Asian Institute

The Asian Institute is a research centre at the Munk School of Global Affairs at the University of Toronto, and is located in the historical Devonshire House, a former residential hall of the university's Trinity College. Ritu Birla is the Richard Charles Lee Director of the Asian Institute.

Asian Institute
Location
Director
Rachel Silvey
Staff
David Chu Professor and Director in Asia Pacific Studies: Takashi Fujitani
  • Director, Centre for South Asian Studies: Ritu Birla
  • Director, Contemporary Asian Studies Program: Dylan Clark
  • Director, Centre for Southeast Asian Studies: Nhung Tuyet Tran
  • Centre for the Study of Korea: Ito Peng, Interim Director
Websitehttp://www.munk.utoronto.ca/ai/Default.aspx

Research Focus

The Asian Institute has over one hundred affiliated scholars whose research focuses on the geopolitical region of Asia. Research at the Asian Institute is interdisciplinary and ranges from the humanities to the social sciences.[1] Examples of this interdisciplinary approach are the Global Ideas Institute, the Contemporary Asian Studies undergraduate program,[2] and the recent student run conference for Sustainable Development that examined how economic and social developments operate in the "regional" context.[3]

Research centres

Centre for South Asian Studies

The Centre for South Asian Studies (CSAS) is a constitutive unit of the Asian Institute at the Munk School of Global Affairs.[4] Ritu Birla is the former director of the centre. CSAS was established in 1981 and is a key research centre of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences at University of Toronto with core faculty across the University of Toronto's downtown St. George, UTSC and UTM campuses. CSAS hosts and organizes many public lectures and academic events throughout the school year.[5]

The CSAS examines "South Asia" and its regions as objects of knowledge, from mythic to governmental, to geopolitical, and "Postcolonial." CSAS programming addresses questions as wide-ranging as the workings of postcolonial democracy, law and activism; histories and contemporary configurations of the sacred and secular; political economy and cultures of capitalism; media, technology and the public sphere; the material and imaginative terrains of literary and visual cultures; and the present life of ancient civilizations.[6]

Geopolitical region of South Asia.

Graduate and Undergraduate Study

CSAS does not grant undergraduate or graduate degrees, but has a collaborative program for students interested in pursuing a MA or PhD who have already been accepted to study at the University of Toronto. The Collaborative Master's and Doctoral Program in South Asian Studies focuses on basic methodological grounding for students working towards their research degrees. The program builds from an interdisciplinary and critical study of South Asia and as starting point to examine the development of global processes.[7]

The CSAS offers a minor in South Asian Studies for undergraduate students that is a part of the Contemporary Asian Studies program at the Asian Institute. The South Asian Studies minor begins with an introduction into the study of Bangladesh, India, Pakistan, Nepal, and Sri Lanka. Students can also take a variety of undergraduate courses from other departments and faculties that can be used toward a CSAS minor.[8]

Munk School of Global Affairs.

Other centres

  • Central and Inner Asia Studies
  • Centre for Southeast Asian Studies
  • Centre for the Study of Korea
  • Dr. David Chu Program in Asia- Pacific Studies (soon to be the Contemporary Asian Studies program).

Notable Lectures

Geopolitical Region of Asia.

Partha Chatterjee (scholar), "Nationalism, Internationalism and Cosmopolitanism: Some Observations from Modern Indian History."

Chen Kaige, Xie Fei, Bart Testa, Chen Biqiang, on the panel, "A Century of Chinese Cinema: Buried Treasures of Chinese Silent Cinema."

Elizabeth J. Perry's, "The Culture of Chinese Communist Resilience: Mining the Anyuan Revolutionary Tradition."

Wang Hui's, "The Beginning of China's Twentieth Century: Revolution and Negotiation in the Era of 'Awakening of Asia.'"

Fall 2011- Spring 2012

Laurie L. Patton's, "Is Every Sanskritist a Nationalist?"

Frank Dikötter's, "Reassessing the Politics of Man-Made Catastrophe: China's Great Leap Forward."

Mahesh Dattani's, "My Life in Theatre and Cinema."

Robert Petit, Kunthear Thorng, and Kate Robertson spoke at the symposium, "From Impunity to Accountability? The Khmer Rouge Tribunal."

Fall 2010- Spring 2011

Mark Selden's, "Electronic Publication and the Critical Intellectual in the Post-Print Era: An Asia-Pacific Perspective."

Saeed Naqvi's, "How Have 170 Million Indian Muslims Remained Moderate?"

Arjun Appadurai's, "The New and the Now: Globalization and the Politics of the Déjà Vu."

Dai Qing's, "China's "Rise" and the Environment's Decline."

Munk School of Global Affairs.

Graduate and Undergraduate Study

Not all of the research centres that are a part of the Asian Institute offer taught programs, however, in association with the Dr. David Chu Program in Asia-Pacific Studies and the Centre for South Asian Studies, the Asian Institute runs several undergraduate and graduate programs.

Undergraduate

  • Contemporary Asian Studies major and minor.
  • South Asian Studies minor.

Graduate

  • Collaborative Master's Program in Asia-Pacific Studies.
  • Collaborative Master's and Doctoral Program in South Asian Studies.

References

  1. The Asian Institute "Home Page" http://www.munk.utoronto.ca/ai/ (accessed 3 May 2013).
  2. UofT News, " Students dig into the complexities of contemporary Asia." (Accessed 30 May 2013) http://www.news.utoronto.ca/students-dig-complexities-contemporary-asia
  3. The Varsity "Redefining Sustainable Development," http://thevarsity.ca/2012/03/12/redefining-sustainable-development/ (accessed 30 April 2013).
  4. The Varsity "South Asian Studies Moves to Munk" http://thevarsity.ca/2009/03/30/south-asian-studies-moves-to-munk/ (accessed 19 April 2013)
  5. The Canadian Journalism Project "The challenges of bringing diversity into a newsroom: SAJA panel examines how South Asian stories are covered in Canada " http://j-source.ca/article/challenges-bringing-diversity-newsroom-saja-panel-examines-how-south-asian-stories-are-cover (accessed 25 April 2013).
  6. accessed 20 March 2013, "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 22 January 2014. Retrieved 2014-02-11.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  7. "University of Toronto Graduate Program" Centre for South Asian Studies (Accessed 18 April 2013) "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 31 March 2013. Retrieved 2014-02-11.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  8. Faculty of Arts and Sciences University of Toronto, "South Asian Studies" (Accessed 18 April 2013) http://www.artsci.utoronto.ca/futurestudents/academics/progs/southasian Archived 14 February 2014 at the Wayback Machine
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