Lecture Theatre: Humanities x Public Life

#10: Ngoei Wen-Qing on the Cold War in Southeast Asia

36 min · 12 de jul de 201936 min
Portada del episodio #10: Ngoei Wen-Qing on the Cold War in Southeast Asia

Descripción

Ngoei Wen-Qing is a scholar of Cold War history at Nanyang Technological University. His first book, The Arc of Containment: Britain, the United States, and Anticommunism in Southeast Asia, was published in May 2019. In his work, Wen-Qing traces the origins of U.S. hegemony and British neo-colonialism in the region, arguing that the Vietnam War was the exception—rather than the defining event—of U.S.-Southeast Asian relations during the Cold War. In this episode, we speak with Wen-Qing about his background, his book, his thoughts on present-day geopolitics, and his plans for a sequel.

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11 episodios

Portada del episodio #11: Lynette Chua on the Politics of Love

#11: Lynette Chua on the Politics of Love

Lynette Chua is an Associate Professor of Law at the National University of Singapore and Head of Studies for Law and Liberal Arts at Yale-NUS College. A scholar of Law and Society, she has researched human rights movements in Singapore and Myanmar and is currently working on a study of “filial piety” laws in Asia. In this episode: Lynette’s non-linear academic trajectory; “pragmatic resistance” and Singapore’s LGBT rights movement; the role of emotions in human rights practice; conducting fieldwork as an “outsider’ in Myanmar; the “Lynette Chua” model; the relationship between academia and activism. “I just do what I feel is important and what I like to do…if you think too much about fear you just kind of become paralyzed.”

26 de oct de 201936 min
Portada del episodio #8: Timothy Barnard on the History of Animals in Singapore

#8: Timothy Barnard on the History of Animals in Singapore

Timothy Barnard is a scholar of environmental history at the National University of Singapore. Tim’s publications include Nature Contained, an edited volume on Singapore’s environmental history, and Nature’s Colony, a monograph on the history of the Singapore Botanical Gardens. Later this year, Tim will publish Imperial Creatures: Humans and Other Animals in Colonial Singapore. In this episode: Tim’s transition from a suburban kid in Middle America to a scholar in and of Southeast Asia; the impact of teaching on Tim’s interest in environmental history; putting together Nature Contained; the history of the Singapore Botanical Gardens; the challenge of environmental history to orthodox Singaporean historiography (i.e. animals don’t care about election results); the impact of colonial rule on animal life; Tim’s current work on the history of water in Singapore. Plus: the three most popular pets in colonial Singapore, and how rabies was introduced to our island.

5 de jun de 201947 min