Total Pageviews

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

Software Makes Us 28,783 Each Month

You are about to discover a brand new and revolutionary traffic and profit generating platform that is 10 times bigger than blogging, article marketing, video marketing or any other traffic platform you have seen before.

The traffic giant I am about to reveal generates stable instant traffic that will replace Google completely!

It is much bigger, less competitive and holds more profit potential than any other traffic platform you may have used before.

Now, let me ask you a question?

Would you like to tap into the wallets of 375 million active buyers without spending a single penny on advertising?

Get Your Copy

If your answer is a yes, I know you are excited like just like the beta testers and the selected few who we have revealed this secret to?

The Income Hybrid 3in1 software suite taps into the biggest and fastest growing viral platform that is untapped and unsaturated!

The statistics show that this revolutionary new traffic platform that Income Hybrid capitalizes on is used by 375 Million users on a daily basis worldwide.

This accounts for more than the entire population of the United States making it the biggest and most widely used traffic source online!

In fact, the latest online consumer statistics report revealed that this brand new traffic and profit generating platform is used by more than 250 Million mobile phone users each day?

Now with the Income Hybrid software, you can legally tap into the wallets of millions of mobile phone and internet users with push button simplicity.

The most astonishing part of it all is that? only 7% of the users using this gigantic viral platform are aware of its money generating potential!

We have cracked the code and discovered the secret to generate passive sustainable profits through this untapped traffic treasure-trove.

I am taking about a true game changer?

Introducing the Income Hybrid 3in1 software suite...

Income Hybrid utilizes a breakthrough new fusion technology that is brand new and untapped by any other software or tools available in the market today.

Due to its state of the art money generating potential and latest advancements in technology, we discovered a platform that is immune to Google slaps, Google panda updates and any other changes that occur online.

That best part is?

To profit from this technology, you do not require a blog, website, or even a domain. In fact, it has nothing to do with blogging, article marketing, video marketing, or keyword research?

It is something brand new that you have never seen before!

This new technology is proven to work in any niche market and in any language to rake in massive affiliate profits.

 

Monday, September 12, 2011

Fw: For the Sannyasa Day of Srila Prabhupada - September 12, 2011

 
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Sunday, September 11, 2011 8:43 AM
Subject: For the Sannyasa Day of Srila Prabhupada - September 12, 2011

Tridandisvami Sri Srimad Bhaktivedanta Narayana Gosvami Maharaja

FOR SRILA PRABHUPADA'S SANNYASA DAY
One Family


Srila Prabhupada taking sannyasa from Srila Bhakti Prajnana Kesava Gosvami Maharaja in 1959


Srila Gurudeva persorming puja at Srila Prabhupada's samadhi mandira at Krsna Balarama Mandir in Vrndavana

[This year, 2011, Srila Prabhupada's sannyasa anniversary is Sept 12 (in India). In honor of this day, we pray that you will be happy to read this lecture of May 30, 2000 in Los Angeles, in which Srila Gurudeva beautifully glorifies him:]

I pray to my siksa-guru, my friend, and also my sannyasa god-brother. I have so many kinds of relations with him - so many. We used to talk, sitting on the same bed, or the same chair, and joking about so many things. Though I treated him as my siksa-guru, he never saw me as a disciple. He told me, "Our relationship is transcendental." I was so fortunate that as his last request for my service he told me, "Give me samadhi." I am so much obliged to him, because he gave me so many services.

I know that he has not established anything new. He gave the same eternal Krsna consciousness, but with an English name. It is coming from Krsna Himself; He is the root. In this world, in this ISKCON, Brahma is the first acarya. Then, Brahma's son Narada, who is also Brahma's disciple, is the second ISKCON acarya. And Narada's elder brothers and teachers, the four Kumaras, are also ISKCON devotees.

Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu and Nityananda Prabhu are also the real ISKCON. We should try to know that we are all in one family. Anyone who is following even a little bit, who is chanting and remembering Krsna in the line of Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu and Nityananda Prabhu – they are ISKCON. They may be in saffron cloth and sannyasa apparel, or they may be in the grhastha asrama, with or without family, alone, or anywhere. All are in ISKCON. That is why the follower of Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu, Srila Rupa Gosvami, has instructed us to honor all devotees who are in ISKCON, from top to bottom: kanistha-adhikaris, madhyama-adhikaris, uttama-adhikaris, and also uttama uttama uttama adhikaris. We have to respect every one; otherwise we are not ISKCON devotees.

krsneti yasya giri tam manasadriyeta
diksasti cet pranitam ca bhajantam isam
susrusaya bhajana-vijnam ananyam anya-
nindadi-sunya-hrdam ipsita-sanga-labdhya
(Nectar of Instruction, Text 5)|

["One should mentally honor the devotee who chants the holy name of Lord Krsna, one should offer humble obeisances to the devotee who has undergone spiritual initiation and is engaged in worshiping the Deity, and one should associate with and faithfully serve that Pure devotee who is advanced in undeviated devotional service and whose heart is completely devoid of the propensity to criticize others."]

Srila Rupa Gosvami never said that we should only respect our god-brothers, or that we should only respect those in his own line. Never. Whoever is serving Radha-Krsna, anywhere in this world, we should honor that person. Even beginners who accept that Krsna is the Supreme Personality of Godhead and who also want to serve Radha and Krsna are to be honored. If one is not initiated, but he is not offensive and is not associating with mayavadis, he should also be considered as an ISKCON devotee; but as a kanistha-adhikari. Those who have given up all nonsense anarthas and misconduct, and who are not criticizing anyone –  not even those who are fit to be criticized – and are always chanting and remembering Krsna, are madhyama-adhikari. There are so many categories in madhyama-adhikari: madhyama-kanistha, madhyama-madhyama, and madhyama-uttama, and we should try to respect these madhyama-adhikaris according to their degree of devotion.|

We should also honor those who are superior, who are serving Radha-Krsna in astakaliya-lila. They have no time to criticize anyone. Offering pranama to all, paying respect to all, they think that everyone is serving Radha-Krsna. They are more than Prahlada Maharaja. We should understand that they are maha-bhagavatas.

krsna-bhakti-rasa-bhavita matih
kriyatam yadi kuto 'pi labhyate
tatra laulyam ekalam mulyam
janma-kotibhis sukrtibhair na labhyate
(Caitanya-caritamrta. Madhya-lila, 8.70)

We should honor such a devotee, whether or not he is a disciple of our Gurudeva. He may be of the Syamananda-parivara, the family or disciplic succession of Syamananda Prabhu, or he may be of the Narottama-parivara, or he may be of the Bhirabhadra-parivara, that is, Jahnava-parivara; no harm. Wherever he is, we should understand that he is a maha-bhagavata.

I know personally that Srila Bhaktivedanta Svami Maharaja, my siksa-guru, used to give proper honor to all. Although I was not initiated by him, oh, how he used to honor me. I was not qualified to sit with him in the same line, but still, he used to take me in his lap like a child. When he would see me he would say, "O, you should sing; I like your singing."

He used to play the mrdanga. I know he was a first-class singer. You can hear on his cassettes that he used to sing in a pathetic tune (a tune revealing his intense separation feelings for Radha-Krsna), coming from his heart. And the hearts of anyone hearing him sing these songs would be melted. This is real kirtana. 'Pasu pakhi jhure pasana vidare, suni jara guna gatha.' Srila Locana dasa Thakura sings, "By the mercy of Gaura and Nitai, even the animals and birds cry and the stones melt. Simply my heart has not melted."

Srila Rupa Gosvami has given instructions that we should try to properly respect all kinds of Vaisnavas. Rupa Gosvami knows the heart of Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu, and your Prabhupada was a Rupanuga Vaisnava. Only very rare persons know what is Rupanuga; very rare. But one day we will have to know. Without knowing what is Rupanuga, we cannot advance. If we do not know all these things, we cannot even become madhyama-adhikari.

Srila Bhaktivedanta Svami Maharaja came to this world with a mission of ISKCON – Vaisnavism. What was that? It is the same mission as that of Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu. Who is Mahaprabhu? The Supreme Personality of Godhead, Krsna Himself. But He is also more than that; He is not only Krsna. He is the combination of both Srimati Radhika and Krsna, and therefore He is not only Krsna; He has combined with Srimati Radhika, His power.

Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu used to always be absorbed in Radha's mood. Krsna did not have Radha's beauty and Her intrinsic mood. Radhika has adhirudha-mahabhava, and even more than that. Krsna's mood goes up to mahabhava, but beyond that – how to serve and to please Krsna – He does not know. He will have to learn by going to the school of Visakha-devi, and sometimes to Lalita-devi. Without the help of Lalita and Visakha, He cannot relish the mood of Srimati Radhika. So this was the mission of Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu – to give these things. Krsna Himself could not do this, but when He took the beauty and the intrinsic mood of Radhika, then He could relish everything in Gambira under the guidance of Svarupa Damodara (Lalita) and Ramananda Raya (Visakha). And what was Gadadhara Pandita doing? He was watching to see if Mahaprabhu was playing His role perfectly or not. If He was making some mistake, Sri Gadadhara Pandita, in the mood of Radhika, would 'twist the ears' of Krsna, He would say, "O, You are doing wrong; You should it do like this." When Mahaprabhu was singing: 'barahapidam nata-vara-vapu,' Gadadhara Pandita quickly came and said, "O, You should do it like this:

barhapitam nata-vara-vapuh karnayoh karnikaram
bibhrad vasah kanaka-kapisam vaijayantim ca malam
randhran venor adhara-sudhayapurayan gopa-vrndair
vrndaranyam sva-pada-ramanam pravisad gita-kirtih

["Wearing a peacock-feather ornament upon His head, blue karnikara flowers on His ears, a yellow garment as brilliant as gold, and the Vaijayanti garland, Lord Krsna exhibited His transcendental form as the greatest of dancers as He entered the forest of Vrindavana, beautifying it with the marks of His footprints. He filled the holes of His flute with the nectar of His lips, and the cowherd boys sang His glories." (Srimad-Bhagavatam, 10.21.5)]

He was perspiring, His heart was melting, and His tears were falling like heavy rain. There was some defect in Krsna, and Gadadhara Pandita therefore instructed Him.

