----- Original Message -----   
  From: Jeannine Bischoff 
  To: AASTIBET 
  Sent: Thursday, January 03, 2013 2:11 PM
  Subject: [AASTibet] International Seminar: The Himalayan   Impasse
International Seminar: The Himalayan Impasse   
  Bonn,   Germany
  28 & 29   January 2013
  The   interdisciplinary symposium, organized by the Dept. for Mongolian and Tibetan   Studies of the University of Bonn (http://www.ioa.uni-bonn.de/abteilungen/zentralasien),   Germany, and sponsored by Fritz Thyssen Stiftung, will retrace how most of the   South Himalayan region, once a vibrant hub between South, Central and East Asia   became a dead end at the fringe of modern nation states. It will investigate,   what direct and indirect impact this had on the local populations and how they   learned coping with it. 
  Fifteen   participating scholars and regional specialists will deliberate on the subject   for two days in the premises of theGustav-Stresemann-Institut   (http://www.gsi-bonn.de/)in Bonn. External audience is most welcome and   participation is free of costs. Food and accommodation is also available on the   premises at reasonable rates. However, note that the capacities for   accommodation are limited. 
  For general   information about the seminar, pls. contact Thierry Dodin:   upp701@uni-bonn.de
  For   practical information, pls. contact Jeannine Bischoff:   jeannine_bischoff@yahoo.de
  Hardly any mountain range evokes the image of an   impassable barrier as the Himalayas do. While this image might be accurate as   far as geography, climate and ecology are concerned, when it comes to human   population, the Himalayas were historically less a barrier than a bridge between   north and south, connecting people through trade, political and religious   relations, and even family and clan relations. Ideas, goods and skills transited   through here in both directions to much further afield regions. Buddhism and   other old South Asian cultural conceptions made their way to Tibet and from   there spread up to Mongolia, Siberia and Manchuria. Foods, plants and medicinal   knowledge travelled from Southeast Asia and today's South China, reaching as far   as today's northern Pakistan and Afghanistan. Salt, Borax and other minerals   from the Tibetan Plateau found their way to South Indian markets, while, in the   19th century, Yak tails were exported to the United States via Calcutta to be   used as fly flaps. Metallurgy skills and metal craft styles of Indian origin   were transported to China via Nepal. South Asian Muslim traders houses   established themselves in Ladakh, Nepal, Sikkim and Tibet, from where they   organised the commercial transport of goods between India, China, and Central   Asia. Trading routes which crossed the Himalayas were also corridors for wars   that continuously redefined political borders, creating a situation where states   territories rarely match the lingistic-cultural realities left by thousands of   years of human settlement. 
  In the second half of the 20th   century, however, diverse political developments, in particular the final   annexation of the traditional Tibetan state by the emerging People's Republic of   China (PRC) in 1951, set a process in motion that was to gradually transfigure   the region for ever. Conflicts flared up particularly from 1956 on, and tensions   on the Himalayan border escalated to the Sino-Indian conflict of 1962, following   which most of the border was closed. The closure was less radical in Nepal, but   here too the free transit of people, goods and ideas became a thing of the past.   The new situation brought in many cases economic decline, cultural   desorientation, social conflicts and general stagnation. Despite the emergence   of new avenues and some successful coping strategies, the southern Himalaya   remains till date marked by what was probably the deepest cut in its known   history.
  The aim of this international conference is to   provide a comprehensive account of the 'Himalayan Impasse' by systematically   retracing the regional disintegration processes which followed these   developments, and analyse which strategies were developed to cope with the   situation. 
  
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