Category Archives: cultural transmission
July 24, 2021 · 2:44 am
Aiyyo! Aiyyo! — AIYYO penetrates the English Dictionary
July 23, 2021 · 7:34 pm
Nihal Seneviratne on Lanka’s MPs Through the Decades
Nihal Seneviratne in Riveting Q and A with Sharlton Benedict, 16 July 2021
A Clerk Reminisces: Nihal Seneviratne (former Sec. Gen. of Parliament) on #NewslineSL – 16 July 2021
PS: Nihal has always been known as “Galba” in my circle … and never posed as a Lord or Walauwwa Hamu. He was raised initially in my home town of Galle and it was pleasing to see his honesty of purpose in this set of exchanges….. The Editor Thuppahi
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Filed under accountability, cultural transmission, democratic measures, education, governance, heritage, historical interpretation, island economy, landscape wondrous, legal issues, life stories, parliamentary elections, performance, political demonstrations, politIcal discourse, power politics, reconciliation, self-reflexivity, sri lankan society, unusual people, world events & processes
July 18, 2021 · 12:21 pm
Universal Franchise for Ceylon in 1931: The Complexities of Governance and Policy
Jane Russell
I am greatly honoured to be asked by the Awarelogue Initiative to speak at their Lecture Forum in this year of 2021, celebrating the 90th anniversary of the advent of universal franchise in Sri Lanka. In my lecture, I shall touch on some of the complex problems of governance and policy faced by a small multi-ethnic island, flanked as it is and always has been, by economic and political superpowers.
Dr. Thomas Drummond-Shiels: Donoughmore Commissioner 1927/28: Labour MP for Edinburgh 1924 -31; Under Secretary of State for the Colonies 1929-31
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Filed under accountability, architects & architecture, British colonialism, centre-periphery relations, communal relations, constitutional amendments, cultural transmission, democratic measures, devolution, economic processes, education, electoral structures, ethnicity, female empowerment, governance, heritage, historical interpretation, landscape wondrous, language policies, legal issues, life stories, modernity & modernization, politIcal discourse, power politics, power sharing, security, self-reflexivity, Sinhala-Tamil Relations, sri lankan society, unusual people, welfare & philanthophy, world events & processes
July 13, 2021 · 11:40 am
Outback Magic: Indigenous Music Traversing Boundaries
Music Outback Foundation had its beginnings in late 2001 when Founding Director Steve Berry took an opportunity to conduct a week long music workshop at M’bunghara, a small Indigenous community in remote Central Australia.
Steve’s time there left him inspired to return to the Northern Territory and pursue the possibility of providing regular music education opportunities to remote Indigenous schools. In September 2002 he visited four more schools conducting workshops at each location, and the success of these visits resulted in an invitation to expand the developing program to 12 remote schools in Central Australia.
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Filed under Aboriginality, ancient civilisations, art & allure bewitching, Australian culture, australian media, charitable outreach, communal relations, cultural transmission, education, ethnicity, heritage, life stories, patriotism, reconciliation, self-reflexivity, tolerance, travelogue, unusual people, world events & processes
July 11, 2021 · 8:21 pm
Australian Aboriginal Peoples as Sophisticated Hunter-Gatherers?
Christine Judith Nicholls, reviewing the book Farmers or Hunter-Gatherers? authored by Peter Sutton & Keryn Walshe …. with highlighting imposed by The Editor Thuppahi
Eminent Australian anthropologist Peter Sutton and respected field archaeologist Keryn Walshe have co-authored a meticulously researched n a meticulously researched new book, Farmers or Hunter-gatherers? The Dark Emu Debate. It’s set to become the definitive critique of Bruce Pascoe’s Dark Emu: Black Seeds — Agriculture or Accident?
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Filed under Aboriginality, accountability, art & allure bewitching, Australian culture, australian media, British colonialism, centre-periphery relations, cultural transmission, economic processes, education, ethnicity, heritage, historical interpretation, landscape wondrous, life stories, literary achievements, performance, politIcal discourse, religiosity, self-reflexivity, teaching profession, the imaginary and the real, travelogue, world events & processes
July 9, 2021 · 8:02 pm
Duncan White: Trinitian, Hurdler and Trailblazer for Ceylon
KLF Wijedasa**
During this Olympic year it is pertinent to remember one of our country’s greatest athletes Major Duncan White on his 23rd death anniversary (July 3). On his way to success, he had to glide over 10 barriers and not break them!

