Category Archives: sri lankan society

Nira Wickramasinghe, historian and Professor at Leiden; her interests and output

nira wickramasinghe 1 Nira Wickramasinghe nee Samarasinghe was educated in France, and Oxford University and taught at the Dept of History, Colombo University before she snared the prestigious post of Professor of Modern South Asian Studies at the Leiden University Institute for Area Studies — a new position facilitated in part by the Leiden University Fund (LUF) and designed to provide a contribution to this field for a period of five years in the form of the LUF Chair.

For her profile NIRA says : “My primary interests are identity politics, everyday life under colonialism and the relationship between state and society in modern South Asia. I have pursued these interests through investigation into such diverse themes as politics of dress, civil society, citizens and migrants, and objects of consumption. Trained as a historian, I have written on late colonial and modern Sri Lanka, using a variety of archives. In the last few years, my work has moved from a focus on national history albeit from a non-state perspective to an approach that contests the nation as a frame and attempts to capture other dimensions of belonging which might be best encapsulated in the term ‘‘post-national’’. I am currently working on a book on ordinary peoples’ encounter with the ‘‘modern’’ using as a lens machines such as the sewing machine, gramophone, tram and bicycle. In addition to my research and teaching I intervene regularly in public debates and contribute essays and op.eds to Opendemocracy and the Wall Street Journal.” Continue reading

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Bernardo Brown registers with IIAS

BERNARDOHis biographical note: “I am an anthropologist of South Asia specialized in the culture and history of Catholic Sri Lanka. The project I am currently working on is a multi-sited ethnography of Catholic clergy who travel between Sri Lanka and Italy. In particular, my research is interested in the forms of religiosity that emerge in transnational contexts and the encounter of different world Christian traditions.

DSC_0690 Pic By Mangala

South Asian priests – who are appointed to serve the needs of Catholics working in Europe – are presented with a number of theological and cultural questions that challenge the traditional roles and expectations of clergy in Sri Lanka. Furthermore, problems that arise when Christian traditions from different geographic origins intersect, cease to be the exclusive concern of theologically oriented debates and become an issue of everyday interest to Catholic laity. With transnational migration, Catholics from diverse national, ethnic and racial origins, are required share religious rituals, festivities and places of worship with people who otherwise they would not engage with in such intimate interactions. Continue reading

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Straight Talking: confrontational advice for the Rajapaksas and the TNA

Muttukrishna Sarvananthan

Northern People Humble the People’s Dynasty”: I salute the people of the Northern Province for showing the door to the self-proclaimed “People’s Dynasty”; the only province in the country to do so, which is a glimmer of hope for re-establishment of democracy in the country. Although I am not a fan of the Tamil National Alliance (TNA), I wholeheartedly welcome its landslide win in the Northern Provincial Council (NPC) elections as a symbolic defeat of corruption, crime, cronyism, militarism, and nepotism of the Rajapaksa regime. Continue reading

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Michael Clarke packed into Packer’s Crown Sri Lanka Project

Courtesy of the Island, 21 October 2013

CROWN CASINOIt is intended that the integrated resort, to be branded “Crown Sri Lanka”, will be a “must-see” landmark tourist resort located by the side of the Beira Lake in the heart of the Colombo resort district. Crown Sri Lanka is intended to be contemporary and iconic in design and will provide a luxury resort experience that the Crown brand is renowned for throughout Asia. The proposed Crown Sri Lanka Resort will be a facility with approximately 450 rooms and suites, signature dining experiences and entertainment offerings, conferencing and event spaces, gaming areas, retail outlets and a specially designed water feature attraction on the Beira Lake. Continue reading

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Ian Botham beefed down for charity & reconciliation walk across Lanka — north to south

Ian Botham interview in the Daily Mirror, UK … courtesy of the Daily News, 18 October 2019

I tipped 5-0 at home and 5-0 away, and we only just missed out on part one — so why should I change my prediction now? My toughest winter yet is almost upon me. But by the time I’ve finished another epic walk, this time in Sri Lanka, I will be able to smile in the knowledge that the Aussies will still have their own toughest test to face — and I’d rather be in my shoes. It is in those shoes that I will be pounding around one of the most beautiful islands in the world in 30 degrees-plus heat, in humidity that hovers around 98 per cent, all for a brilliant cause. Continue reading

