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Concepts, Categories of Knowledge, and Buddhist Imaginary: How Burmese History and the Semantic Shifts in Concepts Fit Together

  • Northern Illinois University - Peters Campus Life Building Room 100 545 Lucinda Avenue DeKalb, IL, 60115 United States (map)

Organizer: Center for Southeast Asian Studies at Northern Illinois University

Type/Location: Hybrid / DeKalb, IL

About the speaker:

Aurore Candier is Associate Professor of History at NIU and the new Director of NIU’s Center for Burma Studies. She is also a historian and associate researcher at the Centre Asie du Sud-Est (Paris) and Institut de Recherche sur le Sud-Est Asiatique (Marseille). She has lived, worked and researched in Burma for more than 20 years when the country was progressively opening up and embracing globalization. Being able to speak Burmese fluently allowed her to build a network of local contacts, academics, students and artists. Her scholarly interests range widely, encompassing Mainland Southeast Asian pre-colonial history and politics; early 20th century colonial history; and Burmese history of ideas, religion, culture, language and literature. She studies changes of ideas and knowledge in Burma in the longue durée and attempts to measure the impact of astrology on Burmese society throughout history. One of the interdisciplinary research programs that she is currently leading brings together scholars working in history, visual arts, and anthropology to explore astrological and divinatory knowledge and practices in Burma.

Registration links:

To attend the event in person, please register here.

To attend the event online, please register here.

Co-sponsor: Center for Burma Studies at Northern Illinois University

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Triple Trouble in Thailand under the Premiership of Paethongtarn Shinawatra

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Objects in Disruption: Oppression in Thailand