To think that Krsna had taken away the beauty and intrinsic mood of Radhika and had become Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu, and that Gadadhara Pandita had thus become Rukmini, is quite wrong. It is not like this.
Srila Bhaktivedanta Svami Maharaja came for the same object and mission as Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu – for the jivas to be given raga-marga. They should know who Srimati Radhika is, and what are all these moods.

When he came to New Jersey, Boston, and New York, however, he realized that he had to cut so many jungles. If the land is not fertile, how can this seed of bhakti be given? The jungles were very dense and wild, with so many wild beasts, dangerous animals and poisonous snakes. It took time, and at the same time he kept everything reserved in his books. He told his disciples to read about the life and character of Prahlada Maharaja, Citraketu Maharaja, and others. He had so little time, because the bell rang. Krsna called him, "I cannot be without you. I need your service. Please come at once." He was then bound to go to his Prabhu. One may say that he has given everything in his books. Yes, he has given everything. But you will have to go deep, with the help of any pure Vaisnava:

yaha bhagavat pada vaisnavera sthane
ekanta asraya kara caitanya carane
(Caitanya-caritamrta, Antya-lila 5. 131)

A so-called Vaisnava cannot give you these truths. If one is not following, what will be the result? You will not understand. No one can be in the same class for twenty or twenty five years, or for his whole life, or forever. If he is not advancing, improving, then he must fall down; and that is now becoming the fact. Prabhupada's disciples came with so much honor to serve Krsna. This desire was there, and they are engaged in so many services.

However, they don't have any way to advance now, and that is why their whole way is blocked. Where will they go? They are sure to go down.
We should not always remain in the kanistha-adhikari stage. There should be a way to go up to something superior, but our minds will not go there. We should try to make advancement through someone who is superior, through those who are practically serving, whose minds are there, who knows Prabhupada's mood, and who know the very deep process of Srila Rupa Gosvami and Srila Raghunatha dasa Gosvami that he has written about in his books. We should try to go very deep.

You can see in the sloka:

tan-nama-rupa-caritadi-sukirtananu-
smrtyoh kramena rasana-manasi niyojya
tisthan vraje tad-anuragi jananugami
kalam nayed akhilam ity upadesa-saram
(Nectar of Instruction, Text 8)

Srila Svami Maharaja has explained the mood of Rupa Gosvami so well. If a person has many worldly desires and is full of anarthas, no harm. If he has some greed to serve Radha-Krsna in the line of Rupa Gosvami, he can do so. He can think of Radha-Krsna. He can sing, "Radha-Krsna prana mora yugula kisora," and also, "Rupa raghunatha pade hoibe akuti, kabe hama bujhabo se yugala piriti". What is the meaning?
Prema-prayojana dasa: When will I become eager to follow in the footsteps of Srila Rupa Gosvami and Srila Raghunatha dasa Gosvami? Only then will I be able to realize what is the priti, the love and affection between Radha and Krsna.

Srila Gurudeva: How will this be possible? By the mercy of Nityananda Prabhu. 'Ara kabe Nitaicandra.' Nityananda Prabhu's mercy is essential. I have heard Srila Svami Maharaja sing this song: 'parama karuna, pahu dui jana, nitai gauracandra; saba avatara sara siromani kevala ananda kanda.' Even in the beginning we realize the mercy of Nityananda Prabhu. But why has Srila Narottama dasa Thakura prayed to Rupa-Raghunatha? Srila Rupa Gosvami is the heart of Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu. Sri Rupa-Raghunatha can give the service of Radha-Krsna. Nityananda Prabhu can also give it, but not in the shape of Baladeva Prabhu or Nityananda Prabhu. He can give it in the shape of Ananga-manjari. Rupa Gosvami is Rupa-manjari. He can give all the moods to serve Srimati Radhika.

We should try to know these truths and advance from kanistha-adhikari to madhyama. Then we will never fall down. A taste will come, and when that taste comes in chanting, remembering, and hearing hari-katha, then Krsna will manifest in the heart and purify it. We will become madhyama-kanistha, madhyama-madhyama, madhyama-uttama, and then maha-bhagavata-kanistha. So, we should try to know all these things, and try to have all these things.

First we should try to have taste. How will it come? If you are not always associating with a high class of Vaisnavas, even your chanting and remembering will not do. Srila Sukadeva Gosvami has therefore given the process: First sravanam, and then kirtanam, and then serving and meditating. Sravana, hearing, should be done. Srila Rupa Gosvami and Srimad-Bhagavatam have both told:

dharmah svanusthitah pumsam
visvaksena-kathasu yah
notpadayed yadi ratim
srama eva hi kevalam

["Duties (dharma) executed by men, regardless of occupation, are only so much useless labour if they do not provoke attraction for the message of the Supreme Lord." Following a system of religion that does not awaken one's Krsna consciousness, or God consciousness, is merely a waste of time and labour." Srimad-Bhagavatam, 6.16.43]

Srila Gurudeva: What is the meaning?

Syamarani dasi: If someone is following all the principles of varnasrama, following all the regulations, and following the Vedas, but he doesn't have any taste for hearing from the topmost sadhus…

Srila Gurudeva: Even if he is chanting and serving in so many ways; even if he is reading the books, but…

Syamarani dasi: If he doesn't have any taste for hearing from pure sadhus about the sweet lila and glories of Krsna, then all of his activities come to zero.

Srila Gurudeva: Yes. You should always know this. Chanting alone will not do. It will not be first-class, or pure. If you are hearing hari-katha, then your chanting of the Holy Name will be pure. The Holy Name is always pure. 'Purna suddha nitya mukta vinatva nama namine.' The Nama is always Krsna Himself. They are not different. But we cannot realize this. We must always be hearing from realized souls.

Narada can tell anyone, any creature, even just by looking at him, "O, may you now become a high-class maha-bhagavata." Simply by telling someone this, he can make that person become like himself. A madhyama-bhagavata cannot do this. He will give his association and hari-katha. A kanistha-adhikari can only say, "You should come to my Gurudeva; you should come to this pure devotee." He can only say this much. On one hand all this is mercy, but Narada can at once say, "O, Krsna-prema should come, and you should dance and sing." He has the capacity to say that, because he has controlled Krsna in his heart by his services. He is therefore a maha-maha-maha-bhagavata.

I request everyone to remember that we are in the one family of Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu. Srila Bhaktivedanta Svami Maharaja's mission was to give this vision. He came to these western countries where there was no sign of bhakti, where all were engaged in sense gratification. The people were always accustomed to take beef and so many other abominable things.

Mercifully, in a year or two, he changed the whole world. It was a miracle. He translated so many books, and by his mercy he accepted so many disciples who were very powerful at that time. He inspired them and engaged them through his teachings everywhere he went. He made them all so powerful that you cannot imagine it.

I know that in France and other areas Bhagavan Prabhu was so famous. He made a big school, New Mayapura, where there were more than three hundred devotees and also a big gosala. You cannot imagine. However, when I went to see that place two years ago, I saw that all the land and trees were weeping. There was no life there; it was like a desert. When Srila Svami Maharaja used to sing there, he was weeping in ecstasy. But what became of it all after he left? So I request Bhagavan also, "You cannot be happy in this world, my dear friend Bhagavan Prabhu. This world can cheat you. You will never be happy. You should therefore have strong faith in your Gurudeva. He was not any ordinary person; he was transcendental. He came from there, for the enlightenment of all."

jnane prayasam udapasya namanta eva
jivanti san-mukharitam bhavadiya-vartam
sthane sthitah sruti-gatah tanu-van-manobhir
ye prayaso 'jita jito 'py asi tais tri-lokyam

["Lord Brahma said, 'O my Lord Krsna, a devotee who abandons the path of empiric philosophical speculation aimed at merging in the existence of the Supreme and engages himself in hearing Your glories and activities from a bona fide sadhu, or saint, and who lives an honest life in the occupational engagement of his social life, can conquer Your sympathy and mercy even though You are ajita, or unconquerable.'" (Srimad-Bhagavatam, 10.14.3)]

All have seen that in this world there is no happiness. There are so many problems and problems. These problems are like poisonous snakes, and death is like a tiger. We cannot say when we will die. Problems are coming one after another, like very large waves of twelve feet and even twenty feet. So I request you all, not to come down. Try to have a taste in the Name and in hari-katha. And, when you hear that a good, bona fide devotee is coming and giving classes, you must certainly attend. This will bring you a taste in all devotional activities. All your paths will be thus open, and then you can go up very soon and very easily. You will see that your Guruji is smiling and saying, "Oh, I am very lucky that you have come. Now let us all serve Radha and Krsna."

