Category Archives: cultural transmission

The Darrawela Club Memorabilia in Up-Country Sri Lanka

David Colin-Thome in 2008 …………………………………………………………….. https://www.historyofceylontea.com/ceylon-publications/feature-articles/the-darrawella-club-memorabilia-and-photograph-collection.html .… with highlighting emphasis imposed by The eDitor, Thuppahi

The Darrawella Club has the finest collection of memorabilia of all planters’ clubs in the country, dating back to 1870, which features the participants in the first cricket encounter between Darrawella Club and Radella Club. These two clubs have not only had a long history of sporting rivalry, but they were also the most prominent sporting planters’ clubs at national competition level in Sri Lanka.

 Fig 1 = the digitised photographs lined up for replacing in their frames

 

Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under accountability, art & allure bewitching, British colonialism, communal relations, cultural transmission, economic processes, ethnicity, governance, heritage, historical interpretation, intricate artefacts, landscape wondrous, life stories, patriotism, photography, plantations, politIcal discourse, Sri Lankan cricket, sri lankan society, Uncategorized, unusual people, world events & processes

Nurturing Crocodiles for Top-End Consumer Market ….!!!

An YOU TUBE presentation of a sophisticated billionaire market  ….. a find….  courtesy of Joe Paiva in Adelaide ….

VINTAGE LEATHER HAND BAG — Hand made in the 70’s …..
AU $250.00

Leave a comment

Filed under Australian culture, australian media, commoditification, cultural transmission, economic processes, the imaginary and the real, world events & processes

Rare CEYLONIANA in the Roberts Study: Issues for the Future

Hallo to Those Attached to “CEYLONIANA” and Valuable Lankan Artefacts & Books

…………… Way back I took steps to catalogue and transport my Oral History tapes and other valuable material to Sri Lanka with the assistance of Jitto Arulampalam in Melbourne, several Adelaidians and VERITE RESEARCH in Colombo (a prolonged and massive set of operations). That stock in now available to the public at the National Library Services Board in Torrington Avenue, Colombo.[1]

Now: as my wife and I age and enter the last phase of our lives, we face the issue of the stock in my study. This includes:

  1. many-many-many off-prints of articles on Sri Lanka and world politics;
  2. books under my name;
  3. books on Sri Lanka and/or world politics (including Marxist fare);
  4. Sessional Papers and Census publications from official stock in Sri Lanka …in largish foolscap size bound copies ….;

Continue reading

5 Comments

Filed under accountability, British colonialism, centre-periphery relations, charitable outreach, cultural transmission, education, heritage, historical interpretation, intricate artefacts, landscape wondrous, life stories, meditations, modernity & modernization, nationalism, patriotism, photography & its history, pilgrimages, politIcal discourse, power politics, prabhakaran, self-reflexivity, Sinhala-Tamil Relations, sri lankan society, teaching profession, truth as casualty of war, world affairs

The International Centre of Ethnic Studies in Sri Lanka: Its Genesis in 1981-83

Kingsley M. De Silva …. a summary memo drafted way back by Professor Kingsley M. De Silva and sent to me in July 2024 by Iranga Silva of the ICES in Kandy[1]

Early in 1981, I had two American visitors, one of whom, Professor Donald Horowitz, I had known since the late 1960s when he visited the island for research on the abortive coup d’état of 1962 in the island. The other was Robert Goldmann, a programme officer of the Ford Foundation in New York. They had come to Kandy to invite me to a Ford Foundation-sponsored conference to be held in August 1981 at the Taita Hills Game Park about 200 km from Nairobi, Kenya, where a group of scholars and administrators—from governments and the private sector—from many parts of the world would discuss the theme of ‘Ethnic Problems in the Developing and Developed Worlds’. A record of the proceedings of this conference—including most of the papers presented—is available in the library of the ICES in Kandy.

Prof. Goldmann

to be presented one of Prof. Horowitz

Continue reading

1 Comment

Filed under centre-periphery relations, cultural transmission, democratic measures, economic processes, education, language policies, life stories, patriotism, politIcal discourse, self-reflexivity, Sinhala-Tamil Relations, social justice, sri lankan society, teaching profession, unusual people, world affairs

Senaka Weeraratna presses His Claims as Inventor of the DRS in Cricket

Michael Roberts

Senaka Weeraratna of Royal College and Sri Lanka has been persistent in his campaign for recognition being accorded to his role in conceiving the revolutonary DECISION REVIEW SYSTEM in cricket matches. On one occasion he even visited me at my sister’s house in Hampden Lane,Wellawatte, Colombo, in order to persuade me about the validity of his cause. I never had any objection to his position; but I have no clout within the ICC and limited capacities in investigating such an issue. All I can say is that SENAKA reminds me of one Anagarika Dharmapala — one of Senaka’s relatives — in the zealousness and persistence devoted to a cause. 

Continue reading

5 Comments

Filed under accountability, Buddhism, centre-periphery relations, cultural transmission, democratic measures, discrimination, disparagement, ethnicity, governance, historical interpretation, legal issues, life stories, religiosity, Royal College, self-reflexivity, social justice, sri lankan society, taking the piss, unusual people, world events & processes

Trump’s Demagogic March leaps further ….

Mayura Botejue in USA

Trump’s marketing instincts are sharp and he seized the moment!

This image will circulate widely. It will draw more adulation from his voter base and help to sway undecided others who admire courage, toughness, defiance, etc. Especially powerful when his campaign casts his opponent Biden as frail and senile.

