Muse Mentor 2024: Professor Saturnino ‘Jun’ Borras

We are delighted to share that, together with the Center for Cultural Studies, we will be hosting scholar-activist Professor Saturnino ‘Jun’ Borras at UCSC this winter quarter.

Jun Borras is Professor of Agrarian Studies at the International Institute of Social Studies of Erasmus University Rotterdam, and is a long-time agrarian movement activist in the Philippines and internationally. He was a member of the International Coordinating Committee of the La Via Campesina during its formative years, in 1993-1996. He is a recipient of the European Research Council Advanced Grant, enabling him to study how land rushes shape global social life, and does fieldwork for this in Southeast Asia and China, Ethiopia and Colombia. He works in the tradition of, and at the same time studies, scholar-activism. He was Editor-In-Chief of Journal of Peasant Studies for 15 years until 2023. He co-organizes the regular International Writeshop in Critical Agrarian Studies and Scholar-Activism meant for PhD researchers and early career scholars from/in the Global South.

We invite you to be a part of our engagement with Jun Borras and his works at the two events we have planned (more details below). For Slow Seminar, please REGISTER HERE

Event flyer

For Slow Seminar, please REGISTER HERE.

SEACoast plunges into the waters of the ‘new thalassology’

Last Friday, SEACoast hosted our annual Muse Mentors, University of Hawaii’s Professors Barbara and Leonard Andaya, with a special event, Ocean Pulse: Historicizing the Modern. The event offered conversations and provocations across disciplines, as well as an opportunity to gather scholars of Southeast Asia from Santa Cruz and across the Bay Area.

Ocean Pulse: Historicizing the Modern began with Professor Leonard Andaya’s talk about the vantage points offered by locating the history of Eastern Indonesia, and the world, as they emerge through the historical, cultural, and environmental context of Oceania–a region historically considered as a collection of scattered, geopolitically insignificant islands. His talk brought us through how specialized commodities from Eastern Indonesia, like nutmeg, circulated in global trade and also built the trade networks themselves through the development of production nodes and port networks–infrastructures that had to ensure that goods, especially if their desired qualities were perishable, arrived in suitable states for consumption by their clients. The success of these nodes and their networks, however, are made possible only through a set of knowledge and practices that emerged through concepts of connectivity between land, rivers, seas, and oceans. An example of the knowledge and practices essential to global trade in commodities include navigational skills that rely on interpretations of clouds, stars, lightning, flying fish, and dolphins to sense proximity to land. Such practices are observed in Eastern Indonesian as well as micronesian communities, thereby emphasizing the centrality of seas and oceans that surround ‘scattered’ islands and how they trouble well-sedimented transnational spatial concepts such as “Southeast Asia” and the “Pacific”.

Man standing at a lectern, giving a talk
Professor Leonard Andaya delivering his talk, Eastern Indonesia in Oceania

Andaya’s rich and energetic talk was followed by a series of comments and provocations offered by our distinguished roundtable discussants from UC Santa Cruz: Professors Carla Freccero (History of Consciousness); Vanita Seth (Politics); Sharon Kinoshita (Literature). Opening up the roundtable, Carla Freccero posed a set of provocations that set speakers and audiences onto questions about what constitutes “pre” or “early” modern in any field-timeline, and what do different timelines and periodization of modernity do in the world they interact with and establish? Rather than taking timelines and periodization as a corollary of articulating history as it really was, Freccero called for forthright explications of contemporaneous investments underlying the historical accounts we construct in our scholarship.

A woman standing at a lectern, giving a talk
Professor Carla Freccero discussing counter-objectification in European encounters with lizards in Brazil

Further interrogations of our intellectual investments came by way of Vanita Seth’s set of ideas and provocations about self-evident facticity of the past. Characteristic of this mode of facticity are the irreversible linearity of time, the discrete separation of past from present, as well as the exclusion of nonhumans–both material and immaterial, natural and supernatural. Referencing Barbara Andaya’s talk in the later half of the event, Seth pointed out how non-human protagonists like sea monsters that populated premodern European histories are increasingly revealed by science as simply being figures of human imagination. While historians have endeavored to democratize history by pluralizing timelines and historical actors, Seth argued that “exploring the alterity of the past does not permit us to escape the ontological limitations of historical thinking”. Rather than doing away with a history sanitized by colonial epistemological standards of truth, Seth emphasized the critical labor of recognizing its stakes, possibilities, and limitations.