So we should be like a family – not thinking that we are enemies. There should be no fear at all. Why fear? If we want to serve Radha-Krsna in the same line as our predecessor acaryas, why fear? Helping each other, therefore, we should follow the mission of Srila Bhaktivedanta Svami Maharaja, Srila Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakura, our Gurudeva, and Srila Rupa and Sanatana Gosvamis; and be happy. Then we may see that ISKCON will be changed. I went to so many places in the world, and I saw that nowadays hardly anyone honors ISKCON leaders, or their god-brothers, or even third class devotees. Hardly anyone honors anyone. That is why they are losing so much. If they properly respect each other, and also chant and remember, they must change.

Gaura Premanande!



.

 



--
If you do not want to receive any more newsletters, this link

To update your preferences and to unsubscribe visit this link
Forward a Message to Someone this link
powered by phplist v 2.10.12, © tincan ltd

Sunday, September 11, 2011

Fw: H-ASIA: Food, famine and land loss in literature query

----- Original Message -----
From: "Andrew Field" <shanghaidrew@GMAIL.COM>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Sunday, September 11, 2011 6:34 PM
Subject: H-ASIA: Food, famine and land loss in literature query


H-ASIA
Sept 11 2011

Food, famine and land loss in literature query
*********************************************
From: Leah Milne <gits1013@yahoo.com>

I was interested in looking at the effects of land loss (particularly
related to the land grab problem whereby cash-rich, land-poor nations buy
land in other areas for agricultural use) and famine as a result of the food
industry. I have found many non-fiction sources (though I would love to hear
of more) but I am particularly interested in Asian literature (fiction and
poetry) that can be peripherally or directly related to this issue. Could
anyone please point me to literary sources which deal with the issues of
agricultural land loss and hunger that can tie in to this? Thanks in
advance!

******************************************************************
To post to H-ASIA simply send your message to:
<H-ASIA@h-net.msu.edu>
For holidays or short absences send post to:
<listserv@h-net.msu.edu> with message:
SET H-ASIA NOMAIL
Upon return, send post with message SET H-ASIA MAIL
H-ASIA WEB HOMEPAGE URL: http://h-net.msu.edu/~asia/=

Fw: H-ASIA: Member pub/book launch Opium War: Drugs, Dreams & the Making of China, by Julia Lovell

----- Original Message -----
From: "Frank Conlon" <conlon@U.WASHINGTON.EDU>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Sunday, September 11, 2011 9:08 PM
Subject: H-ASIA: Member pub/book launch Opium War: Drugs, Dreams & the
Making of China, by Julia Lovell


> H-ASIA
> September 11, 2001
>
> Member's publication and invitation to book launch, London, 15 September
> 2011:
> _The Opium War: Drugs, Dreams and the Making of China_
> by Julia Lovell
> ************************************************************************
> From: Julia Lovell <j.lovell@bbk.ac.uk>
>
> Dear H-Asia members,
>
> I am pleased to announce the publication of my new book, _The Opium War:
> Drugs,
> Dreams and the Making of China_, in the UK.
>
>
> _The Opium War: Drugs, Dreams and the Making of China_
> by Julia Lovell
> (London: Picador, 2011)
> With 56 illustrations, 5 maps.
> Hardback 458 Pages
> ISBN 9780330457477
>
> Publisher's description:
>
> Beginning with the dramas of the war itself, Julia Lovell explores its
> background, causes and consequences and, through this larger narrative,
> interweaves the curious stories of opium's promoters and attackers. _The
> Opium
> War_ is both the story of modern China – starting from this first conflict
> with
> the West – and an analysis of the country's contemporary self-image. It
> explores how China's national myths mould its interactions with the
> outside
> world, how public memory is spun to serve the present; and how delusion
> and
> prejudice have bedevilled its relationship with the modern West.
>
>
> Table of Contents:
>
> Introduction
>
> 1. Opium and China
>
> 2. Daoguang's Decision
>
> 3. Canton Spring
>
> 4. Opium and Lime
>
> 5. The First Shots
>
> 6. 'An Explanatory Declaration'
>
> 7. Sweet-Talk and Sea-Slug
>
> 8. Qishan's Downfall
>
> 9. The Siege of Canton
>
> 10. The UnEnglished Englishman
>
> 11. Xiamen and Zhoushan
>
> 12. A Winter in Suzhou
>
> 13. The Fight for Qing China
>
> 14. The Treaty of Nanjing
>
> 15. Peace and War
>
> 16. The Yellow Peril
>
> 17. The National Disease
>
> 18. Conclusion
>
> For further information:
> http://www.panmacmillan.com/titles/displayPage.asp?PageTitle=Individual%20Title
> &BookID=408067
>
> If you are able to come, a book launch will be held at Asiahouse, 63 New
> Cavendish Street, London, W16 7LP, on 15 September at 6.45pm. A discussion
> will
> be followed by a drinks reception.
>
> Best wishes,
>
> Julia Lovell
> Department of History, Classics and Archaeology
> Birkbeck College
> University of London
> Malet Street
> WC1E 7HX
>
> ******************************************************************
> To post to H-ASIA simply send your message to:
> <H-ASIA@h-net.msu.edu>
> For holidays or short absences send post to:
> <listserv@h-net.msu.edu> with message:
> SET H-ASIA NOMAIL
> Upon return, send post with message SET H-ASIA MAIL
> H-ASIA WEB HOMEPAGE URL: http://h-net.msu.edu/~asia/

Fw: H-ASIA: CFP Settled Strangers: Why South Asians in Diaspora cannot become natives?, panel, ECSAS Conf, Lisbon, 25-28 July 2012

----- Original Message -----
From: "Frank Conlon" <conlon@U.WASHINGTON.EDU>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Sunday, September 11, 2011 9:20 PM
Subject: H-ASIA: CFP Settled Strangers: Why South Asians in Diaspora cannot
become natives?, panel, ECSAS Conf, Lisbon, 25-28 July 2012


