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END:DAYLIGHT END:VTIMEZONE BEGIN:VEVENT UID:0ecad5b33c22d5fafba9e6755b7d1541 CATEGORIES:China Classroom CREATED:20220113T110730 SUMMARY:Place Identity, Urban Tibetans, and Social Entrepreneurship: Translocalism as Development (Eveline Washul & Ethan Goldings) LOCATION:Zoom DESCRIPTION:
This is co-sponsored by Rutgers Global-China Office. This is part of Lou isa Schein's class, "Anthropology of China." It's open to the public. The Z oom link is at the bottom of this page.
Abstract
Since the mid-1990s, Tibetan areas in China have experienced one of the most rapid shifts from rural to urban livelihoods in the nation. Pastoral n omadic communities in particular are undergoing a shift from subsistence li velihoods on pastures and relocating in greater numbers to urban centers to access housing, schools, healthcare, markets, and other resources.&nb sp;These types of mobility are enabled and structured by state forms of bel onging to place, but are also importantly informed by cultural logics of be longing that remain rooted in rural Tibetan home communities. How do Tibeta n individuals coming from pastoral nomadic backgrounds position themselves to access new opportunities based in urban centers while still retaining ti es to home? How does the experience of relocation reshape their senses of b elonging to Tibetan home communities?
Based on fieldwork in eastern T ibet, Chengdu, and Beijing, Dr. Washul will present her research on “t ranslocal” forms of mobility and the place-based identities that shape and are shaped by these regional relocations in the contemporary setting of Tib etan communities in China. Her talk will be followed by a conversation with Ethan Goldings incorporating his experiences promoting sustainability, gre en development and social entrepreneurship in the region.
Bio s
Eveline Washul is Assistant Professor of Tibetan Stud ies in the Department of Central Eurasian Studies at Indiana University and Adjunct Assistant Professor in the Department of Anthropology. Prior to jo ining IU, she was the Director of the Modern Tibetan Studies Program at Col umbia University. She received her Ph.D. in Cultural Anthropology and Tibet an Studies from Indiana University in 2018. Her research combines ethnograp hy with Tibetan historical sources from the 12th to 20th centuries to study the particularities of Tibetan relationships to places and how these shape the transition from rural to urban livelihoods in the late-socialist refor m period in the People’s Republic of China.
Ethan Goldings is an independent scholar with decades of experience as a development consultant . Beginning in 1982, he worked with Tibetans in western China to innovate w ays in which their cultural resources can be used to strengthen community-b ased organizations. Recently he has been collaborating on projects to promo te regenerative agriculture, sustainable animal husbandry and rural green e nterprise in and beyond the region.
Zoom link
Join Zoom Meetinghttps://rutgers.zoom.
us/j/91920811339?pwd=d0EyaWcrcnlMdklZaVNpZHBRR3hyQT09
Join by SIP
Meeting ID: 919 2081 1339 Passwor
d: 235522
This is co-sponsored by Rutgers Global-China Office. This is part of Lou isa Schein's class, "Anthropology of China." It's open to the public. The Z oom link is at the bottom of this page.
Abstract
Since the mid-1990s, Tibetan areas in China have experienced one of the most rapid shifts from rural to urban livelihoods in the nation. Pastoral n omadic communities in particular are undergoing a shift from subsistence li velihoods on pastures and relocating in greater numbers to urban centers to access housing, schools, healthcare, markets, and other resources.&nb sp;These types of mobility are enabled and structured by state forms of bel onging to place, but are also importantly informed by cultural logics of be longing that remain rooted in rural Tibetan home communities. How do Tibeta n individuals coming from pastoral nomadic backgrounds position themselves to access new opportunities based in urban centers while still retaining ti es to home? How does the experience of relocation reshape their senses of b elonging to Tibetan home communities?
Based on fieldwork in eastern T ibet, Chengdu, and Beijing, Dr. Washul will present her research on “t ranslocal” forms of mobility and the place-based identities that shape and are shaped by these regional relocations in the contemporary setting of Tib etan communities in China. Her talk will be followed by a conversation with Ethan Goldings incorporating his experiences promoting sustainability, gre en development and social entrepreneurship in the region.
Bio s
Eveline Washul is Assistant Professor of Tibetan Stud ies in the Department of Central Eurasian Studies at Indiana University and Adjunct Assistant Professor in the Department of Anthropology. Prior to jo ining IU, she was the Director of the Modern Tibetan Studies Program at Col umbia University. She received her Ph.D. in Cultural Anthropology and Tibet an Studies from Indiana University in 2018. Her research combines ethnograp hy with Tibetan historical sources from the 12th to 20th centuries to study the particularities of Tibetan relationships to places and how these shape the transition from rural to urban livelihoods in the late-socialist refor m period in the People’s Republic of China.
Ethan Goldings is an independent scholar with decades of experience as a development consultant . Beginning in 1982, he worked with Tibetans in western China to innovate w ays in which their cultural resources can be used to strengthen community-b ased organizations. Recently he has been collaborating on projects to promo te regenerative agriculture, sustainable animal husbandry and rural green e nterprise in and beyond the region.
Zoom link
Join Zoom Meetinghttps://rutgers.zoom.
us/j/91920811339?pwd=d0EyaWcrcnlMdklZaVNpZHBRR3hyQT09
Join by SIP
Meeting ID: 919 2081 1339 Passwor
d: 235522