A woman sitting at a table, delivering a talk
Professor Vanita Seth theorizing alterity as a tool for historical engagement

Building her talk on the previous rounds of talks and discussions, Sharon Kinoshita captivated us with the parallels and connections between studies of the Mediterranean and Indian Ocean that have sought to reconceptualize the geography and histories of the region, and Leonard Andaya’s scholarship that seeks to similarly build connections between areas like Southeast Asia and Oceania that have been studied as separate regions. Reflecting Janet Abu-Lughod’s, Before European Hegemony: The World System A.D. 1250-1350, Kinoshita described how the seminal text reframed an era characterized by destruction by Mongol conquest, to one of unprecedented integration and communication between overland and sea trade networks, creating overlapping spheres of global trade. These generative developments are well documented in the writings of Marco Polo, many of which meticulously detailed the types of highly valued commodities and where they can be bought or sold, including spices in Southeast Asia. By tracing the parallels and connections between two seemingly disparate worlds, Kinoshita underscored the significance of Leonard Andaya’s scholarship in contributing to a ‘new thalassology’ that foregrounds the knowledge, people, ideas, materials, communities, lands, and seas that often go under the radar, and whose rich relations are impeded by the periodisations and territorialisations of history and area studies writ large. Kinoshita ended her talk with a generous nod to SEACoast ventures as taking “a plunge into this ‘new thalassology'”.

A woman standing at a lectern, giving a talk
Professor Sharon Kinoshita discussing Marco Polo’s writings on Java

Later in the afternoon, we were regaled by tales of sea monsters and maidens across space and time by Professor Barbara Andaya. Early historical accounts of monstrous krakens and beguiling mermaids, as well as contemporary accounts of deep sea exploration, scientific conspiracy theories about sea monsters, and popular media like The Little Mermaid, invites reflection on the sea as more than a mode of transporting and connecting people, materials, and ideas. The sea opens up passages between past and present to question deeply entrenched beliefs about maritime environments and exploration as treacherous terrain, surmountable by masculine heroism and modern technology. Focusing our attention on the shifting ways through which European and Southeast Asian societies dealt with the dangers and mysteries of the sea, underwater monsters and humanoid sea creatures can be seen as embodying prevailing and emergent conceptions of gender, land-sea connections, human-animal relations, as well as the unknown or not-yet known.

A woman standing at a lectern, giving a talk
Professor Barbara Andaya delivering her talk, Braving the wrath of sea monsters and the wile of sea-maids”: Gendering Early Modern Encounters with the Underwater World

 

A Woman delivering a talk, in front of a screen that depicts a man wrestling with a shark and the words "How to survive a shark attack: the art of manliness"
Professor Barbara Andaya discussing the popularity of websites detailing how to survive shark attacks, and its indication of underwater worlds as a threat to masculinity

Breaking from the usual format of academic conferences, we rounded up our event with audiences and speakers gathering in a circle for a plenary discussion. Speakers and audience members, which included curious onlooking undergraduates from the UCSC campus, participated in this relaxed and casual conversation. Numerous threads from earlier talks and discussions were brought up and participants shared how various theories of territory and temporality, commodities, and monstrous otherness resonated within the particular fields of their study and geographies.

A group of people sitting in a circle for a discussion
Ocean Pulse speakers and attendees gathering around for a plenary discussion

On behalf of SEACoast, we would like to thank our gracious Muse Mentors, roundtable speakers, and participants for the incredible day of engagements across disciplines, histories, and seas and fields of study.