> H-ASIA
> September 11, 2011
>
> Call for papers for panel "Settled Strangers: Why South Asians in Diaspora
> cannot become natives?", European Conference on South Asian Studies,
> Lisbon, 25-28 July 2012
> ***********************************************************************
> Ed. note: The ECSAS conferences offer a wonderful opportunity for meeting
> colleagues and scholarly exchange. Participation and membership is not
> limited to scholars based in Europe. FFC
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
> From: Gijsbert Oonk <Oonk@eshcc.eur.nl>
>
> I am organizing a panel at the ECSAS conference from 25-28 july 2012 in
> Lisbon.
>
> Title: Settled Strangers: Why South Asians in Diaspora cannot become
> natives?
>
> My abstract and panel proposal follow below.
>
> If you wish to contribute to this panel let me know as soon as possible
> (by sending a paper proposal).
>
> Dr. Gijsbert Oonk
> History Department
> Erasmus University Rotterdam
> Netherlands
>
>
> Panel:
> Settled Strangers: Why South Asians in Diaspora cannot become natives?
>
> In this panel I propose the concept of 'settled strangers' that may help
> us to understand the ambivalent relations between 'strangers' and the
> local society through generations. Settled strangers are descendents of
> migrants who eventually settled in their new environments for at least
> three generations. They are often referred to as 'third or fourth or more'
> generation migrants, despite that they didn't migrate themselves. They
> (and their parents)are born and raised in the new countries, which they
> have made their own. Here they enjoyed their education, they know the
> local language and they most likely will get married locally (but
> frequently within their own ethnic group). Often, but not always they
> carry local passports or have obtained local citizenship. Despite of this,
> their loyalty towards the local society is at stake in the discourses on
> migration, citizenship. Frequently the suggestion is that 'strangers' are
> not committed to the local economy or the local politics because settled
> strangers always have an 'escape'. Nevertheless, if they take up local
> citizenship or become political active, they are said to do for 'personal
> gains' and not to 'serve the country'. In this paper I show how settled
> strangers navigate between being an insider and an outsider at different
> places and in different times. Even after three or four generations
> running local business, paying taxes, spending money on charities,
> hospitals, dispensaries and what not, they find out that it is never
> enough to be accepted as locally loyal. In his Inaugural Lecture at the
> University of Cape Town, Mahmood Mamdani rethorical asks: When does a
> Settler Become a Native? And his shortcut answer is: from the point of
> view of ethnic citizenship, NEVER.
>
>
> Abstract:
> In this panel I would like to explore the economic, cultural and
> political position of the South Asians in diaspora. They control most of
> the trade and businesses and like many other groups are well known for
> their economic networks and their economic achievements. The most
> influential literature on 'middlemen minorities' (Bonachich e.o.) and the
> recent acclaimed work by Amy Chua is sociological rather than historical.
> This literature cannot explain why these minorities are still not accepted
> and integrated in the local societies. A historical approach may reveal
> some of the answers.
>
> I propose the concept of 'settled strangers' that may help us to
> understand the ambivalent relations between 'strangers' and 'natives'
> through generations. Settled strangers are descendents of migrants who
> eventually settled in their new environments for at least two generations.
> They are often referred to as 'third or fourth or more' generation
> migrants. Despite that they didn't migrate themselves. They are born and
> raised in the new countries, which they have made their own. Here they
> enjoyed their education, they know the local language and they most likely
> will get married locally (but within their own ethnic group). Often, but
> not always they carry local passports or have obtained local citizenship.
> In other words, they are 'settlers' not migrants.
>
> In the case of outsider trading and business minorities, these settlers
> often remain 'strangers'. Both national (or colonial) states and their
> citizens frequently feel uncomfortable with the settled strangers. They
> constantly question whether their political and economic loyalty is
> 'local' or 'overseas', transnational or elsewhere. Returning issues are
> the question of local and/ or multiple citizenship, the questions whether
> they re-invest profits in local industries or 'abroad' and the question of
> 'local assimilation', often defined along marriage patterns (within their
> own group, or with outsiders). Frequently the suggestion is -to say the
> least- that 'strangers' are not committed to the local economy or the
> local politics, because they want to have an 'escape'. And if they take up
> local citizenship or become political active, they will do so because they
> 'profit' from it, they use it for their 'personal gains' and not to 'serve
> the country'. The question of re-investing profits locally is mostly
> disputed along lines of 'exploitation' and selfishness and not along lines
> of 'rational entrepreneurship and objective choices'. However, what in
> fact is happening is that emerging states are creating 'strangers'
> themselves. Often, these 'strangers' were already settling before the
> nation state was foreseeable, like in the case of Asians in Africa.
>
> Once and a while, however, states and citizens admire the workmanship,
> the economic results and the political prestige and professionalism of
> strangers. But, there is always a 'but', -in the end- one never knows
> whether the stranger will leave tomorrow, take his money, his experience
> and 'know how' to another place. This 'danger' makes the stranger
> untrustworthy, someone to keep an eye on, and someone you can use for your
> own interest. But one can never rely on 'strangers' in the long run. For
> them, the axiom 'trade follows the profits' is probably more accurate than
> 'trade follows the flag'.
>
> Interestingly, many of these qualifications are not mentioned in relation
> to local indigenous businessmen and professionals. But often, they have an
> option to leave the country as well. Nevertheless, this hardly ever seen
> as 'untrustworthy', but more often as 'taking an opportunity'. In other
> cases, e.g. when a local politician illegally send money to an overseas
> bank account, this will be seen as corruption. But only 'afterwards', he
> is not accused of potentially being disloyal or corrupt before the events
> happen. Whereas the idea is that minority traders and businessmen were
> 'expected' to send money abroad.
>
> The settled strangers constantly have to deal with these notions of the
> (colonial) state and local citizens. Even after three or four generations
> running local trading companies, spending money on charities, temples,
> mosques, local education, hospitals, dispensaries and what not, they find
> out that it is never enough to be accepted a locally loyal. They will
> always be seen as outsiders. In his Inaugural Lecture at the University of
> Cape Town, Mahmood Mamdani rethorical asks: When does a Settler Become a
> Native? And his shortcut answer is: from the point of view of ethnic
> citizenship, NEVER.*
>
> (*Mahmood Mamdani, When does a Settler become a Native? Reflection of the
> Colonial Roots of Citizenship in Equatorial and South Africa, Inaugural
> Lecture 13th May 1998 at the University of Cape Town, South Africa.)
>
> For more information see: See: http://ecsas2012.iscte.pt/
> REMINDER: please note that convenors of accepted panels must all be/become
> members of EASAS - please attend to this as soon as possible.
> More information on this can be seen at: http://www.easas.org/membership.
> Accepted paper-givers must also join.
> There is no funding for travel or other expenses.
>
> --
> Yours sincerely
>
> Dr. G. Oonk
>
> Head of the History Department
> Erasmus School of History, Culture and Communication
> History Department l3 48
> Erasmus University
> PB 1738 3000 DR Rotterdam
> Netherlands
>
> email: Oonk@eshcc.eur.nl
> phone: +31 10 4082496
> Webiste: WWW.asiansinafrica.com
>
> My recent books: G. Oonk: The Karimjee Jivanjee family: Merchant Princes
> of East Africa, Pallas/AUP, Amsterdam 2009:
> http://www.press.uchicago.edu/presssite/metadata.epl?mode=synopsis&bookkey=10369038
>
> G.Oonk: Global Indian Diasporas:
> http://books.google.nl/books?id=BkwsMTyShi8C&printsec=frontcover&dq=oonk+diasporas&hl=nl&ei=-SLVTIHNDYKWOuHq0YEK&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1&ved=0CCsQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q&f=false
>
> ******************************************************************
> To post to H-ASIA simply send your message to:
> <H-ASIA@h-net.msu.edu>
> For holidays or short absences send post to:
> <listserv@h-net.msu.edu> with message:
> SET H-ASIA NOMAIL
> Upon return, send post with message SET H-ASIA MAIL
> H-ASIA WEB HOMEPAGE URL: http://h-net.msu.edu/~asia/
>

Fw: H-ASIA: CONF UC Davis: Templeton Symposium in Art History: Art Between Europe and East Asia in the 17th Century, 9-30-11

----- Original Message -----
From: "Frank Conlon" <conlon@U.WASHINGTON.EDU>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Monday, September 12, 2011 5:27 AM
Subject: H-ASIA: CONF UC Davis: Templeton Symposium in Art History: Art
Between Europe and East Asia in the 17th Century, 9-30-11


> H-ASIA
> September 11, 2011
>
> UC Davis: Templeton Symposium in Art History: Art Between Europe and East
> Asia in the 17th Century, Davis CA, September 30, 2011
> ************************************************************************
> From: Katharine Burnett <kpburnett@ucdavis.edu>
>
> Please attend:
>
> Templeton Symposium in Art History: Art Between Europe and East Asia in
> the 17th Century.
>
> with speakers
>
> Timothy Brook, Professor, Institute of Asian Research, University of
> British Columbia, author of "Vermeer's Hat: The Seventeenth Century and
> the Dawn of the Global World," 2008
>
> and
>
> Thomas DaCosta Kaufmann, Frederick Marquand Professor of Art and
> Archaeology, Princeton University, author of "Arcimboldo: Visual Jokes,
> Natural History,and Still-Life Painting," 2010.
>
> September 30, 2011, at 3:00 PM in Art 217, University of California, Davis
>
> Questions? Please contact Katharine Burnett <kpburnett@ucdavis.edu>
>
> ##
>
> Katharine P. Burnett
> Associate Professor of Chinese Art History Graduate Adviser for
> Recruitment and Admissions
> Department of Art and Art History
> University of California, Davis 1 Shields Ave.
> Davis, CA 95616
>
> http://arthistory.ucdavis.edu/
> department tel: 530-752-0105
> department fax: 530-752-0795
> office: 160 Everson Hall
> ******************************************************************
> To post to H-ASIA simply send your message to:
> <H-ASIA@h-net.msu.edu>
> For holidays or short absences send post to:
> <listserv@h-net.msu.edu> with message:
> SET H-ASIA NOMAIL
> Upon return, send post with message SET H-ASIA MAIL
> H-ASIA WEB HOMEPAGE URL: http://h-net.msu.edu/~asia/

Friday, September 9, 2011

Fw: H-ASIA: Summer Programme 2012 - World Wide Asia: Asian Flows, Global Impacts, Leiden, Aug 27-Sep 1, 2012 Deadline 16 Nov. 2011

----- Original Message -----
From: "Frank Conlon" <conlon@U.WASHINGTON.EDU>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Friday, September 09, 2011 11:05 PM
Subject: H-ASIA: Summer Programme 2012 - World Wide Asia: Asian Flows,
Global Impacts, Leiden, Aug 27-Sep 1, 2012 Deadline 16 Nov. 2011


> H-ASIA
> September 9, 2011
>
>
> IIAS Summer Programme 2012: World Wide Asia: Asian Flows, Global Impacts,
> Leiden, August 27-September 1, 2012
> DEADLINE 16 NOVEMBER 2011 09:00 (CET)
> **********************************************************************
> From: M C van den Haak <M.C.van.den.Haak@iias.nl>
>
> IIAS Summer Programme in Asian Studies
>
>
> World Wide Asia: Asian Flows, Global Impacts
>
>
> A four-day master class followed by a two-day international conference
>
> Date: 27 August - 1 September 2012
>
> Venue: Leiden, the Netherlands
> <http://maps.google.nl/maps?q=leiden&hl=nl&sll=52.469397,5.509644&sspn=5
> .060825,14.227295&vpsrc=0&z=13>
>
>
> Deadline for applications: 16 November 2011, 9.00 am (CET)
>
> Programme
>
> The second IIAS <http://www.iias.nl/> Summer Programme in Asian Studies
> will partner with the Leiden Global Interactions Research Group (LGIG)
> <http://research.leiden.edu/research-profiles/global/> at Leiden
> University <http://www.leiden.edu/> to critically explore Asian
> migrations as a globalizing force. The flows of people, goods, capital and
> ideas within and from the Asian continents have been transforming the
> global landscape for centuries. Arguably, this influence has become more
> recognizable and acute in the present day.
>
> The study of Asian mobilities can provide important insights into the
> conditions, processes and effects of globalization and historical global
> forms. In order to gain a nuanced understanding of Asia's role in the
> transformation of the global, the workshop and conference will focus on
> exploring the social, historical, political and economic conditions that
> give rise to particular forms of Asian migration and the diverse impacts
> they have in various local and global arenas. This master class seeks to
> cultivate Asian perspectives on historical and contemporary forms of
> migration and their impact on shaping global-local landscapes,
> practices, relationships and structures.
>
> The programme invites applications from PhD candidates and advanced
> research master's students whose work deals with some aspect of Asian
> migration. Students from Asia and non-European/Atlantic institutions are
> especially encouraged to apply.
>
> The programme will be run by three leading scholars in the fields of
> global migration history, the history of globalization, and modern Asian
> history: Prof. Leo Lucassen
> <http://hum.leiden.edu/history/staff/lucassen.html> (Leiden University
> <http://www.leiden.edu/> ),
> Prof. Adam McKeown
> <http://www.columbia.edu/cu/history/fac-bios/McKeown/faculty.html>
> (Columbia University <http://www.columbia.edu/> ) and
> Prof. Radhika Singha <http://www.gmw.ethz.ch/people/singha/SinghaCV.pdf>
> (Jawaharlal
> Nehru University <http://www.jnu.ac.in/> ), respectively.
>
>
> These scholars will combine their expertise to provide participants with
> an intensive and interactive experience. The master class will focus on
> student works. Students will, therefore, be expected to provide a working
> research paper and will have the opportunity to present their work and get
> productive critical feedback from the conveners and their student peers.
>
> The programme will close with a two-day conference on the same theme of
> Asian Migrations, featuring international scholars. Summer Programme
> participants will be given opportunities to meet and interact with the
> conference panelists and a select number of students may be invited to
> present their research in one of the conference sessions. All students
> will be invited to attend the conference and participate in the
> discussions.
>
>
> Information and Application form:
> Please visit www.summerprogramme.asia:
> <http://www.summerprogramme.asia/>
> for more information on the Summer Programme, the requirements and the
> application form.
>
> For questions, please contact Ms Martina van den Haak at
> M.C.van.den.Haak@iias.nl <mailto:M.C.van.den.Haak@iias.nl>
>
> The International Institute for Asian Studies (IIAS) is a postdoctoral
> research centre based in the Netherlands. The Institute encourages the
> interdisciplinary and comparative study of Asia and promotes national
> and international cooperation. The Institute focuses on the human and
> social sciences and on their interaction with other sciences.
>
> Martina van den Haak
> IIAS Main Office
> Leiden | P.O. box 9500
> 2300 RA | Leiden
> <http://www.iias.nl/>
> ******************************************************************
> To post to H-ASIA simply send your message to:
> <H-ASIA@h-net.msu.edu>
> For holidays or short absences send post to:
> <listserv@h-net.msu.edu> with message:
> SET H-ASIA NOMAIL
> Upon return, send post with message SET H-ASIA MAIL
> H-ASIA WEB HOMEPAGE URL: http://h-net.msu.edu/~asia/

