New Frontiers of Eurasian Comparisons: Practices, Opportunities, Dirty Truths

New Frontiers of Eurasian Comparisons: Practices, Opportunities, Dirty Truths

Wiebke Denecke - Professor of Chinese, Japanese, and Comparative Literature, Boston University

Thursday, May 5, 2016 - 5:30pm to 7:00pm
Linsly-Chittenden Hall, Room 104 See map
63 High Street
New Haven, CT 06511

In the midst of sweeping new paradigms of “global history,” “world literature,” or “world philology,” what specifically can Eurasian comparisons contribute to our understanding of the premodern world? This lecture analyzes practices of Eurasian comparisons over the past decades, asking what kind of work has been done, who has engaged in this work and to what effect. It then reflects on the glass ceilings and inequalities involved in comparisons of premodern Eurasia, and addresses the ethical challenges and responsibilities that are at stake in doing this kind of work. Throughout, the lecture throws light on how in particular the emerging study of the interconnections between various East Asian polities might shape future Eurasian comparisons in a way that can energize, even reconfigure the study of Western antiquity.


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Co-sponsored by the Yale Initiative for the Study of Antiquity & the Premodern World
Tags: 
Region: 
China, Japan, Transregional