14th August 1948: Duncan White of Ceylon fixes his starting blocks to the track at the 1948 London Olympics. Original Publication: Picture Post – 4582 – Fastest Men On Earth – pub. 1948 (Photo by Picture Post/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)
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July 9, 2021 · 1:27 pm
Vanni Hope’s Educational Charity Work
VANNI HOPE – It’s Motto: “Be the reason someone smiles today”
MESSAGE: Dear Friends, Relatives and Wellwishers
Once Again many thanks for helping us to serve indivduals and famlies in the poorest comunties in Sri Lanka. We indicate BELOW some of the enterprises in educational support for students in the face of the current covid pandemic — deploying brief You Tube Presentations.
ONE: HARSHINI – LAW DEGREE – LAPTOP – ONLINE CLASSES …. https://youtu.be/ixXniHBs96E
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Filed under accountability, centre-periphery relations, charitable outreach, cultural transmission, economic processes, education, female empowerment, heritage, life stories, performance, security, self-reflexivity, sri lankan society, Tamil civilians, teaching profession, tolerance, unusual people, voluntary workers, welfare & philanthophy, working class conditions, world events & processes
July 9, 2021 · 12:45 am
The Conquista: A Book on Sri Lanka’s Portuguese Period
Avishka Mario Senewiratne

Fr SG Perera who translated the work of Queiros
In an island nation which has more than two thousand five hundred years of written history, no book has provided a more detailed account of any period of Sri Lanka’s history than the Temporal and Spiritual Conquest of Ceylon[1] authored by the Jesuit Father Fernaó de Queyroz.[2] This work covered the 150 years of Portuguese involvement in Ceylon. Ironically, this 17th century Jesuit Priest, had never visited the island of which he was researching and writing in the final two decades of life. This brief essay gives an overview of Queyroz the Historian, his cause and objective, the long and eventful delay of his work in reaching its readers, the controversy around it in the early 20th Century and its splendid translation by Fr. Simon Gregory Perera of the same Society.
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Filed under accountability, atrocities, authoritarian regimes, centre-periphery relations, commoditification, cultural transmission, discrimination, ethnicity, governance, heritage, historical interpretation, Indian Ocean politics, landscape wondrous, life stories, literary achievements, Portuguese imperialism, Portuguese in Indian Ocean, power politics, religiosity, sri lankan society, the imaginary and the real, travelogue, unusual people, world events & processes
July 8, 2021 · 8:34 pm
Addressing History: Sri Lankan Identities over Time
HistoricalDialogue.lk
Dear Friends of HistoricalDialogue.lk, …. We’re happy to announce the launch of our new podcast series, ‘Witnesses to History’. Hosted by Smriti Daniel, the tri-part series is now live on our website and takes you on a journey through Sri Lanka’s history as living memories. Listen to the first episode ‘Holders of History’ which gives an insight into our shared understanding of identity and our shared past – Episode 01 ( 28 mins). Follow the link to also view some exciting bonus material that is archived on the page.
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Filed under accountability, cultural transmission, democratic measures, female empowerment, heritage, historical interpretation, life stories, literary achievements, meditations, performance, politIcal discourse, sri lankan society, travelogue, truth as casualty of war, unusual people, welfare & philanthophy, world events & processes
July 8, 2021 · 1:20 am
Leonard Woolf’s Weliwewa Terrain: Gerald Peiris’s Profound Expertise
Michael Roberts
I have sustained a friendship and interacted with Gerald Peiris from Ramanathan Hall days at Peradeniya University beginning in July 1957. The formal discussions organised at the Ceylon Studies Seminar from 1968-1975 on the one hand and, on the other, casual, but occasionally dynamic, conversations at the Senior Common Room or the Campus Pub in those halcyon years deepened our cooperation …. and continually sharpened my brains.
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Filed under accountability, British colonialism, centre-periphery relations, cultural transmission, economic processes, heritage, historical interpretation, island economy, landscape wondrous, life stories, modernity & modernization, politIcal discourse, self-reflexivity, sri lankan society, travelogue, unusual people, welfare & philanthophy, working class conditions, world events & processes







