Writing Sri Lanka graduate student conference
April 23, 2022
9:30 am
Kahin Center
The recent arrests and detentions of Sri Lankan writers, bloggers and poets form part of a long history of extrajudicial detention which elucidates the ever-present stakes of writing about Sri Lanka, or simply Writing Sri Lanka. This graduate student conference aims to collectively reflect on how these stakes surface in Sri Lanka Studies research, regardless of genre or discipline. Who wields the power to determine which writings about Sri Lanka are legitimate and authentic? Who determines which writings are benign to the state and which writings pose a threat? Under what circumstances are some writings deemed dangerous or illicit, in the guises of patriotism, security, or even the global war on terror? What power do words have—whether in literature or academia, across different languages and genres—to question, critique, and surpass how the state and any other institutions draw and enforce these distinctions?
Panel 1: Writing the Sri Lankan Nation
A Comparative Analysis of the Coverage of Rabindranath Tagore’s third Trip to Ceylon in 1934
Chamila Somirathna, Sinhala, University of Kelaniya
Resisting the Spectacular: Ethical Approaches to Engaging the 2004 Indian Ocean Tsunami
Soraya Zarook, English, University of California, Riverside
Queer Voices in Post-War Transitional Sri Lanka
Thiyagaraja Waradas, Social and Policy Sciences, University of Bath
Discussant: Anindita Banerjee, Comparative Literature, Cornell University
Panel 2: Writing Sri Lankan History
“Harmful” Genres in Sri Lankan Literary History: Revisiting Martin Wickramasinghe’s Bavataraṇaya
Crystal Baines , English, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
From Kavikāra to Folk Singers: Sinhala Nationalism and the Folklorisation of Kavi
Tom Peterson, Music, SOAS, University of London
Discussant: Viranjini Munasinghe, Anthropology, Cornell University
Co-sponsored by the American Institute for Sri Lankan Studies
Additional Information
Program
Einaudi Center for International Studies
South Asia Program