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    1. [INDIA-BRITISH-RAJ] Two-day con­fer­ence on Sir Joseph Banks, India
    2. Harshawardhan_Bosham Nimkhedkar
    3. Two-day conference on Exploring Empire: Sir Joseph Banks, India and the 'Great Pacific Ocean' - Science, Travel, Trade and Culture 1768-1820 Date - June 24-25, 2011 at Greenwich, London, UK From http://www.humanitiescentral.com/exploring-empire-sir-joseph-banks-india-%E2%80%98great-pacific-ocean%E2%80%99-%E2%80%93-science-travel-trade-culture-1768%E2%80%931820/ In 1768, Sir Joseph Banks sailed around the world with Cap­tain Cook and in doing so inau­gu­rated a new era in British explo­ration, empire and sci­ence. As a botanist, man of sci­ence, adviser of the monarch and of min­is­ters, and as Pres­i­dent of the Royal Soci­ety, Banks became a cen­tral fig­ure in the expan­sion in dis­cov­ery and set­tle­ment that took place in the Indo-Pacific region from 1768 to 1820. Through his cor­re­spon­dence with fel­low men of sci­ence and with gov­ern­ment agents, Banks pro­moted the exchange of knowl­edge about flora, fauna and human cul­tures new to Europeans. He was a prime mover in the devel­op­ment of nat­ural phi­los­o­phy, eth­nol­ogy, col­lect­ing and its global orga­ni­za­tion, travel and explo­ration, the pub­li­ca­tion and illus­tra­tion of nat­ural his­tory and other mis­sion find­ings, the devel­op­ment of knowl­edge within the eighteenth-century Repub­lic of Let­ters, impe­r­ial pol­icy mak­ing and the prac­ti­cal uses of sci­ence by the state. He planned, for instance, the col­o­niza­tion of Aus­tralia and shaped the exten­sion of British impe­r­ial influ­ence through India and Poly­ne­sia. His activ­i­ties brought Britons into con­tact with peo­ples, coun­tries, plants and ani­mals pre­vi­ously unknown to them, and this con­tact had major effects on indige­nous soci­eties and ecosys­tems. It also stim­u­lated major cul­tural inter­est at home, and this is appar­ent in the new, Roman­tic, turn in lit­er­a­ture and visual art, whether in Shelley's Franken­stein, Byron's The Island, Southey's The Curse of Kehama and in the paint­ings of Pacific mis­sion artists Hodges and Westall. The aim of this two-day con­fer­ence is to bring together schol­ars from dif­fer­ent dis­ci­plines, e.g. his­to­ri­ans of sci­ence, eth­nol­o­gists, nat­ural his­to­ri­ans (botany & zool­ogy), cura­tors, muse­ol­o­gists, lit­er­ary crit­ics, geo­g­ra­phers, stu­dents of local his­tory, colo­nial crit­ics and oth­ers inter­ested in the cul­tures of late eigh­teenth and early nineteenth-century Britain, India and the Pacific. The con­fer­ence has as its cen­tre Sir Joseph Banks but it also aims more broadly to present crit­i­cal work in a range of areas. Sub­mis­sions for 20 minute papers are invited on such sub­jects as: a.. the his­tory of explo­ration and of colo­nial set­tle­ment e.g. in Aus­trala­sia, the South Pacific, India, the NW coast of Amer­ica, the Poles, and its impact in Britain itself on cul­ture and impe­r­ial pol­icy mak­ing and science b.. the devel­op­ment of colo­nial­ism as a sys­tem (for instance, the appli­ca­tion to a global net­work of forms of admin­is­tra­tion, con­trol and trade, eg the East India Company) c.. nav­i­ga­tional sci­ence, geog­ra­phy and car­tog­ra­phy eg. tech­ni­cal devel­op­ment and meth­ods, instru­ment mak­ers, time­keep­ers, maps and map­mak­ers, sur­veys and charts, growth of geo­graph­i­cal knowl­edge and mar­itime empire d.. the cul­tural impact of the explo­ration and set­tle­ment of previously-unknown regions (e.g. in ver­bal and visual rep­re­sen­ta­tions: art, the­atre, poetry and fic­tion, jour­nal­ism, travel writ­ing; and vis-à-vis Ori­en­tal­ism, Omai, Tahiti and India) e.. agri­cul­tural improve­ment at home and in the colonies (e.g. Cap­tain Bligh and the bread­fruit scheme, the import and export of crops and live­stock, the Royal Soci­ety of Arts) f.. nat­ural phi­los­o­phy in Britain and abroad (e.g. plant exchange, impe­r­ial botany, zoo­log­i­cal explo­ration and dis­cov­ery, geo­log­i­cal map­ping, nav­i­ga­tion, astron­omy, the Royal Soci­ety, Kew Gar­dens, Hooker) g.. col­lec­tions, e.g. of objects and obser­va­tions: the role of col­lec­tions, nat­ural his­tory, eth­no­log­i­cal, anthro­po­log­i­cal and doc­u­mented, their orga­ni­za­tion and inter­pre­ta­tion, and their role in knowledge-production and stag­ing empire h.. the late eighteenth-century gen­try as a class i.. local his­tory: the rela­tion­ship of anti­quar­ian study to the prac­tice of nat­ural phi­los­o­phy in the empire j.. the exchange and cul­tural mean­ings of tech­nolo­gies and objects Ple­nary speak­ers: Pro­fes­sor Simon Schaf­fer, Uni­ver­sity of Cam­bridge Dr Jeremy Coote, Pitt Rivers Museum, Uni­ver­sity of Oxford Con­venors: Neil Cham­bers, Sir Joseph Banks Archive, Not­ting­ham Trent Uni­ver­sity, Tim Ful­ford, Dept ELH, Not­ting­ham Trent Uni­ver­sity Con­fer­ence venue: National Mar­itime Museum, Green­wich, Lon­don, SE10 9NF Abstracts of no more than 200 words should be ccd both to [email protected] and [email protected], by 1 Novem­ber 2010. ----------------- --- Harshawardhan_Bosham Nimkhedkar

    09/09/2010 07:13:11