Silent Voices: The Struggle of Memories of the 1976 Massacre in Bangkok

Silent Voices: The Struggle of Memories of the 1976 Massacre in Bangkok

6th December 2022.
With Thongchai Winichakul.

For forty years after the massacre at a university in Bangkok, the victims, perpetrators, and Thai society at large have been haunted by the tragedy because they find it hard to voice out their memories due to several reasons, including the cruelty of the dominant historical ideology. Their silence is not forgetting, but the inarticulate memories.

Location: A6-006
Time: 17.00 – 18.30

Rising UAE-Indonesia Relations: Geo-Strategic Influence and the  Diplomacy of Religious Moderation

Rising UAE-Indonesia Relations: Geo-Strategic Influence and the Diplomacy of Religious Moderation

2nd November 2022.
With Greg Fealy.

Over the past decade, diplomatic and economic relations between Indonesia and the United Arab Emirates have strengthened markedly.  Emirati trade with and investment in Indonesia is at record levels and a recently signed comprehensive economic partnership should lift this further.  Moreover, Indonesia’s President Joko Widodo and UAE’s President Mohamed bin Zayed al Nahyan have developed what appears to be close personal relations, even naming mosques and roads in their respective countries for each other and agreeing to cooperate across a wide array of fields, including anti-radicalisation and reform of international structures and institutions.  What explains this recent rise in bilateral relations?  This talk will explore several facets of the relationship, giving particular attention to dovetailing of Indonesian and Emirati interests on promoting an image of religious moderation and the geo-strategic motivations that impel closer economic ties.

Greg Fealy is emeritus professor of Indonesian Politics in the Department of Political and Social Change at The Australian National University in Canberra.  He has written extensively on Islamic politics in Indonesia, as well as radical movements, contemporary religious culture and religious diplomacy in Southeast Asia.

Location: A6-005
Time: 17.15 – 18.30

 

“It’s not about you”: From Research to Story in the Public Humanities

“It’s not about you”: From Research to Story in the Public Humanities

3rd October 2022.
With Tzy Jiun Tan.

Public Humanities is the work of engaging diverse publics in reflecting on heritage, traditions, and history. In a time of disinformation campaigns, competitive attention economy, and abundance of entertainment media, public historians are often confronted with the challenge of making knowledge consumable for the wider public, while also maintaining professional standards. Thus, in recent years, historians have experimented with different narrative outputs, including biography, fiction, documentary, and podcasts.

This talk draws from Tzy Jiun’s research on the ”Cold War” in Southeast Asia. It explores how craft and research intersects in the production of a narrative podcast. What does “authenticity” mean in this context? What is the relationship between narrative and what happened? What are the tensions between storytelling and scholarship? More widely, this talk considers the challenges of producing history for audiences outside of the academy.

Location: C2-329