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PRODID:-//EuroSEAS 2019//EN
X-WR-CALNAME:EuroSEAS 2019
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TZID:Europe/Berlin
X-LIC-LOCATION:Europe/Berlin
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:+0100
TZOFFSETTO:+0200
TZNAME:CEST
DTSTART:19700329T020000
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DTSTART:19701025T030000
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260422T105100
UID:borneo-and-beyond-connecting-the-local-and-the-global-in-borneos-past-1
SUMMARY:Borneo and Beyond: Connecting the Local and the Global in Borneo’s Past (1)
LOCATION:Room 1.505
DESCRIPTION:Borneo is often characterised as a remote, isolated island, per
 ipheral to regional and global networks and narratives. Scholars of Borneo,
  however, have long recognised the inaccuracies of this perception, given t
 he island’s long history of participation in global trading networks. Eric 
 Tagliacozzo (2013) argues that, in fact, by the second half of the nineteen
 th century, Borneo was a centre of transnational connection. During this pe
 riod, European interests on the island targeted trade in mineral resources,
  forest products and the cultivation of export crops. At the same time, Wes
 tern explorers and collectors were drawn to the island, motivated by a sear
 ch for wealth and for knowledge of Borneo’s unique flora, fauna and peoples
  - knowledge which was highly prized in scientific circles. The introductio
 n of European styles of governance and peace-making gave further impetus to
  trade, but Borneans remained at the centre of these networks, agents of ch
 ange in their cross-cultural interactions with global forces.\n\nThis panel
  aims to explore Borneo’s position as a hub in such transboundary networks 
 – economic, political, scientific and cultural - and to highlight the islan
 d’s historical significance in regional and global perspective. Participant
 s will demonstrate how a world-history framework can be combined with inter
 disciplinary approaches to the study of Borneo’s past to draw out previousl
 y unheard voices in the island’s story. These approaches include the consid
 eration of alternative source material, such as oral histories and material
  culture; interrogating colonial sources from new perspectives, including r
 ecently declassified archives; and the examination of ‘subaltern’ experienc
 es in Borneo societies.
URL:https://euroseas2019.org/program/panels/borneo-and-beyond-connecting-the-local-and-the-global-in-borneos-past
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20190912T133000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20190912T150000
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260422T105100
UID:borneo-and-beyond-connecting-the-local-and-the-global-in-borneos-past-2
SUMMARY:Borneo and Beyond: Connecting the Local and the Global in Borneo’s Past (2)
LOCATION:Room 1.505
DESCRIPTION:Borneo is often characterised as a remote, isolated island, per
 ipheral to regional and global networks and narratives. Scholars of Borneo,
  however, have long recognised the inaccuracies of this perception, given t
 he island’s long history of participation in global trading networks. Eric 
 Tagliacozzo (2013) argues that, in fact, by the second half of the nineteen
 th century, Borneo was a centre of transnational connection. During this pe
 riod, European interests on the island targeted trade in mineral resources,
  forest products and the cultivation of export crops. At the same time, Wes
 tern explorers and collectors were drawn to the island, motivated by a sear
 ch for wealth and for knowledge of Borneo’s unique flora, fauna and peoples
  - knowledge which was highly prized in scientific circles. The introductio
 n of European styles of governance and peace-making gave further impetus to
  trade, but Borneans remained at the centre of these networks, agents of ch
 ange in their cross-cultural interactions with global forces.\n\nThis panel
  aims to explore Borneo’s position as a hub in such transboundary networks 
 – economic, political, scientific and cultural - and to highlight the islan
 d’s historical significance in regional and global perspective. Participant
 s will demonstrate how a world-history framework can be combined with inter
 disciplinary approaches to the study of Borneo’s past to draw out previousl
 y unheard voices in the island’s story. These approaches include the consid
 eration of alternative source material, such as oral histories and material
  culture; interrogating colonial sources from new perspectives, including r
 ecently declassified archives; and the examination of ‘subaltern’ experienc
 es in Borneo societies.
URL:https://euroseas2019.org/program/panels/borneo-and-beyond-connecting-the-local-and-the-global-in-borneos-past
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20190912T153000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20190912T170000
END:VEVENT
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