Fw: H-ASIA: CFA Tools and Resources for Study of Women in South Asian Islamic Societies, Chicago, Dec 2, 2011 (AIIS, AIBS, AIPS)

----- Original Message -----
From: "Frank Conlon" <conlon@U.WASHINGTON.EDU>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Friday, September 09, 2011 11:05 PM
Subject: H-ASIA: CFA Tools and Resources for Study of Women in South Asian
Islamic Societies, Chicago, Dec 2, 2011 (AIIS, AIBS, AIPS)


> H-ASIA
> September 9, 2011
>
> Call for Applications:
> Tools and Resources for Study of Women in South Asian Islamic
> Societies, co-sponsored by the American Institute of Bangladesh
> Studies, American Institute of Indian Studies and American Institute
> of Pakistan Studies (funding by Carnegie Corporation), University of
> Chicago, Friday, December 2, 2011
> APPLICATION DEADLINE OCTOBER 31, 2011
> ********************************************************************
> Ed. note: Thanks to Keith Snodgrass for forwarding this item to share
> on H-ASIA. For more information go to the link noted in post. FFC
> ---------------------------------------------------------------------
> From: Keith Snodgrass <snodgras@u.washington.edu>
>
> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
> From: AIBS <aibsinfo@aibs.net>
>
>
> Dear Colleagues,
>
> A Faculty Development Workshop co-sponsored between AIBS, AIPS, and
> AIIS (funded by the Carnegie Corporation of New York) will be held
> at the University of Chicago, Friday, December 2, 2011.
>
>
> Faculty Development Workshop: Tools and Resources for Study of Women in
> South Asian Islamic Societies: Call for Applications
>
> The American Institute of Indian Studies, the American Institute of
> Pakistan
> Studies, the American Institute of Bangladesh Studies and the University
> of
> Chicago South Asia Language and Area Center will hold an all-day workshop
> on
> Friday December 2, 2011 that will provide tools and resources for
> promoting
> the study of women in Islamic Society in South Asia. The focus would be to
> provide a complex and nuanced overview of women and the impacts of women's
> political participation in South Asian Muslim societies. It will emphasize
> their pro-active efforts at community organizing, educational reform,
> anti-corruption, human rights, and public health.
>
>
> Who is Eligible to Participate?
>
> Thirty faculty members will be selected to participate in the workshop.
> The
> workshop is targeted at faculty at community colleges, small liberal arts
> colleges, religious-affiliated colleges, minority-serving colleges, and
> small public colleges in the greater Chicago area and northern Illinois.
>
>
>
> How to Apply?
>
> Please go to http://southasia.uchicago.edu/outreach/islam_workshop.shtml
> and
> fill out the simple application which will require a brief statement of
> purpose about your goals for attending the workshop and how you would like
> to use the tools and resources that will be discussed. The deadline for
> applications is October 15, 2011. All applicants will be informed about
> whether they have been selected no later than October 31, 2011.
>
> ******************************************************************
> To post to H-ASIA simply send your message to:
> <H-ASIA@h-net.msu.edu>
> For holidays or short absences send post to:
> <listserv@h-net.msu.edu> with message:
> SET H-ASIA NOMAIL
> Upon return, send post with message SET H-ASIA MAIL
> H-ASIA WEB HOMEPAGE URL: http://h-net.msu.edu/~asia/

Fw: H-ASIA: AJISS-Commentary No.129 on Reconciliation in Thailand by Akira Suehiro

----- Original Message -----
From: "Frank Conlon" <conlon@U.WASHINGTON.EDU>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Friday, September 09, 2011 11:05 PM
Subject: H-ASIA: AJISS-Commentary No.129 on Reconciliation in Thailand by
Akira Suehiro


> H-ASIA
> September 9, 2011
>
> AJISS-Commentary No.129 on Reconciliation in Thailand by Akira Suehiro
> ************************************************************************
> From: Japan Institute of International Affairs <e-commentary@jiia.or.jp>
>
> Editor: Akio Watanabe
> Editorial Board: Hideki Asari, Masashi Nishihara, and Taizo Yakushiji
> Online Publisher: Yoshiji Nogami
>
> AJISS-Commentary No.129
> "Prospects for Reconciliation in Thailand" by Akira Suehiro
>
> [Akira Suehiro is Director of and Professor at the Institute of Social
> Science, The University of Tokyo. The views expressed in this piece are
> the author's own and should not be attributed to The Association of
> Japanese Institutes of Strategic Studies.]
>
> http://www.jiia.or.jp/en_commentary/201109/09-1.html
>
> Beating pre-election estimates, the pro-Thaksin Phue Thai (PT) Party swept
> the board in Thailand's general election on July 3. PT amassed a total of
> 265 of the 500 seats in parliament, compared with the 159 secured by the
> Democrat Party. On the following day, PT began negotiations with five
> minor parties, including Chart Thai Pattana, to form a coalition
> government that eventually had a solid majority of 300 seats. On August 5,
> Yinluk Shinawatra, born in 1967 and the youngest sister of former Prime
> Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, was elected to lead the new Cabinet. She is
> the first female prime minister in Thailand, which has had 27 prime
> ministers.
>
> Since the September 2006 coup that ousted Thaksin, battles have continued
> between the pro-Thaksin United Front for Democracy Against Dictatorship
> (UDD), known as the "red shirts", and the "yellow-shirt" People's Alliance
> for Democracy (PAD). These battles culminated in bloodshed in 2010, with
> 92 people killed and more than 800 injured in the three months from March
> to May. It is wrong, however, to depict Thailand's political turmoil as
> one between PT represented by the red shirts and the Democrat Party
> represented by the yellow shirts. PT's supporters include not only the red
> shirts but also low-income dwellers in Bangkok and citizens in rural areas
> outside the southern region. Meanwhile, the yellow shirts have started
> this year targeting their criticism not just at PT but also at the
> government led by the Democrat Party's Abhisit Vejjajiva. More
> importantly, the yellow shirts advocated boycotting the July election,
> thus denying the very foundation of democratic principles. The myth that
> the yellow shirts are a pro-democracy force has been shattered.
>
> The biggest factor contributing to PT's victory was the spread of
> democracy from the capital region into rural areas. This allowed rural
> residents to express their frustration at the widening economic
> disparities by ballot rather than the traditional method of making a
> direct plea to the king (thawai thika) or submitting a petition to
> political leaders (kho-rong). This is attested to by the high voter
> turnout of 71.4%, the second highest on record after the general election
> in December 2007.
>
> Let's take a closer look at the results of the 375 seats allocated for
> single-seat constituencies by comparing them with pre-election estimates.
> PT made headway in the northeast region where the party won 103 seats as
> compared with the estimated 70 (of the 126 seats in total), in the north
> where it won 49 as compared with 36 (of the 61 seats in total) and in the
> central region where it won 42 as compared with 36 (of the 102 seats in
> total). In contrast, the Democrat Party suffered a crushing defeat as it
> saw its seats drop from 25 to 4 in the northeast, from 17 to 13 in the
> north and from 42 to 25 in the central region. Even in Bangkok where a
> clear-cut victory was expected for the Democrats, the party secured only
> 23 of the 33 seats. PT's overwhelming strength in rural districts can be
> attributed less to Thaksin's popularity than to the strong frustration
> felt by people at the failure of the Abhisit government to narrow the
> economic gap.
>
> In May, just before the election, the Abhisit government introduced a
> series of electoral reforms. Amendments to election law increased the
> number of proportional-representation seats from 100 to 125 while reducing
> the number of proportional-representation districts across the country
> from eight to one. They also changed the existing multiple-seat
> constituencies into single-seat constituencies. These reforms, however,
> all backfired on the Democrats. In proportional representation, PT with
> Yinluck as its head appealed to the voters with slogans calling for "the
> first female prime minister in Thailand" and "social reconciliation under
> the female prime minister," effectively dispelling the Democrats' attacks
> that PT was Thaksin's proxy party and that the red shirts were a group of
> terrorists. The national leader's popularity has a decisive impact on
> election outcomes in Thailand. The high expectations of the newcomer
> Yinluck far outstripped the popularity of her predecessor, Abhisit
> Vejjajiva, who in people's eyes epitomized the political elite.
>
> Where will Thai politics lead? The instability that has characterized Thai
> politics since the 2006 coup will continue for the time being. It is
> unclear how effectively Yinluck, whose political expertise is unknown, can
> mitigate the domestic conflict. If the new government insists on a
> political comeback for Thaksin and seeks to hold accountable those
> responsible for the 2010 bloodshed, frictions with the military and the
> royalists will grow. On the other hand, if the government carries out PT's
> election pledges of raising the minimum wage to 300 baht a day (the
> current minimum wage in Bangkok stands at 215 baht) and doubling the
> initial salaries of civil servants to 15,000 baht, and couples these with
> economic policies that could add to inflationary pressures, the economy
> could become unstable. This would inevitably be reflected in political
> instability.
>
> Thailand is no longer a developing country; it is a middle-income country.
> The percentage of the population deemed poor dropped from 21% in 2000 to
> 8.5% in 2007. The challenge the country is facing is no longer poverty
> itself but widening domestic gaps in income and employment due to
> inequality of opportunity. This also includes the problems of the social
> security system, which has not yet taken into account the rapidly ageing
> and shrinking population, and the mismatch of education and labor markets
> that is coming to light as an increasing number of people receive higher
> education. Thais expect the new government to address these "middle-income
> country" challenges. What is required is not mere cosmetic political
> reconciliation but rather earnest effort toward resolving the new social
> problems underlying the political conflict.
>
>
> ****************
> AJISS-Commentary is an occasional op-ed type publication of The
> Association of Japanese Institutes of Strategic Studies (AJISS) consisting
> of three leading Japanese think tanks: Institute for International Policy
> Studies (IIPS), The Japan Institute of International Affairs (JIIA), and
> Research Institute for Peace and Security (RIPS).
>
> http://www.jiia.or.jp/en/commentary/
>
> ******************************************************************
> To post to H-ASIA simply send your message to:
> <H-ASIA@h-net.msu.edu>
> For holidays or short absences send post to:
> <listserv@h-net.msu.edu> with message:
> SET H-ASIA NOMAIL
> Upon return, send post with message SET H-ASIA MAIL
> H-ASIA WEB HOMEPAGE URL: http://h-net.msu.edu/~asia/
>

