Report on the International Conference on Origins and Migrations among Tibeto-Burman Speakers of the Extended Eastern Himalaya
An international, interdisciplinary conference on origins and migrations among Tibeto-Burman speakers of the “Extended Eastern Himalaya” was staged by the Humboldt University Institute for Asian and African Studies over three glorious spring days in Berlin this May.1 The stage was initially s...
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
2024
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Online Access: | https://hdl.handle.net/10356/177746 |
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Institution: | Nanyang Technological University |
Language: | English |
Summary: | An international, interdisciplinary conference on origins and migrations among
Tibeto-Burman speakers of the “Extended Eastern Himalaya” was staged by the
Humboldt University Institute for Asian and African Studies over three glorious
spring days in Berlin this May.1
The stage was initially set by F.K. Lehman (Chit Hlaing; Univ. of Illinois) and
Robbins Burling (Univ. of Michigan), who lost no time in dispensing with the
popularly-held view that an entire population (nation, tribe, etc.) might be said to
have “originated” in one place and “migrated” en masse to another. Instead, they
both argued, places of “origin” and putative migration routes alike are as subject
to reinterpretation and change as the populations themselves are to mixture with
neighbouring groups and shifts in status, identity and group-affiliations over
space and over time. Lehman’s and Burling’s themes surfaced repeatedly
throughout the remainder of the conference as participants grappled from a
variety of perspectives with the nature and reliability of various types of evidence
The conference convenors Toni Huber (Tibetan
studies, Humboldt University) and Stuart Blackburn (Folklore, SOAS) assembled
a diverse field of presenters, discussants and other participants from a wide range
of disciplines – including folklorists, Tibetologists, (other) anthropologists,
historians, geographers, and linguists – with the goal of addressing the vexing
twin problems of “origins” and “migrations” among T-B speakers in an area
stretching from central Arunachal Pradesh to upland Southeast Asia and
Southwest China. Despite the diversity of approaches represented and the breadth
and complexity of the field addressed, the conference was marked throughout by
fascinating and often unexpected convergences of viewpoint and a uniformly
collegial and collaborative atmosphere. This was certainly due in no small part to
the evidently high competence of the conference organizers and their assistants
(mainly Humboldt University graduate students), who ferried participants
efficiently but in an always relaxed manner from hotel to venue, room to
restaurant, and discussion to discussion, and in the end brought off a logistically
challenging event without even the slightest hitch. |
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