Back to All Events

From Sarandib, via Lanka, to Ceylon: Exile and Memory in the Colonial Age

e549e5b6466c4086eddcb1a5740db4fb43c63b97.jpg

This talk by Ronit Ricci, Department of Asian Studies and Religion at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, focuses on exile and memory in the colonial age.  

The small, Indian Ocean island known as Sarandib, Lanka, and Ceylon was a site of banishment throughout the 18th century for members of royal families, convicts, servants and others sent there from across the Indonesian archipelago. Descendants of these exiles who remained on the island continued to speak and write in Malay, the archipelago's lingua franca, and to adhere to a collective Muslim identity for several centuries and into the present. The talk considers if and how earlier religious and literary traditions of banishment tied to the island -those of Adam's fall from paradise to Sarandib and Sita's abduction to Lanka in the Ramayana -played a role in shaping the experiences of the exiles and their descendants.

Click here for more information. 

Previous
Previous
April 8

On Our Own Strength: The Self-Reliant Literary Group (Tu Luc Văn Đoàn) and Cosmopolitan Nationalism in Late Colonial Vietnam

Next
Next
April 8

Walter Roberts Annual Lecture 2021