Commemoration and Monument in Medieval India

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  • čas přidán 4. 04. 2021
  • What makes some kinds of objects, places, or symbols especially effective claims on history, heritage, and identity? Monuments were only one part of a larger set of features and practices associated with commemoration and memory in precolonial South Asia. Drawing on archaeology and landscape history, we can see how monumental spaces were built, used, and reused, providing clues to their both meanings and functions in past cultural worlds. This discussion sets the stage for a broader consideration of the practice and politics of heritage in medieval India. In partnership with the South Asia Center.
    Mark Lycett, Ph.D., is an historical anthropologist and the Director of Penn’s South Asia Center. Previously he taught at the University of Chicago, where he was Director of the Program on the Global Environment, Academic Director of Chicago's South Asian Abroad Program, and Director of the Center for International Studies. He has extensive research experience in western North America and South Asia, including the Vijayanagara Metropolitan Survey (1988-1997) and, more recently, work on landscape ecology, biodiversity, conservation, and the social lives of forests and forest products in peninsular India.

Komentáře • 7

  • @Baathist_Brawler_1565
    @Baathist_Brawler_1565 Před 2 lety

    Thank you professor for a wonderful lecture on a sorely neglected area of history. It is very difficult to find anything on this civilisation so this is a goldmine, in spite of the faulty audio. Videos like this prove that there are still some true academics left.

  • @diebesgrab
    @diebesgrab Před 3 lety +1

    I feel like it might not be a bad idea to implement some subtitles in case of a bad connection while this is still going on. I’m having a hard time following what he’s saying with all the audio dropout.

    • @maikmost8589
      @maikmost8589 Před 3 lety +1

      i had no problems, but there are subtitels, you have to turn them on (klick CC)

    • @lakrids-pibe
      @lakrids-pibe Před 3 lety +1

      Auto generated subtitles are garbage. Especially when it comes to "exotic names from foreign countries and/or the past.

    • @diebesgrab
      @diebesgrab Před 3 lety +1

      @@maikmost8589
      Unfortunately the closed captioning seems to be having the same issues with the audio dropout I’m having. I can’t imagine it would be a lot of extra effort to add subtitles manually using the original lecture script or something, at least compared to setting up everything else for these remote lectures.

  • @TheNiravsdesai
    @TheNiravsdesai Před 3 lety

    Dr. Lycett, I enjoyed your lecture, but I would really hope that you would learn to pronounce Indian words correctly.