Reminder: The City Talks: Neilesh Bose, "Beyond the Postcolonial City?" / Panel: "The Bengal Lounge Debate"

Download File
Dear Friends of SJS,

THE CITY TALKS




Fall 2016

Beyond the Postcolonial City: Rethinking the Imperial Legacies of Contemporary Urbanism


Organized by the UVic Committee for Urban Studies


September 29

Beyond the Postcolonial City? India, Indigeneity, and the Modern City


Neilesh Bose

Canada Research Chair in Global and Comparative History, Department of History, University of Victoria

Panel Discussion: The Bengal Lounge Debate—History, Empire, and the Contemporary City

Panelists include Lincoln Shlensky (University of Victoria), Sikata Banerjee (University of Victoria), and Ben Isitt (Victoria City Council), facilitated by Neilesh Bose (University of Victoria)

Thursday, September 29, 2016

Legacy Art Gallery, 630 Yates... Street

Doors Open at 7:00pm

Lecture Begins at 7:30pm

Bio


Neilesh Bose’s research and teaching interests include the history of modern South Asia (the Indian subcontinent), the British Empire, decolonization, and the history of diasporas and migrations. In addition to working on local histories grounded in requisite languages, archives, texts, and practices in South Asia, he simultaneously teaches and writes about the intersection between local histories and global processes, such as modern empire, decolonization, and comparative processes of nostalgia and memorialization. Additionally, he hold interests in theater, performance studies, and popular culture. Neilesh’s first book examined the intersections between linguistic identity and Muslim religious community formation in late colonial Bengal. His current project explores the history of religious reform in colonial India and the ways that Indian religious reformers studied local religious practices in the service of a broader universalism. He earned a PhD in South Asian history at Tufts University in 2009 and taught at the University of North Texas in Denton, TX, and St. John’s University in Queens, NY, before joining the University of Victoria in 2015 as Tier II Canada Research Chair in Global and Comparative History.

Abstract

This City Talks event will consist of a presentation by Neilesh Bose followed by a panel discussion on the implications of closing the Bengal Lounge for rethinking the imperial legacies of contemporary urbanism in Victoria, British Columbia. Neilesh's presentation will offer an overview of the role of company-states and empires in modern urban history, from a look at the origins of divided urban spaces in seventeenth-century Company India to their transformations in tandem with a growing colonial order in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century India. With a focus on London and Calcutta as linked urban spaces in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, this presentation introduces how the development of urban space relates to modern science, public health and sanitation, and the modern conception of race, as well as the global circulation of value through real estate speculation. Finally, the presentation will conclude by noting how the urban space of Calcutta in Company (1757 – 1857) and colonial (1858 – 1947) India transformed from a place of opulence and wealth, as well as geo-political strategy and power, into a model of racial segregation.

This is a free public event at the Legacy Art Gallery ~ 630 Yates Street

-------------------

Run by the Committee for Urban Studies at the University of Victoria, The City Talks is a free public lecture series featuring distinguished scholars drawn from the University of Victoria, across Canada, and beyond. The theme for the Fall 2016 series is: Beyond the Postcolonial City: Rethinking the Imperial Legacies of Contemporary Urbanism.

For more information, please visit www.TheCityTalks.ca




--
Margo MatwychukDirector
Social Justice Studies ProgramUniversity of Victoriaweb.uvic.ca/socialjustice/@UVicSJS on TwitterUVicSJS on FacebookUVicSJS on YouTube
You have received this email because you signed up for the UVic Social Justice Studies email list. To be removed respond to this email with "REMOVE" in the subject line.

Add comment


Security code
Refresh

Login Form