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Seminar | Tracing the Asian roots of the Malagasy | Alexander Adelaar

KITLV, Herta Mohr Building, Room 1.30 Witte Singel 27A, Leiden

In this talk I discuss the Indonesian origins of the people of Madagascar. Scholars from various disciplines have reached seemingly contradictory conclusions about the place where these people come from.

Seminar | Colonial heritage engagement in postcolonial Indonesian cities | Remco Vermeulen

KITLV, Herta Mohr Building, room 1.30 & online via Zoom Witte Singel 27A, Leiden

In different cities throughout Indonesia, particularly young people are frequenting Dutch colonial urban spaces, whether individual buildings or vast public spaces. They stroll along the local government-initiated pedestrianized streets in Kota Tua, the historical inner city of Jakarta, hang out at former post offices which have been redeveloped into multifunctional gathering places in Yogyakarta or Surabaya through private initiative, or have fashionable photoshoots in front of crumbling façades in Kota Lama, Semarang to fill their social media accounts.

Seminar | Colonial whispers, indigenous voices: Intertextual legacy of Dutch and Aceh Literature | Myra Abubakar

KITLV, Herta Mohr Building, room 1.30 & online via Zoom Witte Singel 27A, Leiden

Forms of female resistance and heroism are significant themes in literature on and in Southeast Asia. This seminar examines how Dutch colonial literature and historical records depict a prominent female leader and resistance figure from Aceh, Indonesia, highlighting the complex portrayal of resistance and heroism in colonial and indigenous narratives.

Seminar | Facts care about colonial feelings: The Gobang-Rapport and the practice of quantifying colonial subject | Gani Jaelani

KITLV, Herta Mohr Building, room 1.30 & online via Zoom Witte Singel 27A, Leiden

In an extraordinary meeting of the Raad van Indie on October 26th, 1932 which resulted in a reduction in money circulation as a response to the sugar crisis in the Dutch East Indies, the Director of Binnenlandsch Bestuur, A. Mühlenfeld, made the statement that 2.5 cents a day was sufficient for one native person to feed themselves.

Inward Outward | Revisiting Witnessing & the Archive: A conversation with Tina Campt & Mohanad Yaqubi

Framer Framed Amsterdam

Inward Outward investigates the status of moving image and sound archives as they intertwine with questions of coloniality, identity and race. Here, the archive is understood as resting in both physical structures (e.g. national, regional, local or personal) and less tangible ‘cultural archives’ (e.g. beliefs, knowledge, collective memories). Through a symposium series, publication, workshops and other events, we bring theory and practice into dialogue by drawing together people from different professional and creative backgrounds.

UUKS Seminar | Women weaving indigenous Karen ontologies and modern science | Sunita Kwangta & Charlotte Clare

KITLV, Herta Mohr Building, room 1.30 & online via Zoom Witte Singel 27A, Leiden

Myanmar, a country rich in biodiversity, is facing severe threats from escalating armed conflict and environmental degradation, especially following the 2021 military coup. Indigenous lands are particularly vulnerable, suffering from deforestation, unregulated mining, land grabs, and invasive infrastructure projects that devastate ecosystems.

Book discussion | Merdeka: The struggle for Indonesian independence and the Republic’s precarious rise, 1945–1950

KITLV, Herta Mohr Building, room 1.30 & online via Zoom Witte Singel 27A, Leiden

Under the slogan ‘Merdeka!’ the Republic of Indonesia rushed into a battle for independence – a struggle of which no one could predict the outcome. Harry Poeze and Henk Schulte Nordholt provide a new narrative about the revolution, one that focuses not only on the fight against the Dutch but also on the precarious rise of the Republic

PhD defence | Becoming a ‘domestic worker’ or a ‘trailing spouse’: Migrant women, space, body and belonging in Singapore | Lennie Geerlings

Academiegebouw, Leiden University & via livestream

Lennie Geerlings' (KITLV/Leiden University) dissertation, titled Becoming a 'domestic worker' or a 'trailing spouse': Migrant women, space, body and belonging in Singapore comprises an ethnography of the ways in which female migrants attempt to belong in the 'global' city Singapore.