Criticine hopes to build on Alexis’s call for a serious look at archiving decisions and practices in the region, and we would gladly welcome contributions on such topics as:

Archives in Southeast Asia – institutions, collections, practices, histories
Possiblities, polemics, controversies
Archive footage or other material in film, video, artistic practice
Private archives, non-institutional forms of collection
Archiving Southeast Asia – materials held outside the region
Interviews with archivists, collectors, filmmakers
Any other topics that resonate with Alexis’s blog and that you feel should be included in this issue

Please email us at criticine1@gmail.com

Criticine.com | about founder Alexis A. Tioseco

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Conference on Human Rights in SEA

Posted on 28 April 2010 by Ronald Gilliam

The First International Conference on
HUMAN RIGHTS in SOUTHEAST ASIA

Organized by the Southeast Asian Human Rights Studies Network and the Center for Human Rights Studies and Social Development (CHRSD), Mahidol University, Thailand.

14-15 October 2010
Bangkok , Thailand
www.seahrcon.org

Human rights in Southeast Asia are at a critical juncture. There are a number of positive developments in the promotion and protection of human rights, such as, the institutionalization of the ASEAN Inter-governmental Commission on Human Rights (AICHR), formation of national human rights commissions or institutions and the development of a dynamic human rights discourse within the region. These occur, however, alongside a significant amount of human rights violations in a wide variety of areas. There is still much work to do in the promotion and protection of human rights of ASEAN peoples.

The First International Conference on Human Rights in Southeast Asia intends to bring together academics, researchers, graduate and post-graduate students, civil society organizations and government agency representatives who work on the research and greater understanding of human rights in Southeast Asia . It seeks to explore the ways researchers and civil society have begun to make more critical contributions to deepening the understanding of human rights-based framework and actual issues through in-depth engagement with localized sites within the Southeast Asian region. Likewise, as human rights is an emerging area of study at universities and academic institutes in Southeast Asia , the conference also aims to provide a venue for the increasing body of research work being done by academics and graduate students on Southeast Asian human rights.

Possible Panel Themes will include:
1. Universality and particularity of human rights
2. Individual and collective rights
3. Gender, sexuality and women’s rights
4. Rights of vulnerable and marginalized groups
5. Peace, conflict, security and human rights
6. Challenges to human rights in Southeast Asia
7. Media, advocacy and popularization of human rights

Paper Submission Details
Those who wish to present a paper at the conference are invited to submit an abstract of 300-350 words and a short biographical paragraph of 150 words in English by 30 June 2010 to Ms. Saksinee Emasiri at seahrcon@gmail.com. Please indicate to which proposed panel you think your paper would best fall under. The full paper should be about 5,000-6,000 words.

Successful applicants will be notified by 15 July 2010. Full papers are due on 30 September 2010.

CreativecommonsPhoto taken from flickr user j l t under creative commons license

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