     ****   ****

2 Comments

Filed under accountability, citizen journalism, cultural transmission, disparagement, governance

Trump, Biden + Fei-Yu-Ching sing ”A Spray of Plum Blossoms”

Theodore K

In this duo performance, Donald Trump and Joe Biden come together to sing the Chinese song  一剪梅 (in pinyin it reads, “Yī jiǎn méi”).   https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CtKSHJKzia4

(Yī) = One

(jiǎn) = to cut

(méi) = plum

The title of the song may be rendered as A Spray of Plum Blossoms.

The song was made famous by the popular Taiwanese singer Fei Yu-ching and his rendition can be found at https;//www.youtube.co/watch/v=AjitR7RZEQU

 

Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under accountability, art & allure bewitching, authoritarian regimes, centre-periphery relations, China and Chinese influences, cultural transmission, Uncategorized

About Palestine: Chatting with Rabbi Shapiro 

This item was sent to me by Dr. Firazeth Hussein of Wellawatte & Galle

Yaakov Shapiro is an international speaker, author, and pulpit rabbi for over 30 years, now emeritus. He has attained an enviable place in the arena of anti-Zionist public intellectuals, having constructed a unique oeuvre on the ideology of Zionism and its relationship to Judaism. After graduating high school at age 16, Rabbi Shapiro dedicated himself to full-time study of religion, becoming the protégé of some of the most well-regarded rabbinic scholars in Orthodoxy. Among his areas of research are religious philosophy, analytic theology, Talmud, Halachah, and Biblical exegesis. At age 19 he published his first book, משפטי הבירורים, a collection of original expositions on rabbinic principles of tort adjudication. His other books include חלקת השדה, a commentary on Judaic laws governing land disputes (2000); צדה לדרך, a commentary on Rabbi Moshe Chaim Luzzato’s exposition of God as the Necessary Being (2009); and שופריה דיעקב, a compendium of original Biblical exegeses (2017).

Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under accountability, ancient civilisations, arab regimes, authoritarian regimes, communal relations, cultural transmission, ethnicity, heritage, historical interpretation, Jews in Asia, landscape wondrous, liberation tigers of tamil eelam, meditations, Palestine, politIcal discourse, religiosity, self-reflexivity, tolerance, travelogue, unusual people, world events & processes

James Hunter’s Depressing Dissection of American Political Culture Today

Michael Sean Winters, where the chosen title is “From ‘culture wars’ to ‘cultural exhaustion’: James Davison Hunter diagnoses our cultural ills”

Friday, we began a review of James Davison Hunter’s vitally important book Democracy and Solidarity: On the Cultural Roots of America’s Political Crisis with a focus on his historical survey. I stopped with his provocative thesis that the marginalization of religion as a force in cultural politics begins with the close of the Civil War, but he continues his narrative, through Dewey and Niebuhr, the world wars, the Civil Rights Movement, etc. You’ll need to get and read the book to access Hunter’s fine historical sketch of the shifting cultural landscape.

Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under art & allure bewitching, cultural transmission, economic processes, education, education policy, ethnicity, Fascism, heritage, historical interpretation, life stories, literary achievements, politIcal discourse, power politics, press freedom & censorship, self-reflexivity

Sri Lankan ‘Outposts’ on Thursday Island in Colonial Times

Á Booklet by Stanley J. Sparkes and Anna Shnukal entitled The Sri Lankan Settlers of Thursday Island …. presented by …………….. httpsy ://www.elanka.com.au/the-sri-lankan-settlers-of-thursday-island-by-stanley-j-sparkes-and-anna-shnukal/

... I regret that the pictorial illustrations with this text proved obdurate and refused replication; while the whole process of reproduction was difficult”–Thupahiyaa

Introduction

The dismantling of the White Australia Policy in the early 1970s, allied with periodic civil strife in their homeland, brought significant numbers of Sri Lankan immigrants to Australia. Few Australians, however, are aware that, a century before, hundreds of mostly male ‘Cingalese’ (as Sri Lankans were then called),2 mainly from the southern coastal districts of Galle and Matara in the British colony of Ceylon, came as labourers to the British colony of Queensland.3 The first of these arrived independently in the 1870s to join the Torres Strait pearling fleets, but larger numbers were brought to Queensland a decade later as indentured (contract) seamen on Thursday Island and, shortly thereafter, as farm workers for the cane fields around Mackay and Bundaberg, where many of their descendants still live. The arrival of the first batch of 25 indentured Sri Lankan seamen on Thursday Island in 1882 coincided with the importation of ‘Malays’ and Japanese. Yet, unlike the latter, comparatively little has been published on their origins, lives and destinies, nor their contributions to the business, social and cultural life of Thursday Island. Some of those first arrivals demonstrated a remarkable entrepreneurial flair, taking up employment as ‘watermen’ (boatmen), ferrying passengers and cargo from ship to shore and subsequently taking out licences as small businessmen: boarding-house keepers, billiard-room proprietors, shopkeepers, pawnbrokers, boat-owners, gem and curio hawkers and commercial fishermen.

VISIT THIS SITE FOR MAP etc https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thursday_Island

Continue reading

3 Comments

Filed under Australian culture, British colonialism, centre-periphery relations, commoditification, communal relations, cultural transmission, demography, discrimination, economic processes, ethnicity, heritage, historical interpretation, island economy, landscape wondrous, life stories, Pacific Ocean issues, population, religiosity, self-reflexivity, sri lankan society, transport and communications, travelogue, Uncategorized, unusual people, working class conditions, world events & processes