Boats in a Storm is a history of postwar displacements across South and Southeast Asia. For more than a century before World War II, traders, merchants, financiers, and laborers steadily moved between places on the Indian Ocean, trading goods, supplying credit, and seeking work. This all changed with the war and as India, Burma, Ceylon, and Malaya wrested independence from the British empire. Set against the tumult of the postwar period, Boats in a Storm centers on the legal struggles of migrants to retain their traditional rhythms and patterns of life, illustrating how they experienced citizenship and decolonization. Even as nascent citizenship regimes and divergent political trajectories of decolonization papered over migrations between South and Southeast Asia, migrants continued to recount cross-border histories in encounters with the law. These accounts, often obscured by national and international political developments, unsettle the notion that static national identities and loyalties had emerged, fully formed and unblemished by migrant pasts, in the aftermath of empires.
Kalyani Ramnath: She is an assistant professor of history at Columbia University, with research and teaching interests in histories of migration and displacement, legal history, transnational and global histories, and questions of historical method.
*Lunch will be provided
Audience
- Faculty/Staff
- Student
- Graduate Students
Contact
Cindy Pingry
(847) 467-1933
Email
Interest
- Academic (general)