GAN Research Groups

group/gendering-asia-network

Gendering Asia Network
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GAN Research Groups

 

Five groups in the Gendering Asia Network are working within a common framework consisting of two mainelements. Firstly, the overarching themes of globalization, Asian-European encounters and modernity. Secondly, the overarching approaches of applying various gender theories such as post-colonial feminist theory and agential realism, comparing different parts of the region and/or different parts of a single country, comparing Asia and the Nordic countries/Europe and combining the humanities and social sciences. 

 

The groups are open to new participants. New groups are also welcome to join the Network as well as the 2011 workshop in Iceland.

 

The aim is that each group will develop one or more joint research projects.

 

The five research groups

 

   1.  Post-colonial cultural trauma and violence

Contact person: Monica Lindberg Falk (Sweden) Monica.Lindberg_Falk@ace.lu.se

 

“Post-colonial cultureal trauma and violence” is the tentative title of one of the projects that will be developed by this group. That project will address representations of gender, race and ethnicity in Europe and Asia and focus on cultural traumas of war and colonization in Indonesia, Japan, Finland and the Netherlands.

 

The group members have long experiences from gender research in: Japan, Nepal, Indonesia, Vietnam, Malaysia, Bangladesh, Thailand, Pakistan, the Netherlands, Sweden, Finland and Iceland. Within the overarching theme Gendered ways to deal with continuity and rupture following sub-themes were identified at the workshop in Copenhagen:

                       

  • Disasters, Trauma and Recovery
  • What societies forget and what societies remember
  • Representations of traumas, memories and silence
  • Gendered violence
  • The importance of kinship when facing death and disrupture
  • Beliefs in spirits, ghosts as a unifying theme in the region
  • Dead bodies, death rituals and funerals
  • Identity crises following economic breakdowns

 

The research group will use a comparative perspective. Data will be gathered by ethnographic methods, interviews, narratives, observations and analysing documents, novels and newspapers articles.

 

Participants

Karin Ask (M.A.)                                Karin.Ask@cmi.no

Wil Burghoorn (Ph.D)                         wil.burghoorn@globalstudies.gu.se

Hildur Fjóla Antonsdóttir                    hildurfa@hi.is

Mikako Iwatake (Ph.D)                       Mikako.iwatake@helsinki.fi

Suvi Keskinen (Ph.D)                         suvkes@utu.fi

Monica Lindberg Falk (Ph.D)              Monica.lindberg_falk@ace.lu.se

Pauline Stoltz (Ph.D)                          pauline.stoltz@mah.se

Susanne Åsman (Ph.D student)           susanne.asman@globalstudies.gu.se

 

The group is open to more participants.

 

Overview of plans

The group will use the Baha network and e-mail to communicate.

The group will try to meet before the workshop in Iceland. Place and date are not yet decided.

The group will organise a panel at the workshop in Iceland.

 

2.   Mobile Livelihoods & Gendered Citizenship

Contact persons: Ása Guðný Ásgeirsdóttir(Iceland) aga13@hi.isand Ragnhild Madland (Norway) ragnhild.madland@uia.no

 

 

At the Gendering Asia Network-workshop in Copenhagen 8-11 November 2010, Ragnhild Lund presented ‘Mobile Livelihoods and Gendered Citizenship’ as a collaborative research project. Several workshop participants announced their particular interest in the project and the following sub-themes were identified as converging research interests:

 

  • Work related mobilities (temporary, permanent, circular)
  • Transnational lives (identity formation, bonding, networking)
  • Migration for sex work (identity, body, life course, livelihoods, sense of belonging, perceived mobility, crossing borders or not crossing borders)
  • Agricultural change and gendered citizenship (de-masculinisation of agriculture)
  • Development induced displacement, internal displacement, forced migration
  • Mobility in a longitudinal perspective (intergenerational relations)

   

Building on the empirical insights of the various participants, the focus will be different Asian contexts.

