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Doing Theory in Southeast Asia
Doing Theory in Southeast Asia

This open-access database aims to provide a platform for students, teachers, researchers, artists, and curators to exchange critical ideas about diverse Southeast Asian cultures.

The website features a table that lists intellectual, critical, and creative works about different Southeast Asian contexts categorized according to author, medium, and field. It includes annotations about academic journals in the region. Lastly, the section ‘Archipelagic Juxtapositions’ explores emergent topics, which uncover possible connections among seemingly unrelated objects, conditions, and processes pertaining to myth, geopolitics, art, music, and the environment.

‘Doing Theory in Southeast Asia’ was supported by a Hong Kong Research Grants Council (RGC) General Research Fund (GRF), together with a Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK) Faculty of Arts Direct Grant.

HankerM·seasia.crs.cuhk.edu.hk·
Doing Theory in Southeast Asia
Tools of the Trade: the Way Forward
Tools of the Trade: the Way Forward

On March 14-16, 2023, immediately prior to the Association for Asian Studies annual meeting in Boston, Harvard will host an international conference on the transition from print to digital tools, databases, and platforms in Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Vietnamese and Buddhist studies, sponsored by the several research institutes and libraries concerned with East Asia at Harvard.

The Conference will have plenary sessions, at which leaders of libraries and research centers in China, Taiwan, Japan, Korea, Vietnam, Europe, North America, and Buddhist studies will address their respective strategies for development and which we hope will spark comparisons and contrasts, mutual learning, and considerations of improving connectivity across national boundaries. There will be workshops which discuss new technologies and methods that are not language specific. There will be center presentations at which leading digital humanities/scholarship centers and libraries introduce the works they have created. Finally, there will be exemplary projects to introduce particular tools, platforms, databases, and platforms. For workshops and exemplary projects we expect to have a combination of invited presenters and a selection of those who respond to the call-for-presentations.

The Rationale for the Conference

The invention of printing extended the dissemination of tools to support research—dictionaries, bibliographies, atlases, text corpora, and more. One might say that the modern research library is the most important of all “tools.” Yet it dates only to the late nineteenth century in the US and later for East Asian Studies. The demand for new research tools began when the turn away from traditional training led to a need for new ways of discovering information beyond the texts. The Harvard-Yenching Institute Sinological Index Series (1931-50) of 64 titles ranging from the Confucian classics to Japanese scholarship of the 20th century was the first of these new research tools. Through the 1990s there were major investments of scholarly time in the creation of a variety of print tools to support modern scholarship and some began to be published digitally.

Today, the bulk of investment in tools for East Asian studies goes into the development of digital technologies and less and less goes into research tools in print. Mirroring these trends, usage at research libraries has become overwhelmingly digital. This conference begins from a recognition of the long history of research tool building and proceeds to ask how the advent of digital technologies is changing the nature of the tools themselves and user expectations. What are the changes in skill sets required for the developers of research tools to meet the shift from print to digital? What do digital technologies allow that print media did not? Does the low marginal cost of wide dissemination change publication strategies? Can political and linguistic barriers be overcome so that different databases and platforms can be productively linked together? What are the funding and institutional models necessary to sustain research tools in a digital environment? These are questions that concern us all.