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A Visit to Mannar: Bi-lingual Speeches and the Desire for a Bi-lingual National Anthem

Jehan Perera,  The Island, 15 October 2013, where the title is Desire to engage by those who cannot sing national anthem”

There is an invigoration of civil society in the North after the holding of the Northern Provincial Council elections.  For the first time ever since the end of the colonial period there is the sense of having a government that is their own.  There are doubts expressed by some sections in the rest of the country that this political empowerment could lead to the strengthening of separatist sentiment.  Sections within the government itself have expressed their concerns.  However, when I visited Mannar in the North last week, the impression I received was of a people who celebrate being part of the larger national polity. Continue reading

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Christopher Ondaatje’s journeys with Woolf in contemporary Ceylon

Gamini Seneviratne reviewing Christopher Ondaatje: Woolf in Ceylon … taken  from The Island, 17 May 2006

Gamini Seneviratne

Gamini Seneviratne

This book runs to over 300 pages–room enough for Christopher Ondaatje to touch on virtually every aspect of Leonard Woolf’s life and work. It would of course be possible to pursue each of them towards a clearer understanding of both (author and subject). In a review of this kind, though, a consideration of what appears to be the author’s view of what Woolf experienced here and in England must suffice.

CHRIS ON 122 It is embellished by many photographs, most of them truly excellent. Some have been drawn from the archives of the Royal Geographical Society and the University of Sussex, many are of Ondaatje’s own making. The author has been to a great deal of trouble researching the people and places mentioned by Woolf in his writings on / from Ceylon: ‘The Village in the Jungle’, ‘Stories from the East’, his letters and ‘Growing’ the segment of his autobiography that covers his stay here, and his ‘Diaries’ as Assistant Government Agent, Hambantota. The writing is lively and lucid, perhaps less so here than in ‘The Man-eater of Punani’; a selection of the photographs in both books merit publication in a separate portfolio. Continue reading

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Land Powers vested in the Provincial Councils: Dayan misses the boat

Gerald H. Peiris, in The Island, 16 October 2013, where the title is “

GERRY PEIRISThe reader of Dr. Dayan Jayatilleka’s ‘Disinformation, Devolution and the Presidency’ (Midweek Review of 2 October 2013) has ample reason to wonder whether the caption refers to the doctor’s own disinformation or to what he has attributed to others. I am not concerned with the mildly amusing autobiographic trivia with which Dr. DJ often finds it necessary to embellish what he has to say on genuinely important issues. My focus here is on his observations on the recent Supreme Court clarification of the limits of the powers over ‘Land’ vested on Provincial Councils through the 13th Amendment to the Constitution, and on the links he has tried to establish between the resurgence of the Tamil National Alliance (a potentially secessionist political force backed by India) and prevarication on the part of the government of Sri Lanka he perceives in implementing to the fullest the provisions for devolution of power to the Provincial Councils. Continue reading

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Chandani Lokuge: how she works

Sachitra Mahendra, in the Daily News, 16 October 2013, where the title is Not ‘poetry’ nonsense…”

CHANDANI 22Playing with words is not everyone’s premises. Only a few could make reading a hobby. Writing is confined to an even lesser crowd. When it comes to writing too, everybody cannot do it strikingly. Not every written piece would make waves. Well, everyone cannot be a wordsmith! There is a term for beautiful writing in French: belles lettre. That is why Professor Chandani Lokuge’s narrative style deserves a benevolent gaze. Three novels so far under her belt (and one short story collection), Lokuge does not trek the trendy path. One would easily feel spent to read a few pages of a novel by her. That’s no easy read, of course, it requires reading between lines — patience, in other words. But it is not short of breath, not short of life. That’s all in, brimming with breaths. Continue reading

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Leonard Woolf speaks and recollects … in 1965

leonard woolf 33 Interview with Leonard Woolf, conducted by Michael Roberts, 22 December 1965 … now digitised by Special Collections, Barr Smith Library, University of Adelaide. Continue reading

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