 

List of participants:

 

Ragnhild Lund (Professor)                             Ragnhild.Lund@svt.ntnu.no

Lisa Eklund (Ph.D. student)                           Lisa.Eklund@soc.lu.se

Susanne Åsman (Ph.D. student)                     susanne.asman@globalstudies.gu.se

Anna Karlsdóttir (Associate Professor)          annakar@hi.is

Supriya Samanta (Ph.D. student)                   supnu31@gmail.com

Ása Guðný Ásgeirsdóttir (Ph.D. student)      aga13@hi.is

Yee Yee Swe (Ph.d. student)                         ye-swe@online.no

Fengshu Liu (Post.doc)                                   liu.fengshu@ped.uio.no

Ragnhild Madland (Ph.D. student)                ragnhild.madland@uia.no

Maria Tonini (Ph.D. student)                          Maria.Tonini@genus.lu.se

 

The group is open to more participants

 

 

Overview of plans:

 

  1. The group will establish a virtual dialogue through the Barha network. 
  2. The group plan to meet in Copenhagen the first week of March 2011 to discuss theory on migration and the identified sub-themes.
  3. The group will organize a plenary session in the 2011 workshop in Iceland.

 

       3.  Ideas in Transit/Somatic Engineering

Contact person: Katja Rangsivek (Denmark) katjar@hum.ku.dk

4. Communication and Intra-action

Contact person: Liu Xin (Finland) xinliu@utu.fi

 

The initial idea of the potential research group “Communication and Intra-action” was to explore the communication and intra-action between Nordic companies and their employees in the PRC. After the group discussion at the Gendering Asia Network workshop in Copenhagen November 2010, we felt that in order to apply Karen Barad’s notion of intra-action as an analytical tool we should first of all try to understand the posthumanist performative line of thinking. Moreover, since participants in this research group come from diverse disciplinary backgrounds, the current focus of this group is to build a common ground and shared vocabularies by sharing a reading list.

 

List of participants:

 

 

Bu We

buwei@public3.bta.net.cn

Helena Magnusson

helena_fia@yahoo.com

Liu Xin

xinliu@utu.fi

Sirpa Tenhunen

sirpa.tenhunen@helsinki.fi

Ragnhild Madland

ragnhild.madland@uia.no

Lilja Hjartardóttir

lilja@hi.is

Anna Karlsdóttir

annakar@hi.is

Cecilia Milwertz

Milwertz@nias.ku.dk

Marion Marmorat

marion.marmorat@fafo.no

 

Overview of plans:

 

  1. The group has already established a “GAN – Communication and Intra-action” group on Barha.
  2. Participants will share their reading materials and their ideas related to the “communication and intra-action” on the Barha platform.
  3. The group will meet up and draft a detailed research plan/project proposal during the 2011 workshop in Iceland.
  4. It is one possibility that we will have a plenary discussion during the 2011 workshop. We will invite one or two keynote / guest speakers for this plenary discussion (Sari Irni from Åbo Akademi for example). Moreover, participants of this group who have a draft or a paper related to communication and/or intra-action will give presentations.

 

5.   Experiencing Technology – intra-active constructions of identity andthe body

Contact person: Lisa Eklund (Sweden) Lisa.Eklund@soc.lu.se

 

With new types of technology becoming more affordable and accessible, the use and experience of these are important for understanding social and cultural change. This research group focuses on the use and experiences of technologies, including reproductive technologies, and how they contribute to constructing different identities and understandings of the body. It also explores linkages between technology, identity and the body in relation to the state, donors and civil society on the one hand and to the market and consumerism on the other. 

The research group takes a comparative perspective and intends to explore similarities and difference between two Asian countries – China and Vietnam – and the Nordic countries, with special focus on Denmark, Norway and Sweden.

 

Participants

Tine Gammeltoft, Associate Professor, Department of Anthropology, University of Copenhagen

Merete Lie, Professor, Department of Interdisciplinary Studies of Culture, Norwegian University of Science and Technology

Fengshu Liu, Senior Lecturer, Department of Educational Research, University of Oslo

Lisa Eklund, PhD Candidate, Department of Sociology, Lund University

 

            The group is open for more participants  

 

 

Overview of plans

  • Share a reading list and relevant publications
  • Explore possibilities to meet before 20 April 2011
  • Develop a joint research project
  • Present joint research project at the 2011 GAN workshop in Iceland