HankerM·fccs-dci.github.io·
Tools of the Trade: the Way Forward
Project Himalayan Art
Project Himalayan Art
Project Himalayan Art is a three-part initiative that offers comprehensive resources for teaching about Tibetan, Himalayan, and Inner Asian art and cultures, with a focus on cross-cultural exchange. This dynamic project serves as a content hub for teaching on Asia across a wide range of disciplines, including history, religion, art, and anthropology.The project’s goal is to encourage integration of Tibetan and Himalayan art and cultures into liberal arts curricula, expanding their inclusion in Asian Studies courses. We seek to remedy their underrepresentation and the lack of introductory resources for teaching about the region.
HankerM·projecthimalayanart.rubinmuseum.org·
Project Himalayan Art
South Asia Open Archives on JSTOR
South Asia Open Archives on JSTOR
South Asia Open Archives (SAOA) is a collaborative, open-access resource for research, teaching, and learning about South Asia. The member-driven collection includes historical and contemporary sources from and about the region in arts, humanities, social sciences, history of science, and other fields in English and other South Asian languages. With items in dozens of languages (including thousands in English, Bengali, Urdu, and Tamil) distributed across multiple themes (including Art History & Music, Caste & Social Structure, History of Science, Language & Literature, Social, Poitical & Economic History, and Women & Gender), and compiled into useful research collections (including official reports from Bihar and Orissa, the Bombay Presidency, the Madras Presidency, the Indian Census, and Newspaper Reports) the South Asia Open Archives offers a rich and growing collection of historical and contemporary sources for researching, teaching, and learning about South Asia. Developed through collaborative, member-driven efforts to make in-demand research materials digitally available for use by anyone in the world with an internet connection, the South Asia Open Archives represents a novel and innovative approach to post-custodial digital collection development.
HankerM·jstor.org·
South Asia Open Archives on JSTOR
SmartHanzi
SmartHanzi
SmartHanzi is a free yet professional grade tool for students and anyone wishing to read real Chinese texts (web, PDF) even with a limited level in Chinese. Parse and lookup SmartHanzi provides immediate access to unknown words. Although it is not a learning tool, it shows links to related words (also in, contained) and character details: stroke order, character series (Kangxi, etymology). With this perspective beyond immediate usage, one gets naturally familiar with words and characters. Besides recognizing the correspondence between simplified and traditional variants, SmartHanzi also recognizes multiple traditional variants. For instance, searching 真 (or finding 真 in a text) will show both 真 and 眞, according to what is present in selected dictionaries. Or it will recognize equally well 為 / 爲 or 眾 / 衆. Tests Some versions include tests based on HSK levels as a way to check one’s progress. Progress is shown on 12 months. Tests are short and errors reviewed first. One can choose longer tests, or to review unsure words or check supposedly known words. Etymology Etymology is not only for scholars or experts. Along centuries, Chinese writing has developed a number of reference points, reasonable or simply traditional, well known by most Chinese. Se non è vero, è ben trovato. Trying to “learn” Chinese writing without leveraging this invaluable assistance would be an unreasonable challenge. Etymological indications and character series emphasize these reference points. Dictionaries As a free application, SmartHanzi offers a smaller choice than major commercial applications, but remains globally best in class for the intended usage. A first demo (PoC = Proof of Concept) of “Dictionnaire Couvreur” (Chinese-French, classical Chinese) is for those more interested in Chinese culture, since modern language still largely employ elements of ancient Chinese. User Interface SmartHanzi is available for PC, Mac and mobile: - Windows and Mac versions are most effective and comfortable for professional use. - Smartphones offer fast and flexible reading. - Tablet landscape mode (horizontal) can be used either in full screen (split window like on laptop) or multiple applications: the application on one half with original reader on the other half. Download - Windows: download from www.smarthanzi.net is recommended. A Microsoft Store version is also available but at the moment it is not at the same level. - Mac: same version on www.smarthanzi.net and Mac App store. Download from www.smarthanzi.net is recommended for frequent users. - Android: Play Store (or Amazon). - iPhone, iPad: App Store DDB Access DDB Access is similar to SmartHanzi for collaborative projects DDB (Digital Dictionary of Buddhism) and CJKV-E (Classical Chinese). Full dictionary entries for DDB and CJKV-E are much more detailed in DDB Access than short definitions in SmartHanzi. Anyone can access 20 full entries per day.
HankerM·smarthanzi.net·
SmartHanzi
The International Chinese Studies Virtual Events Clearing-House
The International Chinese Studies Virtual Events Clearing-House