Thursday, September 8, 2011

Fw: H-ASIA: CFP Class & French Colonialism, FCHS, New Orleans, 30 May-2 Jun 2012

----- Original Message -----
From: "Frank Conlon" <conlon@U.WASHINGTON.EDU>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Thursday, September 08, 2011 7:52 PM
Subject: H-ASIA: CFP Class & French Colonialism, FCHS, New Orleans, 30 May-2
Jun 2012


> H-ASIA
> September 8, 2011
>
> Call for panelists Class and French Colonialism, French Colonial
> Historical Society, New Orleans, May 30-June 2, 2012
> DEADLINE OCTOBER 15 2011
> (x-post H-French-Colonial)
> *****************************************************************
> Ed. note: Paul Sager is not a member of H-ASIA, but there may be
> some members with interests that would match his suggestion for a FCHS
> conference panel, either also regarding Indochina or other French
> territories. Please contact him directly. Thanks. FFC
> --------------------------------------------------------------------
> From: Paul Sager <paul.sager@nyu.edu>
>
>
> Dear scholars,
>
> Class is a little-studied aspect of colonial history. The racial and
> gender aspects of empire have rightly attracted much interest, but with
> few exceptions class is more often mentioned in passing. It is usually
> tacked on as an incidental or tertiary phenomenon, giving the impression
> that it was a relatively unimportant aspect of colonial social relations.
> To begin to open up the subject, I would like to form a panel focusing on
> questions of social class in French colonial contexts for the next French
> Colonial History Society meeting, to be held in New Orleans in May-June,
> 2012. My own paper will argue that in addition to race and gender,
> class--understood both as primarily discursive imaginings of social class
> as well as more non-discursive stratified socio-economic
> relationships--significantly helped to shape the history of the colonial
> state in French Indochina.
>
> Are any other scholars working on class in French colonial contexts? If
> so, it would be great to get together on a panel.
>
>
> Please contact me off-list at paul.sager@nyu.edu.
>
> The deadline for submissions to this conference is October 15.
>
>
> Paul Sager
> Ph.D. candidate
> New York University
> ******************************************************************
> To post to H-ASIA simply send your message to:
> <H-ASIA@h-net.msu.edu>
> For holidays or short absences send post to:
> <listserv@h-net.msu.edu> with message:
> SET H-ASIA NOMAIL
> Upon return, send post with message SET H-ASIA MAIL
> H-ASIA WEB HOMEPAGE URL: http://h-net.msu.edu/~asia/

Fw: H-ASIA: Member pub _Childbirth in Republican China: Delivering Modernity_ by Tina Johnson

----- Original Message -----
From: "Frank Conlon" <conlon@U.WASHINGTON.EDU>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Thursday, September 08, 2011 7:52 PM
Subject: H-ASIA: Member pub _Childbirth in Republican China: Delivering
Modernity_ by Tina Johnson


> H-ASIA
> September 8, 2011
>
> Member's publication: _Childbirth in Republican China: Delivering
> Modernity_ by Tina Johnson
>
> ************************************************************************
> From: Tina Johnson <tpj444@gmail.com>
>
> Dear friends,
>
> I would like to announce the publication of my new book:
>
> Tina Johnson
> _Childbirth in Republican China: Delivering Modernity_
> (Lanham, MD: Lexington Books, an imprint of Rowman and Littlefield,
> 2011). 268 pp.
> ISBN 0-7391-6440-6 | 978-0-7391-6440-2 (hardcover)
> ISBN 0-7391-6442-2 | 978-0-7391-6442-6 (electronic)
>
> From the back cover:
>
> Childbirth in Republican China: Delivering Modernity is the study of
> a pivotal period (1911–1949) in which traditional midwifery, marked
> by private, unregulated old-style midwives, was transformed into
> modern midwifery through the adoption of a highly medicalized and
> state-sponsored birth model that is standard in urban China today. in
> the twentieth century, biomedical technologies altered the process of
> childbirth on virtually every level. What had been a matter of
> private interest, focusing on family and lineage, became a national
> priority, a symbol of the new citizen who would participate in the
> creation of a revitalized nation. This transformation of reproduction
> coalesces with the broader story of China's twentieth-century
> revolutions, marked by an emphasis on science and modernity. The
> roles of the state and Western medical personnel were paramount in
> affecting these changes, but equally important were the intense
> social and cultural shifts that occurred simultaneously. The dominant
> themes of reproduction in twentieth-century China are characterized
> by expanding state involvement, shifting gender roles, escalating
> consumption patterns accompanying the commercialization of private
> lives, and the increasing medicalization of the birth process.
>
> "This well-researched book is an important addition to the literature
> on state building and mod- ernization in modern China. Focusing on
> the introduction and development of the biomedical birth model in the
> Republican period, it provides a stimulating case study of the
> transformation of reproduction during a period of far-reaching
> social, intellectual, and cultural changes. The author's careful and
> insightful analysis of the issues of modernization, state building,
> gender roles, consumer culture, and the medicalization of birth in
> modern China is scholarly and commend- able. The book will be of
> considerable value to historians of China and medicine, sociologists,
> and anthropologists, as well as gender studies scholars." —Ka-Che
> Yip, author of Health and National Reconstruction in Nationalist
> China: The Development of Modern Health Services, 1928-1937,
> University of Maryland, Baltimore County
>
> "This richly-detailed analysis is an important contribution to our
> understanding of the ways in which gender, medicine, and
> state-building have historically intersected in modern China. Through
> a multi-faceted account of the individuals and institutions who
> sought to reform traditional midwifery practices, Childbirth in
> Republican China reveals how measures intended to improve women's
> status could also subject female reproductive bodies to intensified
> government control. it is sure to become a standard reference in the
> field." —Yi-Li Wu, author of Reproducing Women: Medicine, Metaphor,
> and Childbirth in Late Imperial China
>
>
> Table of contents:
>
> List of Figures and Tables ix
> Acknowledgments xi
>
> Introduction xv
>
> 1 Missionaries and Modernity 1
>
> 2 Reproduction Theory: Modern Childbirth and Modern Motherhood 35
>
> 3 The Midwifery Profession 73
>
> 4 National Reproduction in Republican China 125
>
> Epilogue: Reproduction in Twentieth-Century China 167
>
> Appendix: Translation of ?Good Methods for Protecting
> Newborns and Infants 183
>
> Bibliography 185
>
> Glossary of Chinese Terms 205
>
> Index 211
>
> About the Author 223
>
> For further information: http://www.lexingtonbooks.com/
>
> Best regards,
>
> Tina Phillips Johnson, PhD
> Assistant Professor of History
> Director of Chinese Studies
> Saint Vincent College
> Latrobe, Pennsylvania 15650
> ******************************************************************
> To post to H-ASIA simply send your message to:
> <H-ASIA@h-net.msu.edu>
> For holidays or short absences send post to:
> <listserv@h-net.msu.edu> with message:
> SET H-ASIA NOMAIL
> Upon return, send post with message SET H-ASIA MAIL
> H-ASIA WEB HOMEPAGE URL: http://h-net.msu.edu/~asia/