A man and a woman standing in a forest of redwood trees
Professors Leonard and Barbara Andaya in the Santa Cruz redwoods. Photo credit: Professor Nancy Peluso (UC Berkeley)
A selfie of four people in a forest
SEACoast co-director, Anna Tsing with this year’s Muse Mentors, Professors Leonard and Barbara Andaya, and conference participant, Professor Nancy Peluso (UC Berkeley). Photo credit: Professor Nancy Peluso

Ocean Pulse: Historicizing the Modern with Muse Mentors, Barbara and Leonard Andaya

Maritime Southeast Asia is a region that has been defined by deep histories of cultural exchange, regional and global trade networks, and multiple, fluid maritime polities. Historians have shown how the flow and exchange of goods, peoples, and ideas shaped the diverse epistemic conditions upon which trade and later colonial relations were perceived and negotiated. Here, modern categories of difference, including race, animality, and binaries of gender, sexuality, and self-other, encounter divergent forms of tractions, frictions, and slippages—all of which are still being worked through in contemporary modern Southeast Asian societies. Diving into historical currents and navigations, we take a closer look at the indeterminacies of modernity and the processes that contribute to its reification and discontents.

Ocean Pulse is an invitation to explore the historical forces and relations that have shaped maritime Southeast Asia, and open up conversations about how modern categories of difference, and the realities they engender, are shaped by specific and interconnected historical conditions.

As we navigate these complexities, we are fortunate to have SEACoast Muse Mentors for this year, Professors in History, Leonard and Barbara Andaya, who will each deliver a talk that draw from their ongoing works, Pacific History from the View of Eastern Indonesia, and “Braving the wrath of sea monsters and the wile of sea-maids”: Gendering Early Modern Encounters with the Underwater World, respectively (abstracts attached).

Each talk will be followed by roundtable discussions with UCSC’s very own, Professors Carla Freccero (History of Consciousness), Sharon Kinoshita (Literature), and Vanita Seth (Politics). We are grateful to be hosting these distinguished scholars from different disciplinary fields, and to bring their groundbreaking work and ideas into conversation with each other.

We would love for you to be a part of the conversation at the two events we have planned for Ocean PulsePlease see below for more details and links to register. Event flyers are also attached, for you to circulate in your networks that are local or close to Santa Cruz for this in-person event.

If you have any questions, please write us a seacoast@ucsc.edu.

Slow Seminar on Leonard and Barbara Andaya’s works

3.50 – 5pm | Monday January 30th, 2023 | Social Sciences 1, Room 261

This seminar is an opportunity to read and discuss some of Leonard and Barbara Andaya’s key arguments about the broader currents of trade, colonial, ethnic, sexual, and gender relations that have shaped maritime history and spatial imaginations in Southeast Asia.

Readings

Leonard Andaya’s articles:
2001.The Search for the ‘Origins’ of Melayu. Journal of Southeast Asian Studies.
2000. A History of Trade in the Sea of Melayu. Itinerario, European Journal of Overseas History.

Participants are asked to read the selected texts ahead of the seminar, and not to be discouraged if you are unable to get through all of the readings. Read as much as you are able, and feel free to focus on sections that are of particular interest to you!

Please REGISTER here for event location and updates.

Talks by Leonard and Barbara Andaya & Roundtable discussions 

with Carla Freccero, Sharon Kinoshita, and Vanita Seth

9am-3pm | Friday Feb 10, 2023 | Namaste Lounge, College 9 UCSC

09:00-09:15 Opening Remarks by SEACoast Directors
09:15-10:15 Talk by Leonard Andaya: Eastern Indonesia in Oceania*
10:15-10:25 Coffee Break 
#1
10:25-11:25 Roundtable Panel
 by Vanita, Sharon, and Carla
11:25-12:10 Lunch
12:10-13:10 Talk by Barbara Andaya: “Braving the wrath of sea monsters and the wile of sea-maids”: Gendering Early Modern Encounters with the Underwater World*
13:10-13:20 Coffee Break 
#2
13:20-14:50 Plenary Discussion

*Abstracts for each talk are attached in the flyer below.

Please REGISTER here for event location and updates.

