Archive of Past Events

Himalaya Program: Understanding Nepal after the 2015 earthquakes

The Himalaya Program at UBC is organizing two public events on Nepal‘s recovery after the 2015 earthquakes: a public lecture on Friday evening, September 15, at UBC, and a community forum on Sunday afternoon, September 17, at Robson Square. Please note that the community forum will be in Nepali, so it’ll be of most interest to Nepali-speakers.

If you’d like to attend either event, please RSVP via the Himalaya Program’s website (links below).


Understanding Nepal After the 2015 Earthquakes and Constitution: A Weekend of Events

The Himalaya Program invites you to attend two events this mid-September. There will be a lecture on September 15 and a community forum for discussion on September 17.

Friday, September 15
Lecture: Nepal‘s Prolonged Transition: End in Sight?
Speaker: Deepak Thapa, Social Science Baha
Time: 5:30-7:00PM
Location: Room #120, C.K. Choi Building, 1855 West Mall, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z2
Click here for the event listing on the Himalaya Program website.


Please click here for a link to this poster in a larger size.

This talk will be followed by a reception.

Please RSVP for the event by clicking here.


 

Sunday, September 17
Reconstruction and State Restructuring in Nepal after 2015: A Community Forum (in Nepali)
Organized in collaboration with the Nepal Cultural Society of BC (NCSBC)
Speakers: Jeevan Baniya, Subin Mulmi, Dinesh Paudel, Deepak Thapa
Time: 2:00-4:00PM
Location: Room C400, UBC Robson Square Campus, 800 Robson St., Vancouver, BC V6Z 3B7
Click here for the event listing on our website.
Click here for a link to this poster in a larger size.

Join the Himalaya Program and NCSBC as we welcome a diverse set of visiting scholars for a discussion and Q&A about the various forces affecting Nepal‘s current governance, as well as the Nepali-speaking public’s perspectives and involvement. The four scholars are visiting from Nepal and the USA, and this discussion will be held in Nepali language.

Light refreshments will be served.

Please RSVP for the Community Forum here.

 

April 25: Talk by Mark Turin on Thangmi people of Dolakha, Nepal

Collaborations in Language: Research Partnerships and Commitments in Nepal

TRAS is thrilled that Dr. Mark Turin, with the Department of Anthropology at UBC, has agreed to give a presentation on his long-term fieldwork with the Thangmi-speaking people of Dolakha, Nepal – the same people for whom TRAS rebuilt 200 toilets after the April 2015 earthquake.

Mark is a brilliant speaker, who will draw on two decades of work in Nepal to deepen our knowledge of the collaborations and partnerships which are helping to revitalise indigenous Himalayan languages and cultures, and to show how these issues interconnect with contemporary Nepali politics.

Date: Tuesday, April 25th, 2017
Time: 7.30pm (doors open at 7.00pm)
Place: Unitarian Church of Vancouver (Oak and 49th – 949 W. 49th Ave.), in the Fireside Room. Parking in church parking lot and on street.

Admission by donation.
Refreshments and Handicrafts 

Please join us and bring your friends!

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Abstract:

This talk focuses on several key partnerships in which Dr. Turin has been engaged over the last two decades, both with members of historically marginalized, indigenous speech communities in the Himalaya, and increasingly with a committed global community of scholars in print, on air and online.

In this visually engaging lecture, Dr. Turin will draw on long-term fieldwork in Nepal with speakers of Thangmi—a community long been effaced from the national record—to outline a collaborative approach to the collection, protection and connection of Indigenous Himalayan languages and the cultures that they encode.

His presentation will explore issues of language diversity, endangerment and revitalization. All those interested in learning more about the responsibilities and challenges of long-term community collaboration, cultural resilience in the Himalayas and how these issues interconnect with contemporary Nepali politics will find this lecture interesting.

Bio:

Mark Turin (PhD, Linguistics, Leiden University, 2006) is an anthropologist, linguist and radio presenter. At the University of British Columbia, Dr. Turin serves as Chair of the First Nations and Endangered Languages Program, Acting Co-Director of the University’s new Institute for Critical Indigenous Studies and Associate Professor of Anthropology.

Dr. Turin writes and teaches on ethnolinguistics, language endangerment, visual anthropology, digital archives and fieldwork methodology. He is the author or co-author of four books, three travel guides, the editor of eight volumes, the co-editor of the journal Himalaya and he edits a series on oral literature. Dr. Turin’s recent work has been funded by SSHRC, NSF and NASA.

Website: markturin.arts.ubc.ca

Twitter: @markturin

Nepal: Response, Relief & Recovery

2015-05-29 03.02.27TRAS Speaker Series is very pleased to present:

A evening with Professor Mark Turin

Date:  March 4, 2016

Time:  Doors open at 7:00 pm – talk at 7:30 pm

Location:  Sutherland Secondary School, 1860 Sutherland Avenue, North Vancouver (free parking)

Cost:  By Donation.  (Handicrafts and baked goods will be on sale) Proceeds to TRAS

SPACE IS LIMITED – REGISTER by email at cbunbury@sd44.ca  or by phoning the TRAS office at 604-224-5133

Event Details:

In this presentation, anthropologist, linguist and broadcaster Mark Turin will share insights from his 25 years living and working in Nepal and the greater Himalayan region. Mark’s richly illustrated talk will position the nation’s response, relief and recovery, following the catastrophic earthquakes of April and May, 2015, in a deeper historical and social context. Reflecting on Nepal’s extraordinary ethnic and linguistic diversity, Mark will speak to the creativity and resilience of the country’s citizens in the face of mounting uncertainty.

Speaker bio:

Mark Turin is an Associate Professor of Anthropology at UBC, where he also serves as Chair of the First Nations and Endangered Languages Program. Prior to moving to Vancouver, Mark was an Associate Research Scientist with the South Asian Studies Council at Yale University, and the Founding Program Director of the Yale Himalaya Initiative. He directs the Digital Himalaya Project, of which he is a co-founder, and the co-editor of the longest running open-access journal of Himalayan studies, entitled HIMALAYA. Follow him on Twitter: @markturin

Mark and his wife Sara were instrumental in bringing to TRAS the ‘Twin your Toilet’ reconstruction project in Dolakha.

This special event is co-hosted by the new Global Perspectives Program at Sutherland Secondary School in North Vancouver.
 

 

TRAS Fall Social – October 27, 2015

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Join us on Tuesday, October 27th for our Fall Social dinner

Enjoy a delicious Nepalese meal at Cafe Kathmandu, visit with TRAS friends and get the latest news from the Himalayan region.

Date: Tuesday, October 27th

Time: 7:00 pm to 9:30 pm (doors open at 6:30 pm)

Tickets: $30 – buffet meal with vegetarian and non-vegetarian dishes and chai

Location:  2779 Commercial Dr., Vancouver, BC 

 

Tickets:  Purchase online, call 604-224-5133, email info@tras.ca.

Buy yours early! These dinner events sell out!

 

Funds raised on the night will go to support READI Nepal!

We look forward to seeing you there!

 

 

TRAS 53rd Annual General Meeting

We are pleased to announce the TRAS 53rd Annual General Meeting and Nepal slideshow.

Date: Tuesday, Sept. 15th, 2015

Time: 7:00 pm (doors open at 6:30 pm)

Location: Choices Annex, 2627 West 16th Ave., Vancouver

TRAS member Cynthia Bunbury will share her photos and experiences from her visit to Nepal with Sutherland Secondary School students in the spring of this year (prior to the devastating earthquakes).  A short business meeting will precede the presentation.

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