Fw: H-ASIA: Talk "Colonial Policing In The Dutch East Indies" 9/9/2011

----- Original Message -----
From: "Monika Lehner" <monika.lehner@UNIVIE.AC.AT>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Thursday, September 08, 2011 12:34 PM
Subject: H-ASIA: Talk "Colonial Policing In The Dutch East Indies" 9/9/2011


> H-ASIA
> September 8, 2011
>
> Talk "Colonial Policing In The Dutch East Indies" - Sept. 9, 2011
> ******************************************************************
> From: "Thrasher, Allen" <athr@loc.gov>
>
> Presentation Announcement:
> "Colonial Policing In The Dutch East Indies: The Case Of The Ambonese
> Gewapende Politie (1893-1946)"
> by Martin Thiry, 2011 Library of Congress Florence Tan Moeson Fellow
> Date: Friday, September 9, 2011
> Time: 1:00-2:00pm
> Location: Asian Reading Room Foyer, LJ-150, 1st Floor, Jefferson Building,
> Library of Congress
> [Metro stop: Capitol South on the Blue/Orange Line.]
>
> Summary:
> The role of ethnic minorities in colonial policing is integral to the rise
> of the nation-state and an expression of agency on the part of minority
> groups in the development of the nation-state. During the late colonial
> period an amalgamation of ethnic minorities, referred to collectively as
> the Ambonese, were employed as policing agents. In this capacity the
> Ambonese have been understood as subject forces and less as actors,
> obscuring a fuller history of the Ambonese as colonial police. The ways
> in which they served in the years 1873-1945 helped lay foundations for the
> Indonesian nation-state. The Dutch were trying to form and keep together
> the colonial state; with the help of the Ambonese they served to cohere
> Indonesia.
> The introduction of armed police units, fortified in ever greater numbers
> by the Ambonese (personnel from Ambon, greater Maluku, Manado, and Timor),
> allowed the start of the pacification of the archipelago, particularly in
> the Outer Islands where the Dutch had so far exercised no more than
> nominal control. Ambonese would serve prominently in the Marechausse and
> later in the much more robust gewapende politie, critically in their own
> home areas.
> About the presenter:
> Martin Thiry graduated from Harvard in 2000 and joined the New Orleans
> Police Department where he was a patrolman and a robbery detective. He
> will complete his PhD in History at the University of Hawaii at Manoa and
> the East-West Center in Spring 2012.
>
> Contact:
> Anchi Hoh, Ph.D., Tel: 202-707-5673, E-mail:
> adia@loc.gov<mailto:adia@loc.gov>
> Request ADA accommodation five business days in advance.
> Contact 202-707-6862 or ADA@loc.gov<mailto:ADA@loc.gov>
>
> ******************************************************************
> To post to H-ASIA simply send your message to:
> <H-ASIA@h-net.msu.edu>
> For holidays or short absences send post to:
> <listserv@h-net.msu.edu> with message:
> SET H-ASIA NOMAIL
> Upon return, send post with message SET H-ASIA MAIL
> H-ASIA WEB HOMEPAGE URL: http://h-net.msu.edu/~asia/

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Fw: H-ASIA: CFP 3rd Conf of the Asian Borderlands Research Network: Connections, Corridors, and Communities, Kunming, 12-15 Oct 2012

----- Original Message -----
From: "Frank Conlon" <conlon@U.WASHINGTON.EDU>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Wednesday, September 07, 2011 10:31 PM
Subject: H-ASIA: CFP 3rd Conf of the Asian Borderlands Research Network:
Connections, Corridors, and Communities, Kunming, 12-15 Oct 2012


> H-ASIA
> September 7, 2011
>
> Call for Papers - 3rd Conference of the Asian Borderlands Research
> Network: Connections, Corridors, and Communities, Yunnan University,
> Kunming, 12-15, 2012
> DEADLINE 1 DECEMBER 2011
> (x-post IIAS)
> *********************************************************************
> From: "Haak, M.C. van den" <M.C.van.den.Haak@iias.nl>
>
> 3rd Conference of the Asian Borderlands Research Network
>
> Connections, Corridors, and Communities
>
> Deadline for applications: 1 December 2011
>
> Conference dates: 12 - 15 October 2012
>
> Host: Centre for Southwest Borderland Ethnic Minority Studies, Yunnan
> University (YU), Kunming, China
>
> Convenors:
> Prof. He Ming (YU), Dr. Joy Bai (YU), Dr. Tina Harris (University of
> Amsterdam, UvA), Prof. Willem van Schendel (UvA) and Dr. Erik de Maaker
> (Leiden University)
>
>
> Extensive land and maritime networks have crisscrossed Asia for
> centuries,
> providing the basis for encounters between diverse ethnic, linguistic,
> economic, religious, and political groups. Today, developments such as
> new infrastructural projects, an increase in media access, and renewed
> interest in shaping cross-border cultural identities serve to both
> underscore these long-standing linkages and create new forms of
> connections across Asia. During the 3rd Asian Borderlands Research
> Conference in Kunming, we invite submissions that address
> continuities and ruptures along routes and borders in Asia, broadly
> related to the theme, "Connections, Corridors, and Communities".
>
> * Connections: How are Asian borderlands made more (or less) visible
> through the study of cross-border connections? In what ways does the
> idea of the "borderland" remain resilient throughout political and
> historical ruptures? What are the characteristics of various kinds of
> connections that are being created (as well as cut off) in Asian
> borderlands?
>
>
> * Corridors: Are networks and paths throughout Asian borderlands being
> forged, reopened, diverted, or closed, and what are the effects of such
> processes? Can one conceive of "corridors" in relation to maritime or
> island borderlands, information technology networks, or bodily
> borders in Asia?
>
> * Communities: What constitutes a "community" or "communities" in and
> across Asian borderlands, and how might these be contingent upon
> other factors, such as politics, environmental issues, and history?
> What are some of the barriers and restrictions to the creation of
> communities in the context of Asian borderlands? In what ways is a
> community defined by the state, by organizations, and/or by local
> individuals?
>
> Since one of the main goals of this conference is to spur collaboration
> and
> conversation across diverse fields in the hope of building up a more
> nuanced
> picture of the intersections and relationships across Asian borderlands,
> submissions are invited from scholars, writers, policy studies
> researchers,
> artists, filmmakers, activists, the media, and others from a wide variety
> of
> disciplinary backgrounds. We invite conceptually innovative papers, based
> on
> new research, in order to develop new perspectives in the study of Asian
> Borderlands.
>
> Only a small number of individual papers will be selected. We therefore
> encourage you to submit a full panel or roundtable proposal. We will
> consider proposals for panels and roundtables that have a thematic focus,
> are of a comparative character, and involve scholars or practitioners
> affiliated with different institutions.*
>
> *New to this Asian Borderlands conference, the roundtable format is
> intended to allow for a more open forum on a broader theme. Typically,
> panelists will each address the main issue or topic of the roundtable,
> and the remainder of the time is open for an informal discussion
> between the panel members and a more extended question-and-answer
> period with the audience. Some examples of wide themes in relation
> to Asian borderlands may include, but are not limited to: migration;
> security; gender; technology; environmental issues, etc.
>
> Please visit http://asianborderlands.net to submit proposals.
>
> The deadline is 1 December 2011.
>
>
> Participants will be notified towards the beginning of the year 2012.
>
> Very limited financial support may be made available to specific scholars
> residing in Asia and some junior or low-income scholars in other parts of
> the world. If you would like to be considered for a grant, please submit
> along with your abstract for a panel and/or paper a short letter stating
> the motivation for your request. Please also specify the kind of funding
> that you have applied for or will receive from other sources. Please note
> that the conference operates on a limited budget, and will not normally be
> able to provide more than a partial coverage of the costs of travel.
>
>
> urther information about registration fees, the venue, and logistics will
> be provided on the ABRN website once the panels have been accepted.
>
> For more information, please visit the website
> at http://asianborderlands.net, or email info@asianborderlands.net
>
> The International Institute for Asian Studies (IIAS) is a postdoctoral
> research centre based in the Netherlands. The Institute encourages the
> interdisciplinary and comparative study of Asia and promotes national and
> international cooperation. The Institute focuses on the human and social
> sciences and on their interaction with other sciences.
>
>
>
>
> IIAS Main Office Leiden | P.O. box 9500 | 2300 RA | Leiden | www.iias.nl
> IIAS Branch Office Amsterdam | Oudezijds Achterburgwal 185 | 1012 DK |
> Amsterdam
> ******************************************************************
> To post to H-ASIA simply send your message to:
> <H-ASIA@h-net.msu.edu>
> For holidays or short absences send post to:
> <listserv@h-net.msu.edu> with message:
> SET H-ASIA NOMAIL
> Upon return, send post with message SET H-ASIA MAIL
> H-ASIA WEB HOMEPAGE URL: http://h-net.msu.edu/~asia/
>
>

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

Divine Books

Divine Books
In the Service of Scholars since 1976
 
40/ 5,  Shakti Nagar, Delhi 110007
Ph. No.    011- 42351493
Email
-divinebooksindia@gmail.com
 
Lala Murari Lal Chharia Oriental Series
 
1 & 2. Srimad Bhagavatam with the text of Sridhar with Visisitaadvaita and  Dvaita Readings Vol. I Skandhas 1- 7 & Vol. 2 Skandhas 8-12./ Ed.by T.R. Krishnacharya/ ISBN.978-81-920763-0-0/ (SET) Rs.800
 