In spring 2020, as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic, China Studies around the world moved online. One unanticipated consequence of this unfortunate situation is that it is now possible to attend events regardless of one’s location. The China Studies Virtual Events Clearing-house has been created to share information about upcoming online events with the broader China studies community. The clearing-house was created and is maintained by the Fairbank Center for Chinese Studies at Harvard University. We rely on our colleagues around the world to include their upcoming events; the catalog is not intended to be comprehensive. You can use the catalog to view a list of all upcoming events, or search for events by keyword, institution, or speaker. Since many online events are being recorded for asynchronous broadcast, you may also want to search through past events. (Past events search is available in table view only.) . For the time being, we are limiting the catalog to events sponsored by universities or China Studies centers. If you would like to receive credentials to add your events to the catalog, please send an email using your university or other professional email to fairbankcenter@fas.harvard.edu. The Fairbank Center is providing this clearing-house as a service to the field. We do not take responsibility for any of the events listed here, and unfortunately cannot respond to queries. Please contact the organizer of the specific event directly.
·datastudio.google.com·
The International Chinese Studies Virtual Events Clearing-House
Visualizing Cultures
Visualizing Cultures
Visualizing Cultures was launched at MIT in 2002 to explore the potential of the Web for developing innovative image-driven scholarship and learning. The VC mission is to use new technology and hitherto inaccessible visual materials to reconstruct the past as people of the time visualized the world (or imagined it to be).
·visualizingcultures.mit.edu·
Visualizing Cultures
Virtual Shanghai Project | Virtual Shanghai
Virtual Shanghai Project | Virtual Shanghai
Virtual Shanghai is a research and resource platform on the history of Shanghai from the mid-nineteenth century to nowadays. It incorporates various sets of documents: essays, original documents, photographs, maps, quantitative data, etc. The objective of the project is to write a history of the city through the combined mobilization of these various types of documents. The implementation of this approach relies on the use of digital and GIS technologies. On the research side, the platform offers various ways to step into the history of the city and follow its course at different levels over time. On the resource side, apart from providing original textual and visual documents, it develops a powerful cartographic tool for spatial analysis and real-time mapping (to be upgraded soon). The authors of the present project suscribe to the idea of sharing scholarship and research tools for the benefit of scholars, students, and citizens at large.
·virtualshanghai.net·
Virtual Shanghai Project | Virtual Shanghai
Formosa
Formosa
This digital library gathers together a large body of primarily European and American images of the island of Taiwan – called "Formosa" by foreign visitors in the nineteenth century – and its various peoples, natural resources, wildlife, and built environment. These textual and visual representations, maps, and linguistic data were originally published in European and North American books and journals during the 19th century, but are not easily accessible to those interested in the history of Taiwan today.
·rdc.reed.edu·
Formosa
Asian Historical Architecture: A Photographic Survey
Asian Historical Architecture: A Photographic Survey
Welcome to www.orientalarchitecture.com, a photographic survey of Asia's architectural heritage. Here you can view over 40,000 photos of 1,450 sites in twenty-three countries, with background information and virtual tours. This website is a collection of photos from many different contributors.
·orientalarchitecture.com·
Asian Historical Architecture: A Photographic Survey
Orientalistický Expres – Asociace českých orientalistů
Orientalistický Expres – Asociace českých orientalistů
Orientalistický Expres, z. s. je sdružením českých současných i bývalých studentů a dalších členů akademické obce, jejichž badatelský zájem se soustředí či soustředil na některý z regionů Orientu v nejširším možném významu tohoto slova.
·orientalistickyexpres.cz·
Orientalistický Expres – Asociace českých orientalistů
Southeast Asia Digital Library
Southeast Asia Digital Library
The Southeast Asia Digital Library (SEADL) exists to provide educators, students, scholars and members of the general public with a wide variety of materials published or otherwise produced in Southeast Asia. Drawn largely from the collections of universities and scholars in this region, SEADL contains digital facsimiles of books and manuscripts, as well as multimedia materials and searchable indexes of additional Southeast Asian resources. Nations represented in the collection include Brunei, Cambodia, East Timor, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, and Vietnam.
HankerM·sea.lib.niu.edu·
Southeast Asia Digital Library
Digital Humanities Japan
Digital Humanities Japan
Digital Humanities Japan is an international and interdisciplinary community of scholars and professionals interested in working with digital methods, tools, and resources for Japanese Studies. As a collective, we aim to foster collaboration between those with similar interests by promoting scholarly dialogue, holding workshops to develop technical skills and project ideas, and creating a central platform for the sharing of resources related to digital methods.
·dhjapan.org·
Digital Humanities Japan
Nitartha
Nitartha
