Es mostren els missatges amb l'etiqueta de comentaris postcolonialism. Mostrar tots els missatges
Es mostren els missatges amb l'etiqueta de comentaris postcolonialism. Mostrar tots els missatges

Commemorating the anonymous. British imperialist discourse in China and its backlash among the Irish

Sean Golden gave a talk on "Commemorating the anonymous. British imperialist discourse in China and its backlash among the Irish" at the  First Annual Conference of the  Irish Association for Asian Studies (IAAS) at Dublin City University (Ireland), 17-18/06/2016.

.
Abstract

John Mitchel on his way to exile conversed with naval officers responsible for British conquests in China. In his translation of the 三字經 Sanzijing, Sir Herbert Giles, an English diplomat in China, glossed jiā as ‘a pig beneath a roof’, and remarked to his intended British readership that ‘our’ Irish neighbours would certainly understand this. His discourse demonstrates the effects of attempting to master the colonised ‘abroad’ on his attitudes toward the colonised ‘at home’. Anonymous Irish soldiers and police helped colonise the British Empire. Some later turned against colonisation and fought to liberate Ireland and other colonies. The major source of information about the Taiping movement in Nanjing in the mid-nineteenth century was an anonymous Irishman who became a mercenary. Roger Casement went from being an agent of imperialism to an agent of the Easter Rising; his reports on colonisation in Africa and in Latin America inspired Joseph Conrad to write Heart of Darkness and Nostromo. W.G. Sebald, starting from the connection between Casement and Conrad, portrayed in The Rings of Saturn the decadence that British imperialism produced at home. Postcolonial studies tend to concentrate on the experience of the colonised, but not on the impact of imperialism on the colonisers themselves, or on the underclasses created in the metropole by colonialism. Commemoration of the anonymous agents and victims of British imperialism in Asia and its backlash among the Irish is a challenge for Asian Studies in Ireland.

Keywords: postcolonialism, discourse analysis, Chinese Studies, Irish Studies



Interview with Sean Golden

On 14 February 2014, in the context of the PhD/Masters programme in Translation & Intercultural Studies of the Universitat Rovira i Virgili (URV) and as part of their series of  Interviews with translation scholars, Prof. Anthony Pym interviewed Sean Golden, a member of the Inter-Asia research group. This interview is also available at Translation Scholars on Facebook and the European Society for Translation Studies Video resources - interviews.
Additional videos of Sean Golden giving lectures are available at:
Hong Kong Baptist University - Translation Seminar Series - Public Lecture
19 November 2009
[presented by Seán Golden; organized by Centre for Translation, Hong Kong Baptist University]
[1 streaming video file (124 min.) : digital, stereo., WMV file]
Summary: "Tracing the history of the history of the construction and deconstruction of colonial discourse in China and in Ireland, and its effect on the construction of new "modern" identities in both cases, is complicated, but case studies of these processes, such as those offered here, will add a new dimension to postcolonialist considerations of the construction of a British colonial discourse in China and in Ireland."--Homepage of Centre for Translation
-----
VIU Lecture 2010 - The Crisis of Modernity in China
Venice International University - VIU Lectures
Sean Golden, Universitat Autonòma de Barcelona and Tiziana Lippiello, Università Ca' Foscari Venezia in collaboration with the Department of East Asian Studies, Università Ca' Foscari Venezia.
Part 1 [9:10 minutes]
Part 2 [9:42 minutes]
Part 3 [8:27 minutes]
Part 4 [9:07 minutes]