3. Brihat Jataka of Varaha Mihira. Trans. by N.C.Aiyar. ISBN.978-81-920763-3-1 Rs.500
 
5.  The Twelve Principal Upanisads with Notes from the Commentaries of Sankaracharya and the Gloss/ Trans. into English by E.Roer, E.B.Cowell, Rajendra Lal Mitra./ ISBN.978-81-920763-5-5/ Rs.800
 
6 & 7. The Brahma Vaivarta Purana 2 Vols.- (Brahma and Prakriti Khandas Vol.I.)., (Ganesa and Krishna Janma Khandas. Vol.II) / Trans.into English by Rajendra Nath Sen, 978-81-920763-8-6 (SET) /  Set.Rs.1000
 
9 & 10. The Brihat Samhita of Varaha Mihira 2 Vols.-  Eng.Trans/ N.Chidambaram Iyer.(2 Parts.)ISBN 978-93-81218-17-4(SET)  / Set. Rs 600
 
11. Bhakti Ratnawali with  the Commentary of Vishnu Puri Translated by a Professor of Sanskrit, ISBN.978-93-81218-29-7 / Rs. 300
 
12.  An Introduction to the Yoga Philosophy/ Srisa Chandra Vasu, ISBN.978-93-81218-28-0/ Rs.120
 
13, The Brihat Jatakam of Varaha Mihira.Eng.Trans. by Swami Vijnananda.   ISBN. 978-93-81218-27-3. Rs.500
 
14. The Patanjali"s Yoga Sutras.Trans. Rama Prasada. Delhi,2011. ISBN.978-93-81218-26-6. Rs.400
 
15.   Sri Narada Pancaratram - The Jnanamrita sara Samhita/ Eng.Trans. Swami Vijnananda/     ISBN 978-93-81218-25-9 / Rs.400
 
16-24..Sriman Mahabhartam-A New edition mainly based on the South indian texts with footnotes and readings,Ed. T.R.Krishnacharya & T.R.Vyasacharya. / 9 Vols.Set. ISBN.978-93-81218-39-6 (set). Rs.3000
 

Sri Garib Das Ayurveda Series
 
3. Ayurvedic Care and Cure of the Dihestive System/ Prof.Dr.P.H.Kulkarni. ISBN.978-03-81218-19-8  Rs.300
 
4.Experiments with Drugs of Ayurveda,/Prof.Dr.P.H. Kulkarni   .ISBN 978-93-81218-20-4. Rs.300
 
5.Ayurveda Philosophy and Practice/ Prof.P.H.Kulkarni.,   ISBN.978-93-81218-41-9.  Rs.250
 
6. Encyclopedia of Ayurvedic Massage/ John  Douillard/   ISBN. 978-93-81218-40-2.  Rs. 900  *
 
 
 
Divine Buddhist Texts and Studies Series
 
1. The Dhammapada-A Collection of Verses. Trans.into English F Max Muller. The Sutta Nipata/ Trans. By V. Fausball.  , ISBN.978-93-81218-09-9.Rs.500
 
2. Analysis of the Abhisamayalamkara ./E.Obermiller. ISBN. 978-93-81218-18-1. Rs. 700
 
3. The Life of Buddha by Ashvaghosha  Bodhisattva - Translated from Chinese into English by Samuel eal. / ISBN 978-93-  81218-14-3 / Rs.450
 
4. Buddhist Suttas/ Eng.Trans. T.W.Rhys Davids. ISBN 978-93-81218-02-0 /   Rs.450
 
5. Hand Book of Colloquial Tibetan/ Graham Sandberg.  ISBN.978-93-81218-10-5. Rs.450
 
6.  Buddha Carita/ Eng.Trans. E.B.Cowell. ISBN 978-93-81218-04-4/ Rs.300
 
7. The Larger Sukhavati-Vyuha.The Smaller Sukhavati-Vyuha,The Vajracchedika, The Larger Prajna Paramita-Hridaya-Sutra., The Smaller Prajna Paramita-Hridaya-Sutra./Trans. F.Max Muller. The Amitaayur-Dhyana-Sutra/Trans. J.Takakusu, Delhi,2011. ISBN.978-93-81218-03-7,  Rs.500
 
8. Vinaya Texts.Part II-The Mahavagga,V-X, The Culavagga I-III, /Trans.  T.W.Rhys Davids, Hermann Oldenberg, ISBN.978-93-81218-06-8.Vo.II.  978-93-81218-08-2 (Set.) Price. Rs.600  Per Vol.
9. Vinaya Texts-Part III, The Culavagga IV-XII. / Trans. by T.W.Rhys Davids, Hermann Oldenberg, ISBN.978-93-81218-07-5. Vol.III.  978-93-81218-08-2 (Set.) Price. Rs.600 Per Vol.
10. Vinaya Texta. Part I- The Patimokkha, The Mahavagga I-IV.Trans. by T.W.Rhys Davids, Hermann Oldenberg, ISBN.978-93-81218-05-1 Vol.I.  978-93-81218-08-2 (Set.) Price. Rs.600 Per Vol.
 
11. The Lotus Sutra - Being an english translation of Saddharma-Pundrika Sutra/ Trans.H.Kern/ ISBN 978-93-81218-01-3  /  Rs. 450
 
13. The Questions of King Milinda.Trans. T.W.Rhys Davids. Part I.  ISBN.078-93-81218-22-8.Vol.I.  978-93-81218-24-2. (Set.) Rs. 600.  Per Vols.
14. The Questions of King Milinda, Trans. T.W.Rhys Davids. Part II. ISBN.978-93-81218-23-5/Vol.II.  978-93-81218-24-2. (Set.) Rs. 600.  Per Vols
 
15.  Buddhist Texts from Japan. Ed. F.Max Muller, ISBN. 978-93-81218-43-3. Rs.600
 
 
 
*Limred Sale Market
 

Thanking You
 
Varun Gupta
 
Divine Books
40/5, Shakti Nagar,
Delhi 110007
India
 
Ph. No. 011 42351 493
divinebooksindia@gmail.com

Fw: H-ASIA: Cryptography in South and East Asia (500-1000 C.E.) response

----- Original Message -----
From: "Frank Conlon" <conlon@U.WASHINGTON.EDU>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Wednesday, September 07, 2011 1:43 AM
Subject: H-ASIA: Cryptography in South and East Asia (500-1000 C.E.)
response


> H-ASIA
> September 6, 2011
>
> Response to query re: sources on cryptography in South and East Asia
> (500-1000 C.E.)
> ************************************************************************
> From: chandar sundaram <chandsund@gmail.com>
>
>
> With reference to the query posted this morning by Cody Bahir regarding
> uses of cryptography in military campaigns or political institutions in
> India and China:
>
> If by Cryptography the writer means the encoding and decoding of secret
> diplomatic and military messages, I would suggest looking at the works of
> Sun Tzu and Kautilya, and contacting Professor Upinder Singh, who teaches
> in the history Department of Delhi University, and Professor David Graff,
> who is at Kansas State University.
>
> In any case their co-ordinates are .available through google.
>
> Hope this helps,
>
> Chandar
>
> --
> Chandar S. Sundaram, Ph.D.,
> War and Society Historian
> Victoria BC Canada
> --------------------------------------------------------------
> Ed. note: The contacts and books of these two noted scholars are:
>
> Upinder Singh is Professor of History at Delhi University:
> <upinders@gmail.com>,
>
> She has published:
>
> _Ancient India: New Research_ (Co-edited with Nayanjot Lahiri),
> (New Delhi: Oxford University Press, 2009)
>
> _A History of Ancient and Early medieval India: from the stone
> age to the twelfth century_
> (New Delhi: Pearson Longman. 2008)
>
> _Ancient Delhi_ [2nd edition]
> (New Delhi: Oxford University Press, 2006)
>
> _Delhi: ancient history_,
> (New Delhi: Social Science Press. 2006)
>
> _The Discovery of Ancient India: early archaeologists and the
> beginnings of archaeology,
> (New Delhi, Permanent Black, 2004)
>
> _Ancient Delhi_
> (New Delhi: Oxford University Press, 1999)
>
> _Kings, Brahmanas, and Temples in Orissa: an epigraphic study (AD
> 300-1147)_
> (New Delhi: Munshiram Manoharlal, 1994)
>
>
> David Graff is Associate Professor of History at Kansas State University
> <dgraff@k-state.edu>
>
> Among his publications are:
>
> _Medieval Chinese Warfare, 300-900_
> (London and New York: Routledge, 2002)
>
> _A Military History of China_ (edited with Robin Higham)
> (Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 2002)
>
> "Narrative Maneuvers: The Representation of Battle in Tang Historical
> Writing," pp. 143-164 in _Military Culture in Imperial China_,
> edited by Nicola Di Cosmo
> (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2009),
>
> The K-State History Department site mentions that he is "He is currently
> working on a translation of what remains of Li Jing's Art of War, an early
> Tang military text, and is also writing a book comparing Chinese and
> Byzantine military practice in the seventh century."
> FFC
> ********************************************************************
> To post to H-ASIA simply send your message to:
> <H-ASIA@h-net.msu.edu>
> For holidays or short absences send post to:
> <listserv@h-net.msu.edu> with message:
> SET H-ASIA NOMAIL
> Upon return, send post with message SET H-ASIA MAIL
> H-ASIA WEB HOMEPAGE URL: http://h-net.msu.edu/~asia/