Founded in 1994 by Dzogchen Ponlop Rinpoche, Nitartha International uses modern technologies, pedagogies, and museum practices to preserve the timeless wisdom of Asia. Our specialty is in the teachings of the Nyingma and Kagyu schools of Tibet. Our vision and sincere mission since 1994 has been to preserve these texts, teachings, and cultural works, and make them available to as wide an audience as possible so that countless people may benefit from their wisdom. Nitartha International is the umbrella organization for a variety of activities under the Nitartha name. - Nitartha software development provides Tibetan language software. Our store is available here as well. - Nitartha Dictionary Tools provides an online Tibetan-English translation dictionary. - Nitartha Institute provides advanced Buddhist studies curriculum in English and other languages. -Nitartha Translation Network makes available Tibetan texts in translation into English and other languages. -Nitartha international publications provides both Tibetan-language publications for use in modern-day shedras, and advanced translations for the modern minds in other countries. - Nitartha Digital Library is an extensive collection of Tibetan-language texts and provides digital publications and search of the Nitartha collection.
HankerM·nitartha.net·
Nitartha
Archive | Centre for Studies in Social Sciences Calcutta
Archive | Centre for Studies in Social Sciences Calcutta
Centre for Studies in Social Sciences, Calcutta, The Centre for Studies in Social Sciences is a premier research institute in Eastern India, the major areas of research in the Centre is addressing the social, cultural and economic problems of South Asia, the institute has a library and an archive of documents related to South Asia and the archive primarily focused on documentation of non-conventional historical documents relating to modern Bengal. The digital archives of the Urban History Documentation Archives of the Centre for Studies in Social Sciences available for open access: Most of the printed documents archived by the CSSSC are available online for unrestricted access in collaboration with University of Heidelberg, The Endangered Archives Programme of the British Library and the Center for Research Libraries. The process of uploading of rest of the content is moving ahead and they will be available either on CrossAsia or on Endangered Archives Programme server soon. Early Bengali Periodicals on CrossAsia Digital Collection of the University of Heidelberg. Early Assamese Periodicals on CrossAsia Digital Collection of the University of Heidelberg. Early Bengali books on CrossAsia Digital Collection of the University of Heidelberg. English language books from British India. Manuscripts, official records, books and journals in Eastern Indian languages digitised from public libraries in remote areas in West Bengal and available from the server of the Endangered Archives Programme: Go to the archives. Bengali books digitised from public libraries in remote areas in West Bengal and available from the server of the Endangered Archives Programme: Go to the archives. Online archive of Amrita Bazar Patrika (1870 to 1949) on Endangered Archives programme server: Go to the archives. The Project EAP341 has been nominated for World Summit for Information Society Award 2015 Textual Documents in Microfilm Visual Archive History of Advertisement in Bengal Private Papers and Special Collections Documentation and Dissemination Exhibition of Visual Materials Photo Gallery 1
HankerM·cssscal.org·
Archive | Centre for Studies in Social Sciences Calcutta
Tibetan Studies Resources | UNC University Libraries
Tibetan Studies Resources | UNC University Libraries
This guide is intended to assist researchers looking for information about Tibetan studies. It also provides links to some resources and information outside of the UNC-Chapel Hill Libraries' collections. In this guide (and in the tabs above), you'll find: Books and Articles: Find books, articles, and relevant databases about Tibet studies. Internet Resources: Find internet resources about Tibet studies. Primary Sources: Find primary sources about Tibet studies.
HankerM·guides.lib.unc.edu·
Tibetan Studies Resources | UNC University Libraries
Asian Center | University of the Philippines Diliman
Asian Center | University of the Philippines Diliman
The Asian Center is the University of the Philippines' only unit with a regional area of specialization and one of the colleges in the university's Diliman campus. Established in 1955 as the Institute of Asian Studies, the Asian Center offers graduate-level multidisciplinary academic programs on Asian Studies and on Philippine Studies.
HankerM·ac.upd.edu.ph·
Asian Center | University of the Philippines Diliman
New Mandala | Australian National University
New Mandala | Australian National University
New Mandala provides anecdote, analysis and new perspectives on Southeast Asia. It devotes its attention to the politics and societies of Southeast Asian countries, and their connections with one another. New Mandala has a proud record of contribution to scholarly and popular debates and played a pioneering role in the digitisation of Southeast Asian studies. New Mandala is hosted by the Australian National University’s (ANU) Coral Bell School of Asia Pacific Affairs in the College of Asia and the Pacific. New Mandala was established in June 2006, with co-founder Dr Nicholas Farrelly editing and running the site until 2015. James Giggacher edited the site from May 2015 to March 2017. Liam Gammon took over in April 2017 and was the editor until July 2019, followed by Dr Rebecca Gidley. New Mandala was first established to focus on Thailand and Myanmar but has since expanded to cover the entire Southeast Asian region, and even surrounding provinces and countries. You can read more about New Mandala’s co-founders’ reflections on the history of the site upon its 10th birthday in 2016.
HankerM·newmandala.org·
New Mandala | Australian National University