Event flyer for Ocean Pulse: Historicizing the Modern Slow Seminar on Leonard and Barbara Andaya's works 3.50 - 5pm | Monday January 30th, 2023 | Social Sciences 1 Room 261 This seminar is an opportunity to read and discuss some of Leonard and Barbara Andaya's key arguments about the broader currents of trade, colonial, ethnic, sexual, and gender relations that have shaped maritime history in Southeast Asia. Readings Leonard Andaya's articles: 2001.The Search for the 'Origins' of Melayu. Journal of Southeast Asian Studies. 2000. A History of Trade in the Sea of Melayu. Itinerario, European Journal of Overseas History. Barbara Andaya's book: To Live as Brothers: Southeast Sumatra in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries Talks by Leonard and Barbara Andaya & Roundtable discussions with Carla Freccero, Sharon Kinoshita, and Vanita Seth 9am-3pm | Friday Feb 10, 2023 | Venue TBD Leonard's Talk: Eastern Indonesia in Oceania Barbara's Talk: "Braving the wrath of sea monsters and the wile of sea-maids": Gendering Early Modern Encounters with the Underwater World
Abstract of Eastern Indonesia in Oceania Though the eastern islands of Indonesia today form a distinct part of this archipelago nation, this area can be properly regarded as part of Oceania. The connection extends far back in prehistory at the time of the Austronesian-speaking communities in Southeast Asia and their expansion into the Pacific. Eastern Indonesia’s maritime environment, its boat technology, and the prominence of the fisher-forager-trader are all factors that came to define eastern Indonesia and underscore the argument that eastern Indonesia should be regarded as an integral part of both Southeast Asia and Oceania.Abstract for "Braving the wrath of sea monsters and the wile of sea-maids": Gendering Early Modern Encounters with the Underwater World Despite scientific scepticism, public belief in the existence of “sea monsters” and humanoid marine creatures can be tracked across the globe, even into contemporary times. In the sixteenth century European sailors brought entrenched ideas about an underwater world with them as they ventured into the unfamiliar waters of Asia. Here they encountered societies that shared similar views of the sea as a domain where supernatural forces were always present. The presentation explores some of this interaction as recorded in sources from the early modern period (ca 1400-1800), but also argues that these sources were highly gendered. First, with rare exceptions, long distance sea travel was a male activity and the ocean was therefore viewed primarily through men’s eyes; second, sea monsters could be male, female or androgynous, but their very size and ferocity was a challenge to the masculinity implicit in maritime exploration; and third, it was sea beings in a female form -- as beguiling sirens, seductive mermaids, or vindictive spirit-crones -- that dominated mariners’ imagination. In the 21st century alleged sightings of sea monsters and mermaids attest the extent to which the underwater world still remains both gendered and mysterious.

 

Muse Mentor- Cultural Studies Colloquium by Engseng Ho

We are thrilled to have Engseng Ho, Professor of Cultural Anthropology at Duke University and the Muhammad Alagil Distinguished Visiting Professor of Arabia Asia Studies at National University of Singapore, as this year’s SEACoast Muse/Mentor. Professor Ho will give a talk on Wednesday, Feb 23, 12:15-1:30pm, PST.

Dubai and Singapore: Asian Diasporics, Global Logistics, Company Rule

Dubai and Singapore are emblematic of the contemporary global moment, embodying dizzying success, frenetic excess, spectacular crash. Are they global cities or port-states? Are they Asian nations or corporations descended from the East India Companies that became colonial governments? Their iconic status today as global cities is not simply a function of globalization, but can be understood in terms of dynamic currents that shape and reshape places in the Indian Ocean, the original Asian venue of an international economy. Dubai and Singapore are two tiny places that have seen success because they have understood those currents, and acted in accordance with changes in their dynamics. What are these dynamics – their constants over the long term, and their recent shifts?

This event is co-sponsored by the UCSC Center for Cultural Studies. Please use this link to RSVP or visit the Cultural Studies website for more information. We hope you will join us!

Skip to toolbar