主题 |
蛤蜊、泥滩与采蛤少女:柔性海岸如何书写历史 |
TOPIC |
The Clam, the Mud, and the Girl: How Soft Coasts Made History |
主讲人 |
罗安清,美国加州大学圣克鲁兹分校人类学杰出教授、丹麦奥胡斯大学人类学教授 |
SPEAKER |
Anna Lowenhaupt Tsing, Distinguished Professor of Anthropology at the University of California, Santa Cruz, USA; Professor of Anthropology at Aarhus University, Denmark |
主持人 |
叶敬忠,yh86银河国际人文与发展学院国家级人才计划特聘教授 |
CHAIR |
Ye Jingzhong, Distinguished Professor of China’s National Talent Program at College of Humanities and Development Studies, China Agricultural University |
语 言:英文
时 间:2026年3月19日(周四)14:00-16:00,北京时间
地 点:yh86银河国际(西校区)人文与发展学院CIAD报告厅
交 通:东区师生将安排专门车辆接送,东西校区乘车地点均为校车出发地
东区出发时间:13:15 西区返回时间:17:00
联系人:梁彬,电话:17610975258,邮箱:binliang021@163.com
LANGUAGE: English
TIME: Beijing 14:00-16:00, Thursday, 19 March 2026
VENUE: CIAD Auditorium, West Campus of China Agricultural University
TRANSPORTATION: Bus service will be provided for staff and students from the east campus. Pick-up points on both east and west campuses will be the same as those used for the regular university shuttle bus.
Departure time from the east campus: 13:15 Departure time from the west campus: 17:00
CONTACT: Bin Liang, tel: 17610975258, email: binliang021@163.com


讲座概要:
At the interface between land and water, history is made. Wetlands – so often a target for elimination – have also supported civilizations. In Southeast Asia before colonial rule, “soft coasts” supported a maritime world in which diverse peoples were connected by trade, kinship, and fealty. The coming of European ideas of property and governance led to land reclamation: the destruction of the wetlands that supported this political ecology. Reclamation continues in postcolonial guises. But just what are its social and ecological effects? What’s left?
This talk is a “teaser” for a collectively written book-in-progress by researchers from UC Santa Cruz’s Center for Southeast Asian Coastal Interactions. Besides Tsing, the group includes Gillian Bogart, Kirsten Keller, Joe Klein, Zahirah S., and Megan Thomas. Using materials from our respective field sites and archives, we tell the story of maritime Southeast Asia through wetlands – and those who live there. Wetlands hide pirates, frustrate urban planners, and become the raw material for private property. Muddy places are also sites of more-than-human refuge – and the medium for ethnographically and historically rich storytelling.
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